NFL game summary for 01/18/1976:
What were at the time the two most popular teams in the NFL met in Super Bowl X, and the contrast between their styles was greater than that of their jerseys. Only four years away from their victory in Super Bowl VI, the glitzy, white-clad Dallas Cowboys -- "America's Team," if you will -- combined a high tech offense and a state-of-the-art flex defense to put on a dazzling show each Sunday. They were easy to like, and for once they even had an underdog aura, having reached the Big Game after starting as a playoff wild card. The Pittsburgh Steelers, wearing bad-guy black to defend their Super Bowl win of the year before, lived by a steel hard defense occasionally spelled by a grind-it-out running attack that would have been at home in the 1930s.
The Cowboys struck first. Roger Staubach zeroed in on Drew Pearson for a 29-yard touchdown pass. Before the first quarter ended, Pittsburgh evened the score on a seven-yard pass from Terry Bradshaw to tight end Randy Grossman. Setting up the score was a 32-yard pass to Steeler receiver Lynn Swann on which he outleaped a Dallas defender and then magically kept both feet inside the sideline to make his catch legal. Going into the game, Swann's status had been questionable because of a concussion he'd suffered in the AFC championship game. In practice, he'd dropped every pass thrown to him.
The second quarter was scoreless until Cowboy Toni Fritsch booted a 36-yard field goal with only fifteen seconds left on the clock. Earlier, Pittsburgh's Roy Gerela, playing at less than a hundred percent because of a cracked rib he'd earned with a tackle on the opening kickoff, shanked a field goal try. Dallas safety Cliff Harris mockingly patted him on the helmet only to be unceremoniously dumped on his hip pads by an irate Jack Lambert. Macho displays aside, Dallas went to the locker room with a 10-7 lead.
The defenses continued to dominate in the third quarter which saw three fewer points scored than the second. Pittsburgh sacked Staubach seven times during the game and forced him to scramble on five other occasions. Moreover, they pressured him into three interceptions, and straight arrow Staubach normally threw interceptions about as often as he used gutter language.
The fourth quarter lacked only the kitchen sink. First, Steeler reserve fullback Reggie Harrison blocked Mitch Hoopes' punt. The ball rolled through the end zone for a safety to cut the score to 10-9. Gerela, who'd donned a corset to protect his rib, regained his kicking touch with field goals of 36 and 18 yards to put the Steelers in front 15-10. With 3:02 left, Bradshaw lofted a long pass to game MVP Swann who caught the ball at the five and took it over the goal line to complete a 64-yard lightning strike. Swann finished the day with 161 yards on four catches, a tidy 40.3 average per catch. Bradshaw only saw the TD on film; he'd been knocked loopy by the Dallas pass rush. Gerela missed the extra point.
Now it was Dallas' turn with Captain Comeback Staubach in charge. It took Roger Relentless only 1:14 to get the touchdown back, completing a drive with a 34-yard bullseye to Percy Howard -- exactly one more pass than Howard caught during the regular season.
Terry Hanratty replaced the woozy Bradshaw, but the Steelers were stalled fourth-and-nine at the Dallas 41 with almost a minute and a half to go. Coach Noll feared a blocked kick and called for a Rocky Bleier run that gained only two yards. Noll was gambling that his defense could stop the Cowboys.
Only four points down, 21-17, Staubach had the ball back with more time than he usually needed to negotiate 61 yards. Down the field came the Cowboys, but with no timeouts remaining for Dallas, the clock kept running. With five seconds left, Staubach launched his final pass into the end zone. Steeler Mike Wagner batted the ball but it was caught -- by another Steeler, Glen Edwards. Pittsburgh had its second straight Super Bowl win.
Team stats coming into this game (NFL ranks in parentheses):
Team | Rush Yds/Gm | Pass Yds/Gm | Tot Yds/Gm | Turnovers | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
OFFENSE | 188.1 (2) | 161.0 (14) | 349.1 (6) | 32 | |
DEFENSE | 129.6 (7) | 131.1 (4) | 260.8 (4) | 37 | |
OFFENSE | 173.7 (5) | 185.2 (4) | 358.9 (3) | 35 | |
DEFENSE | 121.4 (4) | 145.7 (8) | 267.1 (5) | 44 |
Line: Steelers by 7
Team | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | F |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pittsburgh Steelers (15-2-0) | 7 | 0 | 0 | 14 | 21 |
Dallas Cowboys (12-5-0) | 7 | 3 | 0 | 7 | 17 |
PIT DAL First Downs: 13 14 Rushes-yards: 46-149 31-108 Yards/rush: 3.2 3.5 Comp-Att-Yd-INT: 9-19-209-0 15-24-204-3 Sacked-yards: 2-19 7-42 Net pass yards: 190 162 Net yards/pass: 9.0 5.2 Total net yards: 339 270 Total plays: 67 (68% run) 62 (50% run) Yards/play: 5.1 4.4 Fumbles-lost: 4-0 4-0 Turnovers: 0 3 Penalties-yards: 0-0 2-20 Attendance: 80,187
PIT: Terry Bradshaw, 9 of 19 for 209 yards and 2 TDs DAL: Roger Staubach, 15 of 24 for 204 yards and 2 TDs (3 int)
Rushing:
PIT: Franco Harris, 27 for 82 yards; Rocky Bleier, 15 for 51 yards; Terry Bradshaw, 4 for 16 yards DAL: Robert Newhouse, 16 for 56 yards; Roger Staubach, 5 for 22 yards; Doug Dennison, 5 for 16 yards; Preston Pearson, 5 for 14 yards
Receiving:
PIT: Lynn Swann, 4 for 161 yards and 1 TD; John Stallworth, 2 for 8 yards; Franco Harris, 1 for 26 yards; Larry Brown, 1 for 7 yards; Randy Grossman, 1 for 7 yards and 1 TD DAL: Preston Pearson, 5 for 53 yards; Charley Young, 3 for 31 yards; Drew Pearson, 2 for 59 yards and 1 TD; Robert Newhouse, 2 for 12 yards; Percy Howard, 1 for 34 yards and 1 TD; Jean Fugett, 1 for 9 yards; Doug Dennison, 1 for 6 yards
Kick returns:
PIT: Mel Blount, 3 for 64 yards; Mike Collier, 1 for 25 yards DAL: Preston Pearson, 4 for 48 yards
Punt returns:
PIT: Dave Brown, 3 for 14 yards; Glen Edwards, 2 for 17 yards DAL: Golden Richards, 1 for 5 yards
Interceptions:
PIT: Glen Edwards, 1 for 35 yards; J.T. Thomas, 1 for 35 yards; Mike Wagner, 1 for 19 yards
Punting:
PIT: Bobby Walden, 4 for 159 yards DAL: Mitch Hoopes, 6 for 245 yards
Field Goals:
PIT: Roy Gerela, 2/4 DAL: Toni Fritsch, 1/1