Amos Alonzo Stagg was the first to call the play, and Stagg credited
Clarence Herschberger with being the first player to run the play. The play was made popular by
Fielding H. Yost during his tenure as head coach of the
football team at the
University of Michigan. This play was also a part of the offensive repertoire of the NFL's
Los Angeles Rams teams of the mid-1970s under coach
Chuck Knox.
Notable examples The
Northwestern Wildcats employed a direct-snap variant of this play in the
1949 Rose Bowl to run for a 45-yard touchdown in the final minutes of the game, defeating the heavily favored
California Golden Bears, 20–14. The
Baltimore Colts ran a version of the play in December 1970. Led by 37-year-old quarterback
Johnny Unitas, the Colts beat the
Oakland Raiders in the
1970 AFC Championship game, 27–17. In a regular-season matchup against the
Michigan Wolverines in 2007,
Oregon Ducks quarterback
Dennis Dixon faked a Statue of Liberty to running back
Jonathan Stewart (somewhat like a
bootleg) and then ran for a touchdown almost unseen. The
2007 Fiesta Bowl featured a widely reported and frequently replayed use of the play, executed by
Jared Zabransky and
Ian Johnson of the
Boise State Broncos against the
Oklahoma Sooners. The play, known as "Statue Left" by the Broncos and run from a
trips shotgun set, clinched Boise State a
two-point conversion for the overtime victory. This bowl game is referred to as one of the closest and most exciting college football games of all time, due in part to the do-or-die nature of this play. Oklahoma saw another Statue of Liberty play in their September 6, 2008, game against the
Cincinnati Bearcats. Bearcats quarterback Dustin Grutza handed off to John Goebel, but the Sooners stopped Goebel for only a short gain. Boise State executed the same play described above nearly eight years later—once against the
Wyoming Cowboys, and also while facing the
Arizona Wildcats in the
Fiesta Bowl. Both plays resulted in touchdowns for
Jay Ajayi. The
New England Patriots employed an unusual variant of the play in their 2007 NFL divisional playoff game against the
Jacksonville Jaguars. Strictly speaking, the play, which the Patriots called "Double Pop," was actually a reverse Statue of Liberty play, in that the run, not the pass, was the fake element. Center
Dan Koppen faked a direct snap to Patriots running back
Kevin Faulk, causing the defense to move to stop the run; meanwhile, Patriots quarterback
Tom Brady, who received the football, faked an over-the-head snap, and held the Statue of Liberty pose with his back to the defense before turning around and throwing a touchdown pass to wide receiver
Wes Welker in the back of the end zone. In the
2023 NFL Wildcard playoff round, the
New York Giants used a Statue of Liberty play in their 31–24 victory against the
Minnesota Vikings. ==In popular culture==