The lateral pass rule, or rather the lack of restrictions contained therein, has given rise to some of the most memorable and incredible
walk-off touchdowns in football history. Both collegiate and NFL football have certain examples of football lore which involve laterals. This is not a complete list. This is only the most known plays with lateral passes.
One lateral pass A well-known and controversial NFL lateral pass occurred during the
Music City Miracle play at the end of the 2000 playoff game between the
Tennessee Titans and the
Buffalo Bills. The play was a true lateral (the ball did not move forward or backward in the pass), but the receiver was a step ahead of the passer and reached back to catch the ball, so it gave the appearance of an illegal forward pass. In October 2003, the Minnesota Vikings faced the Denver Broncos with the scores tied at 7–7 as the first half came to a close. With 12 seconds left in the half and the Vikings on their own 41-yard line facing a 3rd-and-24,
Daunte Culpepper threw a long pass to
Randy Moss, who caught the ball at the Denver 10-yard line. As Moss was being tackled and driven backwards by two Broncos defenders, he tossed the ball over his head for a blind lateral to running back
Moe Williams at the 15, and Williams ran it into the end zone for a touchdown to give the Vikings a 14–7 lead at halftime. This play was later named the 68th greatest play in the first 100 years of the NFL. Another well known play was executed in a college football game by Presbyterian against Wake Forest in 2010. In this trick play, three lateral pass rules were used in combination. First the quarterback passed the ball sideways while intentionally bouncing the ball on the ground (a so-called "fake fumble pass"). The pass-receiver faked the end of the play, suggesting that it was an incomplete pass, but then passed the ball forward to a wide-receiver, who successfully ran for a touchdown. Wake Forest coach Jim Grobe described the play "as well executed as anything I’ve ever seen".
Multiple lateral passes In a college football game in 1982, the famous
walk-off touchdown simply called
The Play happened with five backward passes. In the
Big Game between
Stanford and
California, with four seconds left and trailing by one point, Cal ran the
kickoff all the way for the walk-off touchdown using five backward passes, eventually running through the
Stanford Band, who had already taken the field (believing the game was over after Stanford players appeared to have tackled a Cal ball-carrier). The game remains controversial because of Stanford's contention that the Cal player's knee was down before he passed the ball during the third lateral and that the fifth lateral was an illegal
forward pass. In an NFL game in 2003, there was a well known play called the
River City Relay with three lateral passes. The game was between the
New Orleans Saints and the
Jacksonville Jaguars. The game was held on December 21, 2003. With time running out, the Saints threw backward passes and brought the ball down the length of the field for a
touchdown. However,
kicker John Carney missed the
extra point, which would have tied the game, so the Saints lost by one point, 20–19. In a
Division III college football game in 2007 there was a walk-off touchdown play with 15 lateral passes. On October 27, 2007,
Trinity University was trailing by two points with two seconds left in a game against conference rival
Millsaps College. Starting from their own 39-yard line, Trinity called a play for a short pass across the middle. The receiver pitched the ball backward, with a sequence of additional backward passes as players were in danger of being tackled. The "
Mississippi Miracle" ultimately included 15 backward passes as it covered 61 yards for the walk-off touchdown. On October 31, 2015, the
Miami Hurricanes college football team threw eight lateral passes over the course of 45 seconds to score a touchdown and upset the 22nd-ranked
Duke Blue Devils 30–27. The play stirred controversy amid a number of missed calls by the
Atlantic Coast Conference officiating crew, which subsequently resulted in a two-game suspension for both the on-field crew along with the replay officials. On December 9, 2018, there was a play with two lateral passes for a walk-off touchdown in an NFL game. The
Miami Dolphins pulled off the
only walk-off touchdown to involve multiple lateral passes in NFL history, completing two laterals for a 69-yard touchdown to beat the
New England Patriots 34–33. Miami had almost lost a game against the Pittsburgh Steelers five years prior via laterals, but managed to win when Antonio Brown stepped out of bounds at the thirteen-yard line. ==See also==