Early use of the term •
1922 — On October 28, 1922, the term "Hail Mary play" was used by
Knute Rockne's
Notre Dame in a victory over
Georgia Tech. Notre Dame trailed 3–0 in the second half and had been unable to move the ball effectively.
Noble Kizer, the one
Presbyterian player on the Notre Dame team, stopped play and said to his teammates, "Boys, let's have a Hail Mary." They all prayed, and
Elmer Layden scored a touchdown. On the next possession, Kizer said, "Let's have another Hail Mary," and Layden scored another touchdown. After the game, Kizer said, "Say, that Hail Mary is the best play we've got." An account written in 1935 presented a variation on the 1922 "Hail Mary" play as follows: In the huddle the boys were surprised to hear the non-Catholic say: 'C'mon fellows let's have a 'Hail Mary.' The boys said the quick prayer and on the next play
Jimmy Crowley dashed 30 yards for a touchdown. Some time later Notre Dame was again stopped and again this non-Catholic called on the boys for a Hail Mary. On the next play
Stuhldreher tossed a 25 yard pass to Layden for a score. In between halves this same lad was chuckling to himself. He turned to one of his teammates and said, 'Boy that Hail Mary is a ________ of a play.' •
1935 — On November 2, 1935,
Notre Dame faced an undefeated
Ohio State team and trailed 13–0 at the start of the fourth quarter. Notre Dame scored two touchdowns to cut Ohio State's lead to 13–12. With less than a minute left in the game, Notre Dame quarterback
Andy Pilney ran 30 yards to the Ohio State 19-yard line. Pilney was injured and had to be carried off the field on a stretcher.
William Shakespeare (nicknamed the "Merchant of Menace") replaced Pilney. With the clock running out, the ball was snapped to the fullback who handed it to Shakespeare on what appeared to be a reverse. Shakespeare threw a pass into the end zone, which was caught by Wayne Millner on his knees for an 18–13 win.
Red Barber, who broadcast the game on radio, later called it "the greatest college football game I ever called." Radio announcer Tom Manning added, "I always said Shakespeare had a pair of rosary beads and a bottle of holy water in his back pocket." The media picked up stories of the Catholic faithful praying for Notre Dame as they listened to the game on the radio. One nun told a reporter of overhearing a colleague in her convent "gamefully bargaining" and eventually "threatening" the Poor Souls and saints for another Notre Dame touchdown. In 1969, the game was selected in a poll by the
Associated Press as the "game of the century", the best game in the first 100 years of college football. •
1940 — In 1940,
Georgetown quarterback Joe McFadden used a play referred to as the "'Hail Mary' pass." An
Associated Press article published in December 1940 noted: "A 'Hail Mary' pass, in the talk of the Washington eleven, is one that is thrown with a prayer because the odds against completion are big."
Contemporary use of the term •
1980 —
Holiday Bowl —
BYU vs.
SMU: BYU quarterback
Jim McMahon completed a 41-yard Hail Mary to
Clay Brown on the game's final play for a 46–45 win. The game is known as the "
Miracle Bowl" because the Cougars overcame Southern Methodist's 45–25 lead with four minutes left in the game, sealing the victory with a touchdown and kick after time expired. Brown's catch remains one of the most spectacular Hail Mary receptions in football history. He was completely surrounded by Southern Methodist defenders in the end zone, but he outjumped all of them and managed to hold on to the ball during the subsequent pileup. •
1984 —
Boston College vs.
Miami (FL): Boston College quarterback
Doug Flutie threw a 48-yard Hail Mary to
Gerard Phelan for the 47–45 victory. The play is known as "
Hail Flutie" and is generally credited with winning Flutie the Heisman Trophy later that season. •
1989 —
Southern Miss vs.
Louisville: With Southern Mississippi on its own 21 yard line and only six seconds remaining,
Brett Favre heaved a pass that bounced off of the helmet of the Eagles' Michael Jackson and over to wide receiver Darryl Tillman. Tillman scored as time expired, breaking a 10–10 deadlock. At 79 yards, the throw was probably the longest Hail Mary pass ever completed and was later voted on as one of the "Top 5 Memorable Moments" in college football history during an ESPN.com online vote. •
1994 —
Colorado vs.
Michigan: Down by 5 points, with 6 seconds to play, #7 Colorado lined up in a formation called 'Jets' – 4-wideouts with trips left. Colorado quarterback
Kordell Stewart had good protection, dropped back to his 27-yard line, scrambled a bit, and heaved the ball 73 yards in the air down to the opposing 1-yard line. The play, known as 'Rocket Left', called for
Michael Westbrook to tip the ball into the end zone for backup wideout Blake Anderson, but it was in fact Anderson in the middle of a cluster of players who tipped it to Westbrook for a 64-yard touchdown pass on the last play of the game. Colorado won 27–26, and the play (which Colorado had also run at the end of the first half, resulting in #4 Michigan intercepting it) became known as "The
Miracle at Michigan" and took home an
ESPY for College Football Play of the Year. •
2000 —
Northwestern vs.
Minnesota: Northwestern quarterback
Zak Kustok completed a 45-yard Hail Mary to wide receiver Sam Simmons. The touchdown gave Northwestern a 41–35 victory as the Wildcats rallied from a 35–14 deficit. The play (a volleyball-style tip to the trailing wide receiver) was named "Victory Right." •
2001 —
Miami (OH) vs.
Akron: Future Super Bowl-winning quarterback
Ben Roethlisberger completed a 70-yard tipped pass to Eddie Tillitz to defeat Akron 30–27 on the last play. The play was dubbed "Big Ben" (an old Atlanta Falcon name for the Hail Mary pass) and helped Roethlisberger earn the nickname that he would later be known by. •
2002 —
LSU vs.
Kentucky: This game ended in a 75-yard Hail Mary pass, thrown by Louisiana State quarterback
Marcus Randall, deflected by Kentucky into the hands of Louisiana State receiver
Devery Henderson. Before the play, Kentucky players gave a "Gatorade bath" to the head coach thinking they would win. After the play, fireworks were then fired into the air over the stadium and Kentucky fans rushed onto the field and even started tearing down the goal posts in the opposite
end zone, not knowing that they had lost. Louisiana State won the game 33–30. The play is known as the "
Bluegrass Miracle". •
2003 —
Tennessee vs.
Florida: Tennessee quarterback
Casey Clausen threw a 48-yard touchdown pass to
James Banks on the final play of the first half. The play gave Tennessee a 7–3 lead and they went on to win 24–10. •
2004 —
Texas A&M vs.
Oklahoma State: DeQwan Mobley of Texas A&M caught a long Hail Mary pass just before halftime. •
2005 —
Washington vs.
Arizona: During the closing seconds of the first half, Washington quarterback
Isaiah Stanback heaved a pass 69 yards to
Craig Chambers to tie the game at 14. Washington would eventually win 38–14. •
2005 —
2005 Capital One Bowl — #12
Iowa vs. #11
LSU: Iowa quarterback Drew Tate threw a 56-yard touchdown pass to Warren Holloway on the game's final play to give the Hawkeyes a 30–25 victory. The game was coach
Nick Saban's last at Louisiana State, as he was leaving to coach the
Miami Dolphins. •
2006 —
NC State vs.
Boston College: A 34-yard Hail Mary from North Carolina State quarterback
Daniel Evans to wideout John Dunlap with 8 seconds left gave North Carolina State a 17–15 victory. •
2006 —
Arkansas State vs.
Memphis: A 53-yard Hail Mary from quarterback
Corey Leonard to wide receiver Patrick Higgins with 6 seconds left gave Arkansas State a 26–23 victory. •
2006 —
Washington vs.
California: In his third career start, quarterback Carl Bonnell threw a 40-yard Hail Mary that was tipped by three Cal defenders at the goal line and caught by Marlon Wood at the two yard line with no time left. He dove into the end zone to tie the game at 24–24. Cal would win in overtime, and the image of
Marshawn Lynch driving the injury cart in celebration became the lasting image from the game, rather than the game-tying pass. •
2007 —
Iowa vs.
Indiana: On September 29, trailing 21–0 with five seconds left in the first half, Iowa quarterback Jake Christensen's took the snap and made a 33-yard desperation heave into the end zone that was deflected by a group of three Hoosier defensive backs before being caught by receiver Trey Stross. Iowa went on to lose the game. •
2007 —
Army vs.
Tulane: Trailing 17–10, Army quarterback Kevin Dunn threw a 36-yard Hail Mary that was tipped by two Tulane defenders and a diving catch was made by Mike Wright to tie the game at 17–17. Army went on to win the game in overtime, 20–17. •
2008 —
Middle Tennessee vs.
Florida Atlantic: Middle Tennessee quarterback
Joe Craddock threw a touchdown pass to Malcolm Beyah as time expired to beat Florida Atlantic 14–13. •
2008 —
Buffalo vs.
Temple: Buffalo receiver
Naaman Roosevelt hauled in a 35-yard Hail Mary pass from quarterback
Drew Willy to stun Temple. The play capped a remarkable final three minutes that saw the lead change hands three times. The Bulls won by a final score of 30–28. •
2008 —
UC Davis vs. : After an illegal procedure penalty, UC Davis was moved out of field goal range to the 38 yard line, down 30–28 with two seconds remaining. Quarterback Greg Denham completed a Hail Mary pass to wide receiver Bakari Grant as time expired to win the game 34–30. •
2010 —
East Carolina vs.
Tulsa: East Carolina defeated Tulsa 51–49 with a Hail Mary pass on its final play. The pass was thrown by Dominque Davis and caught by Justin Jones. •
2010 —
UAB vs.
Troy: Quarterback Bryan Ellis of UAB threw a 44-yard pass to Jackie Williams as time expired to top Troy at Legion Field, 34–33. •
2011 —
Michigan State vs.
Wisconsin: On the final play of the game with the score tied at 31, Michigan State quarterback
Kirk Cousins threw a pass into the end zone that was caught by
Keith Nichol at the 1-yard line after being deflected off B. J. Cunningham's helmet. Nichol fought two Wisconsin defenders for the extra yard to reach the end zone. It was not ruled a touchdown on the field, however the call was overturned after video replays showed that the ball had crossed the plane, making the play a 44-yard touchdown pass, giving a 37–31 win to Michigan State. It was Nichol's only catch of the game. •
2011 —
Boise State vs.
Wyoming: With 1 second to play before halftime, Boise State quarterback
Kellen Moore threw a 46-yard pass that Wyoming cornerback
Tashaun Gipson batted into the air. Wide receiver Matt Miller, who had already fallen to the ground, caught the ball on his chest as it fell towards him, breaking a 7–7 tie. Boise State used the momentum going into halftime to further expand their lead in the second half and win by a significant margin. •
2011 —
2012 Capital One Bowl — #9
South Carolina vs. #20
Nebraska: Down 13–9 at the end of the first half, South Carolina quarterback
Connor Shaw took the snap from South Carolina's 49-yard line with six seconds remaining. Shaw heaved a Hail Mary pass, which was caught at the 4-yard line by wide receiver
Alshon Jeffery, who dove into the end zone for a touchdown as time expired. South Carolina went on to win 30–13, and Jeffrey was named MVP of the game. •
2012 —
Southern Utah vs.
California: On the final play of the second quarter, Southern Utah quarterback
Brad Sorensen rolled right and threw a 37-yard pass into the end zone that was tipped by several players before wide receiver
Cameron Morgan made a one handed catch in the back of the end zone. The touchdown closed the Bears lead to 20–10. The Bears would eventually win 50–31. •
2012 —
Auburn vs.
Louisiana–Monroe: A struggling 0–2 Auburn team completed a Hail Mary pass just before halftime when
Kiehl Frazier connected with
Sammie Coates, giving the Tigers a 21–14 halftime lead. Auburn was then able to hang on to win in overtime over a Louisiana-Monroe team that had upset
Arkansas the previous week. •
2013 —
Texas vs.
Iowa State: As time expired in the second quarter, quarterback
Case McCoy threw a 44-yard pass that was caught by wide receiver Josh Harris. The pass gave the Longhorns a 17–13 lead and was crucial in their 31–30 victory over the Cyclones. •
2013 —
Nebraska vs.
Northwestern: Trailing 24–21 with four seconds left in the game, Nebraska quarterback Ron Kellogg III tossed a ball that was caught by receiver
Jordan Westerkamp in the end zone. The ball was tipped in the air at the goal line by a Northwestern player before Westerkamp, who was behind the cluster at the goal line, caught the ball 2–3 yards into the end zone. The pass gave the Cornhuskers a 27–24 victory. The play is called "The Westercatch" by Husker fans. •
2013 —
Deep South's Oldest Rivalry — #7
Auburn vs. #25
Georgia: Trailing 38–37 with 36 seconds left in the game, Auburn quarterback
Nick Marshall threw a 73-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Ricardo Louis. The ball was overthrown but was deflected by Georgia defenders
Josh Harvey-Clemons and Tray Matthews at the 23-yard line, falling into the hands of Louis, who bobbled and then controlled the catch. The score known as "
The Prayer at Jordan-Hare" gave Auburn a 43–38 win. •
2014 —
Jackson State vs.
Florida A&M: Jackson State quarterback LaMontiez Ivy threw a 60-yard Hail Mary pass to wide receiver DeSean McKenzie with one second remaining in regulation to defeat Florida A&M 22–16. •
2014 —
Edward Waters vs.
Pikeville: Edward Waters quarterback Tyler Mahla completed a 46-yard pass to Devion Laws to tie the score at 48 with no time left in regulation. Kicker Christopher Miglioranzi added the extra point to seal the win. Edward Waters outscored Pikeville 35–7 in the fourth quarter. •
2014 —
Arizona vs.
California: Arizona quarterback
Anu Solomon launched a 47-yard Hail Mary pass to wide receiver Austin Hill as time expired to defeat visiting California, 49–45. The play capped off a 22-point second half rally in which Arizona scored 36 points in the 4th quarter, including the game's last 19 points in the final 3:30. Fans dubbed the play the "Hill Mary". •
2014 —
Houston vs.
BYU: Houston quarterback
John O'Korn heaved a 45-yard Hail Mary pass to wide receiver Daniel Spencer in the end zone to pull the Cougars of Houston within a possession at the end of the first half, 23–15, after falling behind 23–0 with 3:23 to play. However, three missed kicks (two points after touchdown and a blocked field goal) doomed Houston in its loss, 33–25. •
2014 —
USC vs.
Oregon State: Leading 14–10 right before halftime,
Cody Kessler threw a 48-yard Hail Mary pass that was caught by Darreus Rogers on the 1. Rogers then was able to run in the end zone, giving the Trojans a 21–10 lead. USC ended up winning the game 35–10. •
2014 —
Arizona State vs.
USC: Trailing 34–32 with seven seconds remaining, Arizona State quarterback
Mike Bercovici completed a 46-yard Hail Mary pass to wide receiver Jaelen Strong as time expired to defeat #16 USC, 38–34, in Los Angeles. This was the first time Arizona State had won in the Coliseum since 1999. This completed a 9-point comeback in the last 3:02 during which Arizona State had no timeouts. USC had several defenders on the goal line, but Strong had enough space to leap for and catch the ball just in front of the end zone and then scored the touchdown before the defenders could react. Bercovici, a California native, was starting just his second game that year, having replaced an injured Taylor Kelly. This was not the first time that first-year USC coach
Steve Sarkisian had lost on a long pass against Arizona State: in 2009, when he was head coach at
the University of Washington) Sarkisian's team was defeated when Danny Sullivan completed a 50-yard pass to Chris McGaha with five seconds remaining in a game that
Arizona State won 24–17. •
2014 —
University of Central Florida at
East Carolina: After blowing a 26–9 fourth quarter lead, the Knights won 32–30, claiming a share of the
American Athletic Conference title when Justin Holman completed a 51-yard Hail Mary to
Breshad Perriman as time expired. •
2014 —
Bahamas Bowl –
Central Michigan vs.
Western Kentucky: Western Kentucky was leading 49–14 heading into the fourth quarter, but Central Michigan rallied by scoring five unanswered touchdowns in the period, including a last-second pass from quarterback
Cooper Rush 48 yards downfield to receiver Jesse Kroll, who then lateraled the ball to Deon Butler for 10 yards. Butler then lateraled to Courtney Williams for 2 yards. Williams finally lateraled to
Titus Davis, who sprinted down the sideline and managed the reach the ball over the pylon for the touchdown that pulled the Chippewas within a point at 49–48. Central Michigan elected to go for the win on a
two-point conversion, but Rush's pass on a fade route was broken up, which allowed the Hilltoppers to escape with a 49–48 victory. •
2014 —
2014 Capital One Orange Bowl –
Mississippi State vs.
Georgia Tech: As time expired in the first half, Mississippi State quarterback
Dak Prescott threw a 42-yard pass that was tipped and caught in the end zone by receiver
Fred Ross. The touchdown cut Georgia Tech's lead to 21–20, but the Bulldogs would eventually lose to the Jackets 49–34. •
2015 —
BYU vs.
Nebraska: With his team trailing 28–27 with one second remaining, BYU backup quarterback
Tanner Mangum threw a 42-yard pass that was caught by receiver Mitch Matthews, who managed to fall across the goal line as he was tackled by a trio of Cornhusker defenders. The touchdown gave BYU a 33–28 win and ended Nebraska's Football Bowl Subdivision record 29-game winning streak in season openers. •
2015 —
BYU vs.
Boise State: Incredibly, for a second consecutive week (following their last second, "Hail Mary" win over Nebraska in their previous game), BYU pulled off a miraculous victory with another long "all or nothing" pass from freshman quarterback Tanner Mangum. This time, with his team trailing 24–21 with 54 seconds left in the game and facing 4th-and-7, Mangum evaded a sack and tossed a 35-yard pass to BYU receiver Mitchell Juergens, who pulled it down in the end zone to put the Cougars ahead. BYU defensive back Kai Nacua then returned an interception 50 yards for another touchdown in the last remaining seconds to close out a 35–24 win. •
2016 —
Central Michigan vs.
Oklahoma State: With Central Michigan trailing 27–24 with no time remaining on its own 49-yard line, with an untimed down following an Oklahoma State penalty, Chippewas quarterback Cooper Rush threw a Hail Mary to Jesse Kroll, hitting him just inside the Cowboys' 10-yard line. In a planned play, Kroll than lateraled to Corey Willis, who ran into the end zone for a touchdown to give the Chippewas a 30–27 win. The game was known not only for its finish, but for an officiating error that made the play possible. Shortly after the game, the referee in charge, as well as representatives from the two conferences involved (
MAC and
Big 12), announced that the Chippewas should not have been allowed to run their winning play. On the previous play, during which the clock ran out, Oklahoma State had been called for intentional grounding on fourth down. Under NCAA rules, an accepted live-ball penalty on fourth down cannot end the game; however, an exception to that rule states that if the penalty includes a loss of down (as is the case with intentional grounding), the game ends at that point. This nuance in the rules was missed by both the officiating crew, provided by the MAC, and the replay crew, provided by the Big 12. •
2016 —
Tennessee vs.
Georgia: After a Georgia touchdown with 10 seconds remaining in regulation, it appeared as if the Bulldogs would win this game leading 31–28. It was not to be. Aided by a couple of Georgia penalties, on the last play of the game, Tennessee quarterback
Joshua Dobbs threw a 43-yard Hail Mary to receiver Jauan Jennings, who outleaped several Georgia defenders in the end zone to secure the catch. The touchdown gave the Volunteers a 34–31 win, after trailing as many as 17 points. For more details on this game, see
Hail Mary between The Hedges. •
2017 —
Tennessee vs.
Florida: With 9 seconds remaining in regulation in a tied game, Florida quarterback
Feleipe Franks escaped traffic before heaving a 63-yard pass intended for receiver
Tyrie Cleveland in the end zone. Cleveland beat two Tennessee defenders to haul in the game-winning catch as time expired, resulting in a 26–20 Florida victory. This play is referred to by most fans as the "Hail Feleipe" or the "Heave to Cleve". •
2021 —
South Dakota vs.
South Dakota State: Clinging onto a 20–17 lead with only seconds left in the fourth quarter, South Dakota State attempted to run out the clock on fourth down by having their quarterback run around in the backfield and then throwing the ball away into the stands, but after a video review, the officials determined there was still 1 second left on the clock when the ball left the field of play. Following the turnover on downs, with that 1 second remaining and the ball at their own 43-yard line, South Dakota Coyotes quarterback Carson Camp threw a successful 57-yard walk-off Hail Mary touchdown to win the game 23–20: the ball bounced off the hands of multiple South Dakota State defenders before being caught by South Dakota wide receiver
Jeremiah Webb. •
2022 —
Appalachian State vs.
Troy: With two seconds left in regulation and the Mountaineers trailing 28–26 from its own 47-yard line, Chase Brice threw up a desperation pass to the end zone. The jump ball was tipped and deflected into the grasp of Appalachian State receiver Christan Horn at the 7-yard line. Horn got a block from his teammate and trotted into the end zone to give the Mountaineers a wild 32–28 victory with no time left on the clock. This game was notable for also being preceded by the first ever visit of the
ESPN program
College GameDay to
Boone. •
2023 —
Houston vs.
West Virginia: Despite trailing 35–24 in the fourth quarter, West Virginia scored two consecutive touchdowns, including a 4th and 10 conversion with 12 seconds left on the clock to lead 39–35. On the last play of the game from around the 50-yard line, Houston quarterback
Donovan Smith threw the game-winning pass which tipped to wide receiver Stephon Johnson to win the game for the Cougars, 41–39. •
2023 —
Alabama vs.
Auburn: In the fourth quarter of the 2023 edition of the
Iron Bowl, trailing 24–20, 8th–ranked Alabama suddenly found themselves in Auburn's territory following a muffed Auburn punt return. After driving the ball all the way to Auburn's 7–yard line, Alabama fell back to the 31–yard line on fourth down after a botched center–quarterback exchange and a penalty for QB
Jalen Milroe being past the
line of scrimmage on a pass attempt. On 4th down with 43 seconds remaining, Auburn sent two linemen to rush Milroe, a linebacker to spy Milroe, and had the remaining eight defenders try to stop an Alabama touchdown. Meanwhile, Alabama sent three wide receivers to Milroe's left and two to his right. After spending six seconds in the pocket, Milroe saw wide receiver
Isaiah Bond facing single coverage against Auburn defensive back
D. J. James. Bond leaped over James while staying in bounds to catch the game–winning touchdown. The 27–24 win jumped Alabama up to 11–1 on the season, keeping the Tide's hopes of making the
College Football Playoff alive. The Tide would end up making the field of four following an upset victory against #1
Georgia in the
SEC Championship Game. ==Professional football==