He was only covered on the second one because Bradshaw threw it to the inside for some odd reason when Swann was to the outside. If Bradshaw throws it to the outside Swann has an uncontested catch.
What made these catches even more incredible was the fact that Mark Washington had Swann covered like a blanket on all 4 catches ...... fortunately for Washington, he got to play in all 5 Super Bowls that Cowboys played in in the 1970's. He played a solid 10 seasons in the NFL from 1970 through 1979, and his teams won 2 Golds and 3 Silvers.
Agreed, there's no faulting Mark Washington on these plays. He played them as well as they could be played. Swann was just playing in a whole different universe that day.
I have new respect for Terry. I had to rewind that last pass: He released it at his own 30 and Swann caught it at the 5. Watching QBs struggle to get hail mary into end zone from much beyond midfield.
I would put this performance alongside Jerry Rices performance in Superbowl 23. This is my favourite Superbowl to watch and Lynn Swanns catches are pure poetry in motion. What a fantastic athlete he was.
Iconically great catches by Swann (what grace!), brilliant passes by Bradshaw (what a gun of an arm!), great pass blocking by Rocky Bleier (what guts and heart!).
Great observation on Bleier. Rocky made fantastic blocks on the two most iconic catches. Without those blocks, those catches never happen. He was the ultimate team player in the ultimate team sport.
He was told by doctors that he would never play again after being severely injured in Vietnam, Rocky Blier was a major contributor in the Steelers 4 championships in the 70s.
Incredible catches. I was able to go to his MVP party as a ten year-old kid in Foster City. My brother and I took a photo with him. Still have it to this day. :)
No one ever talks about it but Bradshaw's dropback was so quick and efficient. He gets back there in the blink of an eye and just launches the ball. Really incredible to watch.
I was in 4th grade in North Jersey and this was the first Super Bowl I really watched. I remember that night throwing my foam football to myself in my bedroom and purposely bobbling it before catching it. Lynn Swann turned that Super Bowl into his personal showcase…
I worked with Mark Washington’s daughter in one of my previous jobs. I always felt bad for him. His coverage on Swann was actually very good on three of the plays here. Swann just made some spectacular plays.
I was an Oakland Raiders fan back then who hated the Steelers because they kept knocking my Raiders out of the playoffs back then, but I say to this day, that Lynn Swann had one of the best Super Bowl games as a WR that I've ever seen; especially when you take into account how difficult 2 of those catches were!
Wow. And Swann doesn’t get up pounding his chest saying “Look at me. Look what I did.” Miss those days when players just did their job and when we knew what a catch was without waiting 10 minutes for the replay to tell us.
As a kid, pretending to be a quarterback out in the back yard, it was this last throw I always imagined I was making to win the game. I wasn’t old enough to remember this game, but a few years after it, they still showed the highlight someplace where i recall seeing it.
The 2nd catch was one of the most illustrious and iconic catches in NFL history. The last catch he had came when the Cowboys came with an all out blitz which left Swann in single coverage. Not only was it an incredible pass, but it came under an intense rush where Bradshaw got knock silly by Larry Cole. Bradshaw never got a chance to admire his efforts.
Swann's first catch was one of the greatest plays I have ever seen!!!! He literally is out of bounds, comes back in bounds, floats in the air and makes the play... AMAZING!!! The bobbling catch falling to the ground speaks for itself. What concentration!!! The final catch for the touchdown is the same play as the bobbled one, a post vs man to man. The greatness of this play is not the catch, but Bradshaw's bravery to hang in the box vs an all out blitz, knowing he was going to get blasted, and throwing a perfect strike. Everybody talks about Mahomes and Brady being great, and they are. All I know is when the money was on the table, Bradshaw delivered.. EVERYTIME!!!! 4 Super Bowls, 4 wins. Great players make great plays in great games. Two of the best to do it. Thanks for posting!!!
Look at his upper body. From his waist up he is not in the field of play. Obviously he came down with both feet in bounds. What cannot be in dispute is this was a GREAT catch!!!!!
@@jefferysimmons4501 fantastic catch. I actually had to watch it a few times since at first glance i was sure he had gone out of bounds but he didn't. That nimbleness is due to his study of ballet
I'm not suggesting this was an illegal play. (i.e he was of bounds, came back into the field of play and made the catch) I'm highlighting his body control and his ability to literally change direction in the air and make one of the greatest catches EVER!!! Please understand, Swann is my guy. He was one of the reasons I went to Southern California to play football to play the wide receiver position, so my comments are in no way a diss of him, or to infer he did anything against the rules. I'm just saying he was a "BAD MAN".
As epic as the second catch is, the clarity of mind to get yards after that catch is icing on the cake. The third catch is not the flashiest, but the positioning past the first down marker and cradling that bullet is still absolute textbook.
@@topJimmyP1984 Evidently, you are the type who desperately seeks to find at least one ground in a perfectly brewed cup of coffee. I suppose the cynic (or in this case one not a Steeler fan, perhaps) has his place, but not here. He was not down by contact because he did gain full control of the ball until after the contact. Since the rule requires the player to be down by contact, he continued to advance the ball. Swann was not "awarded extra yards." The refs spotted it properly.
Bradshaw's arm strength would STILL be considered top tier in the modern NFL. That TD ball to Swann traveled 65 yards in the air. That's an absolute MONSTER of a throw even in today's game. Let alone to be deadly accurate with it while about to get totally smoked by the defender. End to end, one of the finest throws in NFL history.
Agreed 100%. 🎯 NFL Films rated Bradshaw’s TD bomb to Swann in SB X the greatest throw of all time: ruclips.net/video/OrSkwRiC0LY/видео.htmlsi=Eo1WEIoFCOG2xAIk
" Would 'still' be considered top-tier in the NFL"? Bradshaw had the most powerful harm in NFL history--I'm talking distance plus the bullet speed getting it there. With a football that was more difficult to get distance with than today's footballs. Note that Terry never once in his career aired it out/i.e., threw it his hardest; even this last one at the end of Super Bowl X was not the hardest he tried/farthest he could throw it, although in this case, he at least looked "somewhat" close to doing that.
You will not find Lynn Swann on anyone's list of all-time top ten receivers but he is undoubtedly the most fluid, graceful, and acrobatic reciever of all-time. You don't hear Terry Bradshaws name mentioned when discussing the greatest Quarterback ever but in the 4 Superbowls he played in he was superb. Arguably the best deep thrower ever.
Swann is on my personal list of all-time top FIVE NFL receivers. I don't care about inflated stats; I care about who can get it done when it counts the most, and nobody has ever been better at that than Swann.
2:35 My Late Great Momma & I in living room Omaha NE … same place we saw Hail Mary vs Vikings … Steelers ripped hearts out of Vikings Cowboys Rams Fans … being a Shreveporter Terry Bradshaw Performances Salt In The Wound … Great Post … Thx For Posting! Cheers!
Super bowl 10 instantly turned me into a football fan and had to watch every Steelers game after that. Lynn Swann was my one and only favorite player and I went on to play wide receiver and of course wore#88 in H.S. I still have dreams of playing football 37 years later.
Swann’s second reception is probably the indelible memory most people have of this game, and among the most iconic plays in SB history, but I’m pretty sure it didn’t lead to a Pittsburgh score. His first catch, the big play in Pittsburgh’s first quarter drive to tie the game, is the finest sideline catch I’ve seen in nearly 60 years watching football.
You are correct-- that second catch is the one replayed over and over again, and perhaps the most memorable catch in super bowl history, but the Steelers did not score on that drive. So it was really an inconsequential play, as great as it was.
The first Super Bowl I watched in its entirety, I was 11 and although I was pulling for Dallas I have to say Swann earned MVP honors that day especially not being for sure if he was gonna play or not after getting knocked out of the AFC championship game against Oakland.
The block of Webster on the 2nd pass. He pushed Petersen about 15 yards away from Bradshaw, and the arm of Bradshaw on the 4th pass, that was about 65 yards in the air after having to reset his feet to launch it.
Definitely the greatest game by a WR in a SB. That last catch was somewhat surprising since Swann wasn't exactly a burner and somehow managed to get behind Washington......but hey, we will take it!!!
Lynn Swan inspired a good friend to take ballet lessons. He saw a news story that Mr Swan took lessons to improve his body control and my buddy, as a kid, thought this was his way into the NFL. Funny enough, it didn't help him become a better receiver but he's had a multi-decade career, and made a good living, as a dancer. Funny how some find their niche.
Lynn Swann doesn't have eye-popping career stats, but no wide receiver did more with the time he played and the plays he made than Swann. Quality over quantity. If you have one game to win, and everything is on the line, there's nobody better than Swann!
This is still one of the Top 5 Super Bowl performances of All Time. 3 of those 4 catches are in the Top 50 Plays in Football history and 2 are in the Top 10!!!
You can see the arm strength from TB , especially on the last throw. Must have been reassuring in his mind he had Swann to throw to, … or Stallworth. You can just see for an instant on the behind view the wallop Bradshaw was about to receive. Growing up along the east coastline in Canada, I always marvelled at the nice Super Bowl weather in January.
I lived in NW Indiana the last 36 years. The local TV was from Chicago so I saw a lot of Bears action, and since Hoosier tax rates are lower than those in IL, many Chicagoans have migrated there, basically turning the area into a suburb of Chicago over the last 20 years. I just moved near Baltimore, and will be seeing a lot of Ravens games. Still, nothing has (and nothing will) surpass or even equal what the Steelers did then. Phenomenal.
Also, I grew up in Pittsburgh from ‘64 to ‘86, and the Steelers then are a good part of why the Steelers will always be my favorite team and why Pittsburgh will always be my favorite city. Thank you!
Just before the snap on the TD catch, Tom Brookshier said the play would determine the game and left the booth to go to the Steelers locker room. Also, the narration by John Facenda in the "NFL Films Session on SBX" of Bradshaw to Swans TD catch was for the ages.
One of the most insane statistics I've ever seen is Bradshaw's career Yds/Att in SuperBowls an incredible 11.1 -- and an NFL record that might never be broken!
There’s a lot of hyperbole out there, but the greatest THROW in NFL history is that final pass. A five point lead with five minutes to go in the Super Bowl, a rush that knocks you out, 64 yards in the air, dead on target, to help ice the game. I’m not a Steeler fan, but the truth is the truth. And this the day after KC beat SF 25-22 in OT at SB 58.
Agreed.... BUT Big Ben's game winning touchdown throw to Santoino Holmes in front of AND between 3 defenders, ranks right up there as an NFL all timer as well.
Incredible performance from the past catching duo! I had always known about “the immaculate reception” but didn’t know about the other 3 catches. Very impressive even by today’s standards
No critic has ever played a snap of high school football, lynn swann played professional football in the 1970s at 160 pounds,winning 4 super bowl rings as a member of the last true dynasty in NFL history
Lynn Swann credits his grace to ballet lessons his mother made him take as a child. I remember watching an interview with him about the deflected ball he caught at the 50 (2nd one, I believe). He said that ballet taught him to keep his body upright, and that allowed him the ability to see the ball and catch it. He also compared the body posture of himself to Mark Washington's in that Washington tumbled and fell with no sense of body position.
Stats, schmats. Fantasy football mentality has ruined the way the game is played and distorted what greatness means, making it about numbers instead of REAL production, clutch performance and winning. Greatness isn't just about "how many," it's about "HOW." It's the stage on which a player performs his impact on the game, the style with which he played the game, and the legacy he leaves behind. Swann hit it out of the park with all these things.
Swann is making some of the most incredible catches in NFL history on the biggest stage and is simply returning to the huddle for the next play. I'm a hardcore Oakland Raider fan, but you have to respect the Steelers.
For sure. It took a special breed of player to survive at QB in the ‘70s. It was open season. Stats didn’t matter… only winning mattered. Big plays in big moments. Fantasy football (and the mammoth stats-based gambling industry built around t) has ruined the NFL.
@@mrsatire9475Exactly, calling guys like Brady and Mahommes the best ever, is a joke. If they had to play in the 70s and 80s, they wouldn't have half the success that they have now. Bradshaw, Staubach and Montana are better than they are.
If you need to see a quarterback put a ball where only his receiver can get it and trust him to do so while the receiver also knows this and is making the step and jump to go get it, this is a clinic on that trust on both sides. Take a good look folks, you hardly see this anymore. The defense on each play was excellent and today qb's are told dont throw it into that coverage. That sideline pass and catch showed exceptional footwork
Agreed. 🎯 The NFL was less “turnover averse” in those days. The rules made it much harder to score compared to today’s game, so offenses had to take risks to score. Bradshaw had the arm to get it done, and IMO, Swann was by far the best receiver of the era. No receiver did more with such limited opportunities. Simply phenomenal.
@mcmillenandwife I was watching an off side camera that showed a hit from behind Swan by Jack Tatum to the base 8f his neck by a forearm at speed that knocked Swan down and out. He actually kept playing that game and caught passes. They played a man's game. Then again, guys died quite often on early college football. So it is always about perspective
@@ronharvey8442 This video (link below) is as brutal a shot as I’ve seen a receiver take. It’s in the first quarter, and Swann just pops up, trots back to the huddle, then goes on to rip the Browns apart (as usual). He was an amazing player. ruclips.net/video/Ax80A1nD62Y/видео.htmlsi=Jfb0IBPfMHKld4Pl
@@chrisoakley5830 you're wrong on that one......Harris was only meant to block on the play......when Bradshaw scrambled and shook off Raider Tacklers......Franco did what he learned at Penn State.......If you are unblocked.....Drift to where the Ball is supposed to go......he moved himself down toward Fuqua, because that was the play. It was Luck that he caught it......but he actually created the Chance, by listening to his College Coach Joe Paterno........and it Paid Off......with less than 25 seconds on the Clock!
Agreed. Getting them BOTH in the same draft was like winning the lottery. Not to mention Lambert and Webster in that draft (and Shell as an undrafted free agent). Just amazing. There will never be another draft like it.
Lynn Swann was the very deserving MVP of Super Bowl X, and I'll bet the Cowboy defensive back assigned to cover him, Mark Washington, still has nightmares over this game.
Nah nah nah... Love me some Swann, but the G.O.A.T? Absolutely not!!! Jerry Rice is not only the G.O.A.T. from the receiver position, but many think he is in the conversation, with Jim Brown, as the greatest football PLAYER ever.
If I could pick an all-time NFL team my starting WRs are Swann and Stallworth -- numbers/stats be damned. When they had to make the big plays, regular or post season, they always rose to the occassions. They didn't get to grab huge quantities of catches but on a team like this, making the plays they did with 3, 4, 5 receptions a game, with the hits they had to take from myriad great physical defenses, damn that's just sheer quality. I love Rice. Terrell, Moss and Carter, but pound for pound, it's Swann and Stallworth.
Notice how professional and mature Swann is after the catches! No theatrics, just plain celebration with his teammates.
Agreed, Swann was the epitome of class.
Generally, the only time you saw showboating behavior back then was when a TD was scored........players back then were classy and all business.
Yeah, today they celebrate a blocking like if it was a SB win, can’t stand the disrespect.
I know who's saying this your racism is showing
Back then, players didn't do the stupid stuff that they do today.
I cannot believe my eyes because Washington had him covered on all four plays and Swann still caught the balls.
He was only covered on the second one because Bradshaw threw it to the inside for some odd reason when Swann was to the outside. If Bradshaw throws it to the outside Swann has an uncontested catch.
Yes, I agree; Washington provided good coverage on Lynn Swann. This made 'Swanny' look even better.
What made these catches even more incredible was the fact that Mark Washington had Swann covered like a blanket on all 4 catches ...... fortunately for Washington, he got to play in all 5 Super Bowls that Cowboys played in in the 1970's. He played a solid 10 seasons in the NFL from 1970 through 1979, and his teams won 2 Golds and 3 Silvers.
Agreed, there's no faulting Mark Washington on these plays. He played them as well as they could be played. Swann was just playing in a whole different universe that day.
That Bradshaw arm incredible.
It wasn’t as good as Uncle Rico’s tho
@@guins99 😂 “How much do you wanna make a bet I can throw a football over them mountains?”
@@guins99😂
Yes he does I remember watching those games as a kid and thinking man he throws that ball like a baseball
No shotgun. Snap under center. Old-school 7-step drop. Effortless arm motion, tight spiral, bombs away. What’s not to like?
My gosh, Bradshaw sure had a cannon for an arm.
Truth. 🎯 One of the greatest arms in NFL history. 💪🏻🏉
He flicked that ball 50 yards like he was tossing keys on the table. Amazing strength and accuracy
I have new respect for Terry. I had to rewind that last pass: He released it at his own 30 and Swann caught it at the 5. Watching QBs struggle to get hail mary into end zone from much beyond midfield.
@@lucecooler Swan caught it around the 7. But still 63 yards in the air.
He could throw it 100 yards!!
I would put this performance alongside Jerry Rices performance in Superbowl 23. This is my favourite Superbowl to watch and Lynn Swanns catches are pure poetry in motion. What a fantastic athlete he was.
Better than rice, no sticky gloves, plus the rules back then permitted defense to actually be played
Iconically great catches by Swann (what grace!), brilliant passes by Bradshaw (what a gun of an arm!), great pass blocking by Rocky Bleier (what guts and heart!).
Great observation on Bleier. Rocky made fantastic blocks on the two most iconic catches. Without those blocks, those catches never happen. He was the ultimate team player in the ultimate team sport.
The greatest blocker to ever play.
Pat Summerall classic calls of great catches.
Sick blocks by Bleier on two of those plays. So many stars, easy to overlook how important he was to that offense.
Rocky was great. An absolute workhorse, truly great blocker, and he never gets credit for his pass catching. Such an underrated part of that team.
The dude was missing half of one of his feet.
He destroyed DD Lewis on the second pass, and Cliff Harris on the 4th.
Saved the day on that final TD taking out Cliff Harris
He was told by doctors that he would never play again after being severely injured in Vietnam, Rocky Blier was a major contributor in the Steelers 4 championships in the 70s.
Swann was one of the best! The most acrobatic receiver for sure! What a weapon!
Incredible catches. I was able to go to his MVP party as a ten year-old kid in Foster City. My brother and I took a photo with him. Still have it to this day. :)
Even with all those rings, I think Bradshaw is still underrated....and yes, Swann was awesome.
No one ever talks about it but Bradshaw's dropback was so quick and efficient. He gets back there in the blink of an eye and just launches the ball. Really incredible to watch.
I was in 4th grade in North Jersey and this was the first Super Bowl I really watched. I remember that night throwing my foam football to myself in my bedroom and purposely bobbling it before catching it. Lynn Swann turned that Super Bowl into his personal showcase…
The last Swann catch won the Super Bowl.
I worked with Mark Washington’s daughter in one of my previous jobs. I always felt bad for him. His coverage on Swann was actually very good on three of the plays here. Swann just made some spectacular plays.
Agreed, you really can’t fault Washington at all. He played it as well as it could be played. Swann just made ridiculous catches.
Unfortunate goat. Two of those passes he had perfect coverage. The TD was a perfect throw.
You could say that about the whole Dallas team. It's possible that the two greatest teams in NFL history both played at the same time.
I was an Oakland Raiders fan back then who hated the Steelers because they kept knocking my Raiders out of the playoffs back then, but I say to this day, that Lynn Swann had one of the best Super Bowl games as a WR that I've ever seen; especially when you take into account how difficult 2 of those catches were!
Wow. And Swann doesn’t get up pounding his chest saying “Look at me. Look what I did.” Miss those days when players just did their job and when we knew what a catch was without waiting 10 minutes for the replay to tell us.
As a kid, pretending to be a quarterback out in the back yard, it was this last throw I always imagined I was making to win the game. I wasn’t old enough to remember this game, but a few years after it, they still showed the highlight someplace where i recall seeing it.
The 2nd catch was one of the most illustrious and iconic catches in NFL history. The last catch he had came when the Cowboys came with an all out blitz which left Swann in single coverage. Not only was it an incredible pass, but it came under an intense rush where Bradshaw got knock silly by Larry Cole. Bradshaw never got a chance to admire his efforts.
Hard to believe just how good Bradshaw was.
Swann's first catch was one of the greatest plays I have ever seen!!!!
He literally is out of bounds, comes back in bounds, floats in the air and makes the play... AMAZING!!!
The bobbling catch falling to the ground speaks for itself. What concentration!!! The final catch for the touchdown is the same play as the bobbled one, a post vs man to man. The greatness of this play is not the catch, but Bradshaw's bravery to hang in the box vs an all out blitz, knowing he was going to get blasted, and throwing a perfect strike.
Everybody talks about Mahomes and Brady being great, and they are. All I know is when the money was on the table, Bradshaw delivered.. EVERYTIME!!!! 4 Super Bowls, 4 wins.
Great players make great plays in great games. Two of the best to do it. Thanks for posting!!!
He wasn't out of bounds or that would have been illegal
Look at his upper body. From his waist up he is not in the field of play. Obviously he came down with both
feet in bounds. What cannot be in dispute is this was a GREAT catch!!!!!
@@jefferysimmons4501 fantastic catch. I actually had to watch it a few times since at first glance i was sure he had gone out of bounds but he didn't. That nimbleness is due to his study of ballet
I'm not suggesting this was an illegal play. (i.e he was of bounds, came back into the field of play and made the catch) I'm highlighting his body control and his ability to literally change direction in the air and make one of the greatest catches EVER!!! Please understand, Swann is my guy. He was one of the reasons I went to Southern California to play football to play the wide receiver position, so my comments are in no way a diss of him, or to infer he did anything against the rules. I'm just saying he was a "BAD MAN".
Great first two catches! Bradshaw standing tall in the pocket and throwing 65 Yard dime was epic!
As epic as the second catch is, the clarity of mind to get yards after that catch is icing on the cake.
The third catch is not the flashiest, but the positioning past the first down marker and cradling that bullet is still absolute textbook.
He was down by contact, should not have been awarded extra yards, Ref blunder.
@@topJimmyP1984 Evidently, you are the type who desperately seeks to find at least one ground in a perfectly brewed cup of coffee. I suppose the cynic (or in this case one not a Steeler fan, perhaps) has his place, but not here.
He was not down by contact because he did gain full control of the ball until after the contact. Since the rule requires the player to be down by contact, he continued to advance the ball. Swann was not "awarded extra yards." The refs spotted it properly.
4-0 Super Bowl record. Great QB.
Bradshaw's arm strength would STILL be considered top tier in the modern NFL. That TD ball to Swann traveled 65 yards in the air. That's an absolute MONSTER of a throw even in today's game. Let alone to be deadly accurate with it while about to get totally smoked by the defender. End to end, one of the finest throws in NFL history.
Agreed 100%. 🎯 NFL Films rated Bradshaw’s TD bomb to Swann in SB X the greatest throw of all time: ruclips.net/video/OrSkwRiC0LY/видео.htmlsi=Eo1WEIoFCOG2xAIk
Terry Bradshaw could throw the football from end zone - end zone! Really!👍✌️
" Would 'still' be considered top-tier in the NFL"? Bradshaw had the most powerful harm in NFL history--I'm talking distance plus the bullet speed getting it there. With a football that was more difficult to get distance with than today's footballs. Note that Terry never once in his career aired it out/i.e., threw it his hardest; even this last one at the end of Super Bowl X was not the hardest he tried/farthest he could throw it, although in this case, he at least looked "somewhat" close to doing that.
Ball was heavier back then
Bradshaw won the state high school javelin championship in Louisiana.
You will not find Lynn Swann on anyone's list of all-time top ten receivers but he is undoubtedly the most fluid, graceful, and acrobatic reciever of all-time. You don't hear Terry Bradshaws name mentioned when discussing the greatest Quarterback ever but in the 4 Superbowls he played in he was superb. Arguably the best deep thrower ever.
Swann is on my personal list of all-time top FIVE NFL receivers. I don't care about inflated stats; I care about who can get it done when it counts the most, and nobody has ever been better at that than Swann.
Everyone wants to make their success all about their defense. Which was extremely good!
2:35 My Late Great Momma & I in living room Omaha NE … same place we saw Hail Mary vs Vikings … Steelers ripped hearts out of Vikings Cowboys Rams Fans … being a Shreveporter Terry Bradshaw Performances Salt In The Wound … Great Post … Thx For Posting! Cheers!
When I fell in love with 🏈!
I was in 3rd grade
I remember being a kid watching this game, everyone in my house was going crazy after his sideline catch!
You're the man. THANK YOU for posting this. Super Bowl X was my first big-time memory watching an NFL game, a few months short of ten years of age.
Thanks, man. Be sure to check out our site. Over 600 games you can watch. www.mcmillenandwife.com
@@mcmillenandwife That's an automatic.
I was three when this game happened, and all I remember of it is Lynn Swann.
Super bowl 10 instantly turned me into a football fan and had to watch every Steelers game after that. Lynn Swann was my one and only favorite player and I went on to play wide receiver and of course wore#88 in H.S. I still have dreams of playing football 37 years later.
Me too - I was about 10, and it's my first "big-time memory" of watching an NFL game as well.
Looks like those ballet classes that my man Lynn Swann got teased for (from some classmates) paid off nicely throughout his NFL career. 🙂
Cross training.
the BEST part - watch what Swann does at staring 0:13 Seconds....
Yep. Ridiculous body control on that catch.
@@mcmillenandwife True - I was talking about handing the football to the referee and running back to the huddle.🤩
@@G-Dogg21 Ah, yes. Show you've been there before @ 0:13 seconds. 🕶
@@mcmillenandwife Thanks for correcting me on the timing!!
Swann’s second reception is probably the indelible memory most people have of this game, and among the most iconic plays in SB history, but I’m pretty sure it didn’t lead to a Pittsburgh score. His first catch, the big play in Pittsburgh’s first quarter drive to tie the game, is the finest sideline catch I’ve seen in nearly 60 years watching football.
In a game of inches, every yard matters.
You are correct-- that second catch is the one replayed over and over again, and perhaps the most memorable catch in super bowl history, but the Steelers did not score on that drive. So it was really an inconsequential play, as great as it was.
Beautiful to watch. Terry makes it look so easy.
The first Super Bowl I watched in its entirety, I was 11 and although I was pulling for Dallas I have to say Swann earned MVP honors that day especially not being for sure if he was gonna play or not after getting knocked out of the AFC championship game against Oakland.
Thanks for posting, I remember this as a kid
Hard to beat that 70's Steelers air attack with Bradshaw and those great receivers Swann and Stallworth.
The block of Webster on the 2nd pass. He pushed Petersen about 15 yards away from Bradshaw, and the arm of Bradshaw on the 4th pass, that was about 65 yards in the air after having to reset his feet to launch it.
love how on the td catch lambert is the first to greet him
Lambert (yelling at Swann): "F$#&IN' YEEEEEAAAAHHHH, MAAAAAAANNNN!!!"
Bradshaw had balls of steel, two hall of fame receivers, and the Steel Curtain. Good luck.
Definitely the greatest game by a WR in a SB. That last catch was somewhat surprising since Swann wasn't exactly a burner and somehow managed to get behind Washington......but hey, we will take it!!!
Yes, good but not great speed… but man, his hands and leaping ability were off the charts. 😮🏆
Lynn Swan inspired a good friend to take ballet lessons. He saw a news story that Mr Swan took lessons to improve his body control and my buddy, as a kid, thought this was his way into the NFL. Funny enough, it didn't help him become a better receiver but he's had a multi-decade career, and made a good living, as a dancer.
Funny how some find their niche.
Lynn Swann doesn't have eye-popping career stats, but no wide receiver did more with the time he played and the plays he made than Swann. Quality over quantity. If you have one game to win, and everything is on the line, there's nobody better than Swann!
Love my Steelers............been a fan since early 70s
Me too, sense 1972!🏈👍✌️
This is still one of the Top 5 Super Bowl performances of All Time.
3 of those 4 catches are in the Top 50 Plays in Football history and 2 are in the Top 10!!!
🎯👍🏻 Agreed.
You can see the arm strength from TB , especially on the last throw. Must have been reassuring in his mind he had Swann to throw to, … or Stallworth. You can just see for an instant on the behind view the wallop Bradshaw was about to receive. Growing up along the east coastline in Canada, I always marvelled at the nice Super Bowl weather in January.
I lived in NW Indiana the last 36 years. The local TV was from Chicago so I saw a lot of Bears action, and since Hoosier tax rates are lower than those in IL, many Chicagoans have migrated there, basically turning the area into a suburb of Chicago over the last 20 years. I just moved near Baltimore, and will be seeing a lot of Ravens games. Still, nothing has (and nothing will) surpass or even equal what the Steelers did then. Phenomenal.
Also, I grew up in Pittsburgh from ‘64 to ‘86, and the Steelers then are a good part of why the Steelers will always be my favorite team and why Pittsburgh will always be my favorite city. Thank you!
The announcer is the legendary Pat Summeral. The best voice ever in the NFL. An Arkansas graduate.
Just before the snap on the TD catch, Tom Brookshier said the play would determine the game and left the booth to go to the Steelers locker room. Also, the narration by John Facenda in the "NFL Films Session on SBX" of Bradshaw to Swans TD catch was for the ages.
My god! Terry had a CANNON!!!
Great quality, for footage that old. Steelers forever.
Be sure to check out our site, klavss76. Hundreds of classic Steelers games to watch. www.mcmillenandwife.com/
@@mcmillenandwife I know your site and it's great, that's how I suscribed, I have watched a few old games there, great work thank you
Thanks,@@klavss76!
One of the most insane statistics I've ever seen is Bradshaw's career Yds/Att in SuperBowls an incredible 11.1 -- and an NFL record that might never be broken!
Definitely can see why he was the MVP. I found the 2nd catch to be more impressive than the immaculate reception. That catch was a thing of beauty.
There’s a lot of hyperbole out there, but the greatest THROW in NFL history is that final pass. A five point lead with five minutes to go in the Super Bowl, a rush that knocks you out, 64 yards in the air, dead on target, to help ice the game. I’m not a Steeler fan, but the truth is the truth. And this the day after KC beat SF 25-22 in OT at SB 58.
Agreed.... BUT Big Ben's game winning touchdown throw to Santoino Holmes in front of AND between 3 defenders, ranks right up there as an NFL all timer as well.
This is when he became my favorite receiver✌️
What an absolute stud Swann was ..... insane talent
thanks guys for another great videp
You're welcome!
Incredible performance from the past catching duo!
I had always known about “the immaculate reception” but didn’t know about the other 3 catches. Very impressive even by today’s standards
That's just God given talent right there both QB & Receiver!
Love it that Lambert Greeted Swan onthat last TD bomb....Lambert was always pissed😮 that the Steelers drafted Swan, before him
No. He was mad that the Browns didnt draft him. He lived thirty mins outside Cleveland. grew up a Browns fan
great clarity, amazing. How in the world? Wish all their old clips could look like this.
Technology now is terrifying 😂
That looks like a master copy
Mr. poetry in motion Lynn Swann.
A legend for the steelers. He won superbowls with Terry Bradshaw and Franco Harris.
No critic has ever played a snap of high school football, lynn swann played professional football in the 1970s at 160 pounds,winning 4 super bowl rings as a member of the last true dynasty in NFL history
I've measured it closely on video.... that pass was thrown from the 29 and would have landed at the 7 yard line. That was 64 yards in the air.
Truly, a thing of beauty. Deep and perfect. NFL Films ranked it the greatest throw of all time: ruclips.net/video/OrSkwRiC0LY/видео.html
Bradshaw could throw from end zone - end zone!👍✌️
This is great stuff.
Lynn Swann credits his grace to ballet lessons his mother made him take as a child. I remember watching an interview with him about the deflected ball he caught at the 50 (2nd one, I believe). He said that ballet taught him to keep his body upright, and that allowed him the ability to see the ball and catch it. He also compared the body posture of himself to Mark Washington's in that Washington tumbled and fell with no sense of body position.
Only 4 pass completions between them but completely game changers/difference makers
Unlike Art Monk or Cris Carter. Stat-padders.
Swann is the apotheosis of how every football player should handle the self.
Those were the days.
He was impressive with his great catches. I liked his catches.
I wish the NFL channel would show this Superbowl
It was a great one, I was 10 years old and watched it on tv, I have never forgotten it.
My favorite receiver as a kid some doo doo poppers say his stats are not there but he had Dynamic playing ability. 🤘🏻🙂
Stats, schmats. Fantasy football mentality has ruined the way the game is played and distorted what greatness means, making it about numbers instead of REAL production, clutch performance and winning.
Greatness isn't just about "how many," it's about "HOW." It's the stage on which a player performs his impact on the game, the style with which he played the game, and the legacy he leaves behind. Swann hit it out of the park with all these things.
@@mcmillenandwifeFantasy football is stupid.
Swann is the the case argumemt for quality over quantity.
Swann is making some of the most incredible catches in NFL history on the biggest stage and is simply returning to the huddle for the next play. I'm a hardcore Oakland Raider fan, but you have to respect the Steelers.
Rocky Bleier was superb at picking up the blitz on throws #2 and #4. Bradshaw to Swann - a thing of beauty.
@@davidpollard4051 Agrred! 🎯 Without those blocks, neither catch happens.
Beautiful work.....as usual my brother
This were the real Steelers honored to watch this games I can remember watching this games like it was yesterday
The quarterback's the bravest guy on the field.
Bradshaw's said he was used to not seeing his great passes completed, because he was on the ground.
For sure. It took a special breed of player to survive at QB in the ‘70s. It was open season. Stats didn’t matter… only winning mattered. Big plays in big moments. Fantasy football (and the mammoth stats-based gambling industry built around t) has ruined the NFL.
You can't even tackle the QB anymore, you have to sing him a lullaby and rock him to sleep
@@mrsatire9475Exactly, calling guys like Brady and Mahommes the best ever, is a joke. If they had to play in the 70s and 80s, they wouldn't have half the success that they have now. Bradshaw, Staubach and Montana are better than they are.
@@chrisoakley5830100% correct! You got that shit right my man!👍✌️
The last touchdown pass. 65 yards standing flat footed. Geez, what an arm!
If you need to see a quarterback put a ball where only his receiver can get it and trust him to do so while the receiver also knows this and is making the step and jump to go get it, this is a clinic on that trust on both sides. Take a good look folks, you hardly see this anymore. The defense on each play was excellent and today qb's are told dont throw it into that coverage. That sideline pass and catch showed exceptional footwork
Agreed. 🎯 The NFL was less “turnover averse” in those days. The rules made it much harder to score compared to today’s game, so offenses had to take risks to score. Bradshaw had the arm to get it done, and IMO, Swann was by far the best receiver of the era. No receiver did more with such limited opportunities. Simply phenomenal.
@mcmillenandwife I was watching an off side camera that showed a hit from behind Swan by Jack Tatum to the base 8f his neck by a forearm at speed that knocked Swan down and out. He actually kept playing that game and caught passes. They played a man's game. Then again, guys died quite often on early college football. So it is always about perspective
@@ronharvey8442 This video (link below) is as brutal a shot as I’ve seen a receiver take. It’s in the first quarter, and Swann just pops up, trots back to the huddle, then goes on to rip the Browns apart (as usual). He was an amazing player. ruclips.net/video/Ax80A1nD62Y/видео.htmlsi=Jfb0IBPfMHKld4Pl
When the NFL was worth watching.
Swann made some great catches but Bradshaw’s throws were incredible also…. Especially that last one!
The falling down catch at mid field is the greatest in NFL history.
Sorry......it's the Immaculate Reception.....
There can be Only One!
@@rileyjackfansmithandjones8238 Yes, there can only be one, and it's the one made by Swann, the catch by Harris was pure luck.
@@chrisoakley5830 you're wrong on that one......Harris was only meant to block on the play......when Bradshaw scrambled and shook off Raider Tacklers......Franco did what he learned at Penn State.......If you are unblocked.....Drift to where the Ball is supposed to go......he moved himself down toward Fuqua, because that was the play. It was Luck that he caught it......but he actually created the Chance, by listening to his College Coach Joe Paterno........and it Paid Off......with less than 25 seconds on the Clock!
Swann was the best receiver of the 70’s. His teammate Stallworth was 2nd best.
Agreed. Getting them BOTH in the same draft was like winning the lottery. Not to mention Lambert and Webster in that draft (and Shell as an undrafted free agent). Just amazing. There will never be another draft like it.
BRAdshaw AnD lynnE hell of a combo
Lynn Swann was the very deserving MVP of Super Bowl X, and I'll bet the Cowboy defensive back assigned to cover him, Mark Washington, still has nightmares over this game.
At 2:34 I think that fan is having a religious moment after Lynn Swann’s TD.
😂 He’s the poster child for heartbreak.
He's eulogizing the cremation of Mark Washington.
@@JAWrightonline 😂
@2:10 Okay. That was about a 70-yard throw.
Insane, isn’t it? 😮💪🏻
Bradshaw the original TB12
He's the better of the two also, Brady didn't play the same game that Bradshaw had to play.
@@chrisoakley5830 a lot of people would disagree with u.
@@nala3038 Yes, that's true, and as you can see I would disagree with them. It's all a matter of opinion.
@@chrisoakley5830Yep, different era of football, it was real football back then, today it's more like flag football👍✌️
My steelers!❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Swann is the GOAT, followed by Rice, Moss, M Harrison, Stallworth, and AB
Nah nah nah... Love me some Swann, but the G.O.A.T? Absolutely not!!! Jerry Rice is not only the G.O.A.T. from the receiver position, but many think he is in the conversation, with Jim Brown, as the greatest football PLAYER ever.
Lynn Swann is one of the greatest players in the history of the NFL!!
No doubt
If I could pick an all-time NFL team my starting WRs are Swann and Stallworth -- numbers/stats be damned. When they had to make the big plays, regular or post season, they always rose to the occassions. They didn't get to grab huge quantities of catches but on a team like this, making the plays they did with 3, 4, 5 receptions a game, with the hits they had to take from myriad great physical defenses, damn that's just sheer quality. I love Rice. Terrell, Moss and Carter, but pound for pound, it's Swann and Stallworth.
Agreed. Quality over quantity. 👍🏻👍🏻
Nobody like Swannie, except Stallworth! Those were THE days!
OH How I remember that Game.
STILLARS !!!!!
Mr Swann was incredible, Mr. Bradshaw’s arm was amazing
Man i had forgotten about swann .
Is it just me or did Swann come thru in all tha SBs?✌️
jeez.. helmet to helmet on bradshaw on the TD. that was brutal
Yeah, they were playing a radically different game back then.
Bradshaw threw that ball 65 yards and hit Swann in stride. And he got knocked out.