There have been many notable cases where the halfback option pass has been used with great success. • Perhaps the first use of the play occurred under
Homer Woodson Hargiss at the
College of Emporia in 1910. • In
Super Bowl XII, Dallas Cowboys fullback
Robert Newhouse threw a 29-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver
Golden Richards, versus the Denver Broncos, becoming the first fullback/halfback to throw a touchdown pass in Super Bowl history. QB
Roger Staubach took the snap and pitched the ball to Newhouse who ran left, faking a sweep, before pulling up and throwing a game sealing pass to Richards. • The
Los Angeles Rams successfully used a halfback option in
Super Bowl XIV, with quarterback
Vince Ferragamo handing the ball off to running back
Lawrence McCutcheon who then passed it to wide receiver Ron Smith for a 24-yard touchdown. • In
Super Bowl XXII,
Denver Broncos quarterback
John Elway caught a 23-yard pass from halfback
Steve Sewell on the halfback option play, becoming the first quarterback ever to catch a pass in the Super Bowl. • Former
San Diego Chargers running back
LaDainian Tomlinson successfully threw seven touchdowns on option passes on just twelve career passing attempts. • In
college football, the
Arkansas Razorbacks used halfback option passes with great success in
2006, using running back
Darren McFadden in the role. • During the
2008 NFL season, the halfback option play became particularly popular with the advent of the
Wildcat formation. In Week 3 of that season, the play was used no less than nine times across the league, four times by
Miami Dolphins running back
Ronnie Brown, twice by McFadden, and once by
Baltimore Ravens running back
Willis McGahee. • A halfback option pass was one of the many
trick plays successfully used by
Boise State in its win over
Oklahoma in the
2007 Fiesta Bowl. • The
Cincinnati Bengals successfully used a halfback option in
Super Bowl LVI, with quarterback
Joe Burrow pitching the ball to running back
Joe Mixon who then passed it to wide receiver
Tee Higgins for a 6-yard touchdown. • Fictionally, the 1998 film
The Waterboy prominently featured the halfback option as the game-winning play, with
Bobby Boucher, in position as halfback, completing a
Hail Mary pass to quarterback
Guy Grenouille. ==References==