The Catch refers to the winning touchdown
reception by
Dwight Clark off a
Joe Montana pass in the January 10,
1982,
NFC Championship Game between the
Dallas Cowboys and the
San Francisco 49ers. The
Catch is widely regarded as one of the most memorable events in
NFL history.
Play
In a game where the lead shifted back and forth repeatedly, the
49ers took over the ball at their own 11-yard line trailing 27-21.
San Francisco marched down to the Dallas 6-yard line, where they
faced third down and three with 58 seconds left on the clock. When
Joe Montana took the snap, the play,
known as Sprint Right Option, was intended to be a pass to wide
receiver
Freddie Solomon; earlier in
the game, Solomon scored a touchdown on that play. However, the
Cowboys covered Solomon perfectly. Making matters worse, the pass
rush of the Cowboys collapsed the 49ers offensive line. Two of the
Cowboys defensive ends
Ed
"Too Tall" Jones and
Larry Bethea,
plus linebacker
D.
D. Lewis chased a backpedaling
Montana toward the sideline, and seemed certain to either send him
out of bounds or sack him. But at the last moment, and after
pump-faking to get 6-foot 9-inch "Too Tall" Jones to jump, Montana
threw a high pass to the back of the end zone that seemed destined
to sail out of bounds until 49ers receiver
Dwight Clark made a leaping grab with his
fingertips for the go-ahead touchdown with 51 seconds left in the
game. Clark finished the game with 8 catches for 120 yards and 2
touchdowns.
The play, remembered in 49er lore as "Red Right Tight - Sprint
Right Option" had called for both the primary receiver, Solomon,
and Clark to line up on the right. Montana was supposed to roll to
his right and find Solomon. Clark's pattern called for him to cut
left across the end zone, stop, and immediately reverse his path to
the right. If Solomon were covered, it would be up to Montana to
find Clark. Due to the pressure, Montana's pass was high, but Clark
was in position to make his memorable grab.
A photograph of the catch by
Walter
Iooss, Jr., with Clark at the height of his leap and
Everson Walls reaching out to try to block the
ball, was featured on the cover of
Sports Illustrated the following
week.
Other contributors on the final 89-yard drive that led to the play
now referred to as “The Catch” included
Lenvil Elliott (RB),
Earl Cooper (FB),
Mike Wilson (WR),
Charle Young (TE),
Dan
Audick (LT),
John Ayers (LG),
Fred Quillan (C),
Randy Cross (RG), and
Keith Fahnhorst (RT).
Clark and
Montana re-enacted The Catch in observance of the 25th anniversary
of the play as part of San Francisco alumni day activities at
halftime of the Minnesota game November 5,
2006, at Candlestick
Park
.
Reactions
Some people claimed that Montana was trying to throw the ball away,
leaving time for a fourth down. Clark disputes that assertion,
claiming that it was a backup plan that they practiced many times.
Montana confirmed that he could not see the end zone through the
defenders, but claims that he knew exactly where Clark would be.
The 49ers coach,
Bill
Walsh, assumed that it was a throw-away play and immediately
began planning for the fourth down until he heard the cheers from
the crowd.
As for the height of the catch, Montana has said that he didn't
feel that he threw the ball very high. However, Clark leapt as high
as he could only to get his fingertips on the ball. In the Sports
Illustrated article, Montana explained that he never saw The Catch,
since he had just been knocked to the ground by Too Tall Jones, but
"I saw Dwight's feet touch the ground. I heard the crowd scream."
Later, in the locker room, he expressed his amazement at how high
Clark had jumped.
Some players reported that Too Tall Jones reacted to the play by
stating "You just beat
America's
Team" to Joe Montana after Clark had caught the pass; Montana
replied "Well, you can watch the Super Bowl on TV with the rest of
America."
Aftermath and legacy
While The Catch is well known by most NFL fans, many forget that
there were still 51 seconds left on the clock after Clark's
touchdown, and with Dallas needing only a field goal to win, the
game was far from over.
After the ensuing kickoff, Dallas receiver
Drew Pearson caught a long
pass, but defensive back
Eric C.
Wright made a touchdown-saving
horse collar-type tackle (then a
legal tackle) to keep him from scoring. This play was known as "The
Grab." On the next play, quarterback
Danny
White fumbled the ball while being sacked by
Lawrence Pillers, and San Francisco’s
Jim Stuckey recovered the ball, sealing
a victory for the 49ers.
The 49ers won 28–27 and went on to win
Super Bowl XVI over the
Cincinnati Bengals.
This game was a watershed in the historic fortunes of both the
49ers and the Cowboys. After being a losing team in the 1970s, San
Francisco went on to win four
Super Bowls
in the 1980s, and made the playoffs eight out of the next 10 years.
Meanwhile, Dallas, the most successful team in the NFC in the
1970s, never made it back to the Super Bowl in the 1980s, and
suffered losing seasons in the last part of that decade.
The Catch was immortalized by two dramatic broadcast play-by-play
calls.
Vin Scully described the play on
CBS Television:
Meanwhile,
Jack Buck had the call over on
CBS Radio:
Dwight Clark while discussing The Catch in
America's Game: The
Super Bowl Champions documentary about the 1981 49ers had
this to say about the legacy of that play.
Cultural references
For several years in the 1980s and 1990s, Kodak featured a
television ad to the tune of
Barbra
Streisand's
"The Way We
Were" featuring The Catch, as shown by NFL Films.
In 2002, the NFL ran a series of advertisements promoting the
playoffs, using famous plays as a uniting theme. Actor
Don Cheadle demonstrated the height of Clark's
catch by standing on a stepladder in the end zone.
In 2005, a commercial for the
Gatorade
sports drink, known as "The Winning Formula", portrayed an
alternate version of The Catch, in which the ball bounced out of
Clark's fingertips. Following the Gatorade logo, the real version
was shown with Dwight Clark's completion. This is also done with
Derek Jeter's
"flip
play" going wide of home plate and
Michael Jordan's
famous
buzzer-beater against
Cleveland going off the rim.
On August 5, 2007,
The Best Damn Sports Show
Period did a special show commemorating the top 50 amazing
sports catches of all time. The Catch is listed as #17.
Officials
- Referee: Jim Tunney
- Umpire: Bob Bolyston
- Head Linesman: Ed Marion
- Line Judge: Bob Beeks
- Field Judge: Ed Merrifield
- Side Judge: Dean Look
- Back Judge: Ray Douglas
See also
External links
- St. Petersburg Times
-
http://vault.sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1125154
-
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/football/features/superbowl/archives/16/
- http://www.mercurynews.com/raidersheadlines/ci_12556315
References
- sfgate.com
- http://www.superbowl.com/features/insider/montana
-
http://abclocal.go.com/kgo/story?section=49ers&id=4925318&ft=exLg
-
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d-LmPFHgE3k&feature=related