The week after this playoff victory, perhaps as some maintain it was karma for the Steelers, the Steelers lost the AFC Championship Game 21–17 to the Miami Dolphins, who went on to win
Super Bowl VII in their landmark
undefeated season. Had the Raiders advanced to the AFC Championship Game instead, they would have entered that contest with an all-time record (including playoffs) of 6–1–1 against the Dolphins. Despite the loss to the Dolphins, the Steelers started to reverse four decades of futility and went on to become a dominant force in the NFL for the rest of the 1970s, winning four Super Bowls in six years with such stars as Bradshaw, Harris,
John Stallworth and
Lynn Swann along with the
Steel Curtain defense led by
Jack Ham,
Jack Lambert,
"Mean Joe" Greene,
Mel Blount, and
Dwight White. The year 1972 was one year before the Steelers' fortieth year in the NFL, during which they had finished above .500 only nine times, and until then had never won a playoff game. In fact, before this game, the only playoff game the team had ever played was a loss to the Philadelphia Eagles in 1947 after the two teams finished tied for the
Eastern Division championship. The Immaculate Reception was actually the first touchdown the Steelers ever scored in the postseason (they were shut out against the Eagles in the 1947 playoff game). They had long been regarded as one of the league's doormats (as the
1944 Card-Pitt merger was 0–10 and was ridiculed as the "Carpitts," a play on the word "carpet").
Between 1950 and 1970, the Steelers finished as high as second place once, doing so in 1962, which garnered them an
exhibition game called the "
Playoff Bowl". As recently as 1969, the team had posted a 1–13 record, thus securing the first draft choice in the subsequent NFL draft, in which the Steelers chose Bradshaw that seeded their remarkable turnaround. Since the AFL–NFL merger, the Steelers have the league's best record (surpassing Miami in
2007 because of the Dolphins' recent struggles), have had a league-low three head coaches, and have had only nine losing seasons,
none worse than 5–11. Only twice since the Immaculate Reception has the team had losing seasons two years in a row and none three years in a row. The Immaculate Reception spawned a heated rivalry between the Steelers and the Raiders, a rivalry that was at its peak during the 1970s, when both teams were among the best in the league and both were known for their hard-hitting, physical play. The teams met in the playoffs in each of the next four seasons, starting with the Raiders' 33–14 victory in the 1973 divisional playoffs. Pittsburgh used the AFC Championship Game victories over Oakland (24–13 at Oakland in
1974 and 16–10 at Pittsburgh in
1975) as a springboard to victories in
Super Bowl IX and
Super Bowl X, before the Raiders notched a 24–7 victory at home in 1976 on their way to winning
Super Bowl XI. To date, the two last met in the playoffs
in 1983 when the eventual
Super Bowl champion Raiders, playing in
Los Angeles at the time, crushed the Steelers, 38–10. The rivalry has somewhat died off in the years since, mainly due to the Raiders' on-field struggles since appearing in
Super Bowl XXXVII. The play itself started another rivalry between the Raiders and the rest of the league, as Raider fans have long thought that the league has wanted to shortchange the team and specifically owner
Al Davis. In 2007, NFL Network ranked the "Raiders versus the World" as the biggest feud in NFL history. More positively, the play ironically led to the lifelong friendship between Harris and Villapiano due to their shared
Italian American heritage, despite their difference of opinions on the events of the play. A year after the play, Harris had discovered that both his mother and Villapiano's father, both Italian immigrants, hailed from the same area of the
Italian Peninsula after Villapiano's father helped Harris' mother (who still wasn't fluent in
English at the time) speak for her son at a banquet in their native
New Jersey. This led to the two becoming friendlier away from the football field with Harris becoming an "honorary Raider" while Villapiano has accepted the events of the play over time. For the
1978 NFL season, the NFL passed two rule changes that would have affected the Immaculate Reception had it happened today. The first one, regarding the forward pass touching an offensive player but being caught by another without touching a defender, was repealed. There are no longer any restrictions on any deflections of passes, and a future play that mirrored the Immaculate Reception would simply be an extraordinary but legal reception. Second, the NFL also passed tougher
pass interference rules (ironically as a result of the "dirty" play of the Steelers' own Mel Blount, among others), which if in effect in 1972 would have
penalized the Raiders regardless of the result of the play due to Tatum's hit on Fuqua; as the
goal post would be at the goal line until
1974 when they were moved back to the end line, such a penalty would have placed the Steelers in relatively short field goal range for Gerela to try a game-winning field goal from 42 yards out. Whether a future Franco Harris would have been ruled as catching such a deflected football before it struck the turf is a different matter, thanks to myriad cameras and use of instant replay that is part of the present-day NFL. As 1972 was the last year that the NFL forbade any local telecasts of home games, the game itself was not shown live on Pittsburgh NBC affiliate
WIIC-TV (now WPXI), nor was it shown on nearby NBC affiliates
WJAC-TV in
Johnstown, Pennsylvania,
WFMJ-TV in
Youngstown,
Ohio;
WBOY-TV in
Clarksburg,
West Virginia; and then-NBC affiliate
WTRF-TV in
Wheeling, West Virginia, all of which are secondary markets to the Steelers.
WICU-TV in
Erie, Pennsylvania and then-NBC
O&O WKYC-TV in
Cleveland were the closest stations to air the game (although WIIC-TV showed the game on
tape delay the following day). Starting the next year, any home games that sold out 72 hours before kick-off could be televised locally. As the Steelers began their home sell-out streak in 1972,
blackouts have never been needed in the Pittsburgh area.
Game ball The actual ball ended up in the hands of fan Jim Baker, who attended the game with his young nephew, Bobby. Baker managed to scoop up the ball during the ensuing melee after the extra point kick, grabbed his nephew, and ran off the field. He had offered to give the ball back to the Steelers in return for lifetime
season tickets but was rebuffed. Until 2023, he declined every offer to sell it, including the highest offer of $150,000 from heavy equipment provider Ray Anthony International, instead keeping it in a guarded bank vault in
West Mifflin, Pennsylvania and occasionally bringing it out for public appearances involving the Steelers, including one with Franco Harris in 1997 to commemorate the play's 25th anniversary. However, in 2023, Baker sold the ball to Maggie Hardy for an undisclosed amount. Plans call for the ball to be kept at
Nemacolin Woodlands Resort. In 2026, a beer was brewed using yeast culture grown from the DNA swabs taken from the ball, specifically for an NFL Draft celebration event at Nemacolin Woodlands Resort.
Legacy The Steelers organization still considers the Immaculate Reception the greatest moment in team history. The play was documented by NFL Network's
A Football Life in 2012. On December 23, 2012, on the fortieth anniversary of the play just hours before the
Steelers hosted the
Cincinnati Bengals, the Steelers unveiled a monument at the exact spot where Harris made the reception at a parking lot just outside
Heinz Field, where Three Rivers Stadium formerly stood. This is the third such monument that commemorates the play in the city (the others are located at the
Pittsburgh International Airport and the
Heinz History Center). In the
2013–14 NFL playoffs,
Seattle Seahawks'
Richard Sherman deflected a pass by
San Francisco 49ers quarterback
Colin Kaepernick, that was intended for
Michael Crabtree, which was caught by teammate
Malcolm Smith to seal the Seahawks' 23–17 victory in the NFC Championship Game. The play was later dubbed "the Immaculate Deflection" (as an homage to the Immaculate Reception), and would later be voted by Seahawks fans to be the most significant play in franchise history. For
Super Bowl XLIX,
Wix.com ran an ad featuring retired football players using its tools to build websites for their new businesses, including Harris who creates a fictional wedding planning website called "Immaculate Receptions" named after the famous play. "The 100-Year Game", a short film created by the league for
Super Bowl LIII, featured many current and former football stars. In it, Bradshaw is seen throwing a football across the room towards such contemporary star receivers as
Larry Fitzgerald and
Odell Beckham Jr. — only to see the ball tipped, and snatched by Harris just before it hits the floor. A 2019 poll of media members by the NFL named the Immaculate Reception as the greatest NFL play in its history. On December 24, 2022, while hosting the present-day
Las Vegas Raiders to mark the fiftieth anniversary of the Immaculate Reception, Harris became only the third player in Steelers history to have his jersey retired. Harris had died four days earlier on December 20, and was originally scheduled to appear during the ceremony. ==Officials==