1974 Pittsburgh Steelers season

Pittsburgh Steelers 42nd US football season

1974 Pittsburgh Steelers season
OwnerArt Rooney
General managerDaniel M. Rooney
Head coachChuck Noll
Home fieldThree Rivers Stadium
Results
Record10–3–1
Division place1st AFC Central
Playoff finishWon Divisional Playoffs
(vs. Bills) 32–14
Won AFC Championship
(at Raiders) 24–13
Won Super Bowl IX
(vs. Vikings) 16–6
Pro Bowlers
6
  • PK Roy Gerela
  • DT Joe Greene
  • DE L. C. Greenwood
  • LB Jack Ham
  • RB Franco Harris
  • LB Andy Russell
AP All-Pros
4
  • Joe Greene (1st team)
  • L. C. Greenwood (1st team)
  • Jack Ham (1st team)
  • Roy Gerela (2nd team)
Team MVPGlen Edwards
Team ROYJack Lambert

The 1974 Pittsburgh Steelers season was the franchise's 42nd in the National Football League (NFL). They improved to a 10–3–1 regular-season record, won the AFC Central division title, sending them to the playoffs for the third consecutive season, and won a Super Bowl championship, the first league title in Steelers' history. This was the first of six consecutive AFC Central division titles for the Steelers, and the first of four Super Bowl championships in the same time period.

The Steelers also made history by playing in the NFL's first-ever regular season overtime game, the league having introduced a 15-minute sudden-death period to break ties. Their Week 2 contest against the Denver Broncos nevertheless ended in a 35–35 tie. As of 2023 no other team has ever won the Super Bowl after recording a tie in the overtime era.

On March 9, 2007, NFL Network aired an episode of America's Game: The Super Bowl Champions that covered the 1974 Pittsburgh Steelers, with team commentary from Franco Harris, Joe Greene, and Andy Russell, and narrated by Ed Harris.

Offseason

NFL Draft

During the offseason, the Steelers held their training camp in St. Vincent College in Latrobe, Pennsylvania.

During the 1974 NFL Draft, the Pittsburgh Steelers would draft WR Lynn Swann in Round 1, LB Jack Lambert in Round 2, WR John Stallworth in Round 4, and C Mike Webster in Round 5, and they also signed S Donnie Shell as an undrafted free agent. All five would later be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame. As of 2014, the 1974 Steelers are the only team in NFL history to select four Hall of Fame players in one single draft.

1974 Pittsburgh Steelers draft
Round Pick Player Position College Notes
1 21 Lynn Swann   WR USC given #88
2 46 Jack Lambert   LB Kent State 1974 NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year, given #58
4 82 John Stallworth   WR Alabama A&M given #82
4 100 Jimmy Allen  S UCLA given #45
5 125 Mike Webster   C Wisconsin Alternated with Ray Mansfield for the rest of Ray's career, given #52
6 149 Jim Wolf  DE Prairie View A&M given #62
6 150 Rick Druschel  Guard North Carolina State given #46
7 165 Allen Sitterle  T North Carolina State
7 179 Scott Garske  TE Eastern Washington
8 204 Mark Gefert  LB Purdue
9 223 Tommy Reamon  RB Missouri played for the WFL in 1974
9 229 Charlie Davis  DT TCU given #77
10 243 Jim Kregel  G Ohio State
10 254 Dave Atkinson  DB BYU
11 283 Dick Morton  RB Arkansas
12 308 Hugh Lickiss  LB Simpson
13 333 Frank Kolch  QB Eastern Michigan
14 333 Bruce Henley  DB Rice
15 387 Larry Hunt  DT Iowa State
16 412 Octavus Morgan  LB Illinois
17 437 Larry Moore  DE Angelo State
      Made roster    †   Pro Football Hall of Fame    *   Made at least one Pro Bowl during career

Preseason

In the 1974 preseason, the Steelers went 6–0 and were the only undefeated team in the NFL. However, most of the talk was centered around the NFL's first successful black quarterback, Joe Gilliam. Chuck Noll started Gilliam in the preseason and after it ended, Noll started him for the first few games of the regular season. Gilliam's stellar performance in the preseason sparked a quarterback controversy in Pittsburgh.

Regular season

Following playoff appearances in both of the two previous seasons, the Steelers appeared to be in great shape after finishing the preseason as the only undefeated team in the NFL. After the first two regular season games, the Steelers had scored a total of 65 points and were 1–0–1, but then lost to the Oakland Raiders at home. The play of the Steelers' starting quarterback at the time, Joe Gilliam, continually deteriorated. By week 7, the Steelers were 4–1–1 and Gilliam was benched for Terry Bradshaw during a win against the Atlanta Falcons. Bradshaw won the next two games, but after a loss in Cincinnati, Noll benched Bradshaw again, this time in favor of Terry Hanratty (who had been selected in the 1969 Draft). However, Hanratty played horribly in Cleveland. The offense was struggling, but the Steelers had won those tough games behind the still-maturing Steel Curtain defense. When Bradshaw was brought back into the starting lineup, the Steelers beat the Cleveland Browns and the New Orleans Saints (in a game in which Bradshaw ran for more yards than he passed for). After a loss to Houston, the Steelers played the most important game of their regular season in New England. A win over the Patriots would clinch the AFC Central division title for the Steelers and put them in the playoffs for the third straight year. The Steelers defeated the Patriots, then beat the Cincinnati Bengals, and awaited the playoffs.

Playoffs

In the divisional round of the playoffs, the Steelers played the Buffalo Bills. Sports Illustrated's Dan Jenkins wrote that Pittsburgh was "the only team to reach the playoffs without a quarterback".[1] However, the Steelers dominated Buffalo and held its star running back O. J. Simpson to 49 yards rushing (it was Simpson's only playoff game appearance).

In the 1974 AFC Championship game, the Steelers played an old foe, the Oakland Raiders. Each year, their rivalry was escalating: they had met in the playoffs the previous two seasons. In 1972, the Steelers won in Pittsburgh; in 1973, the Raiders returned the favor in Oakland. In this third playoff meeting, the Steelers were ready for anything the Raiders could throw at them. Using the new "Stunt 4–3 defense" the Steelers held the Raiders to 29 yards rushing as the Steelers themselves ran for over 200 yards in Oakland. After a Franco Harris touchdown run, the Steelers clinched their first Super Bowl appearance in club history (and their first league championship game appearance).

Super Bowl IX

The Steelers met the Minnesota Vikings in Super Bowl IX. Both teams had a hard time in the rough weather conditions at old Tulane Stadium in New Orleans. After many exchanges of punts, the Steelers finally scored a safety on a bobbled handoff by Viking quarterback Fran Tarkenton. The score at the half was 2–0. The Steel Curtain continually dominated the Vikings. Vikings coach Bud Grant tried to run at the strength of the Steel Curtain, but they were shut down. The only points Minnesota scored came from a blocked punt that the Vikings recovered in the end zone for a touchdown; the subsequent extra point attempt was blocked. After the MVP performance by running back Franco Harris (34 carries for a then-Super Bowl-record 158 yards and a touchdown), the Steelers came away with a 16–6 victory. It was the first league title in Steelers history.

Personnel

Staff

1974 Pittsburgh Steelers staff

Front office

  • President – Arthur J. Rooney
  • Vice president – John R. McGinley
  • Vice president – Daniel M. Rooney
  • Vice president – Arthur J. Rooney, Jr.
  • Public relations director – Ed Kiely
  • Traveling secretary – James A. Boston
  • Controller – Robert P. Quinn
  • Accountant – Dennis P. Thimons
  • Publicity director – Joe Gordon
  • Ticket manager – Joseph H. Carr
  • Director of player personnel – Dick Haley
  • Assistant director of player personnel – Bill Nunn
  • Director of professional scouting – V. Timothy Rooney

Head coaches

Offensive coaches

Defensive coaches


Strength and conditioning

  • Strength – Louis Riecke
  • Flexibility – Paul Uram
  • Team physician, orthopedic – Dr. John Best
  • Team Physician, M.D. – Dr. David S. Huber
  • Team dentist – Dr. Robert Gray
  • Trainer – Ralph Berlin
  • Equipment manager – Anthony Parisi
  • Field manager – Jack Hart

[2]

Roster

1974 Pittsburgh Steelers final roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Reserve lists
  • 53 Henry Davis MLB (IRTooltip Injured reserve)


Practice squad [3] [4] [5]
Rookies in italics
48 active, 1 inactive

1974 schedules

Preseason schedule

Week Date Game Site Opponent Result Record
1 August 3 Tulane Stadium at New Orleans Saints W 26–7 1–0
2 August 12 Three Rivers Stadium Chicago Bears W 50–21 2–0
3 August 17 Veterans Stadium at Philadelphia Eagles W 33–30(OT) 3–0
4 August 24 Three Rivers Stadium New York Giants W 17–7 4–0
5 August 30 RFK Stadium at Washington Redskins W 21–19 5–0
6 September 5 Texas Stadium Dallas Cowboys W 41–15 6–0

Regular season schedule

Week Date Game Site Opponent Result Record TV
1 September 15 Three Rivers Stadium Baltimore Colts W 30–0 1–0 NBC
2 September 22 Mile High Stadium at Denver Broncos T 35–35(OT) 1–0–1 NBC
3 September 29 Three Rivers Stadium Oakland Raiders L 0–17 1–1–1 NBC
4 October 6 Astrodome at Houston Oilers W 13–7 2–1–1 NBC
5 October 13 Arrowhead Stadium at Kansas City Chiefs W 34–24 3–1–1 NBC
6 October 20 Three Rivers Stadium Cleveland Browns W 20–16 4–1–1 NBC
7 October 28 Three Rivers Stadium Atlanta Falcons W 24–17 5–1–1 ABC
8 November 3 Three Rivers Stadium Philadelphia Eagles W 27–0 6–1–1 CBS
9 November 10 Riverfront Stadium at Cincinnati Bengals L 10–17 6–2–1 NBC
10 November 17 Cleveland Municipal Stadium at Cleveland Browns W 26–16 7–2–1 NBC
11 November 25 Tulane Stadium at New Orleans Saints W 28–7 8–2–1 ABC
12 December 1 Three Rivers Stadium Houston Oilers L 10–13 8–3–1 NBC
13 December 8 Schaefer Stadium at New England Patriots W 21–17 9–3–1 NBC
14 December 14 Three Rivers Stadium Cincinnati Bengals W 27–3 10–3–1 NBC
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.

Postseason schedule

Week Date Game Site Opponent Result Record TV
Divisional December 22 Three Rivers Stadium Buffalo Bills W 32–14 11–3–1 NBC
AFC Championship December 29 Oakland Coliseum Oakland Raiders W 24–13 12–3–1 NBC
Super Bowl IX January 12 Old Tulane Stadium Minnesota Vikings W 16–6 13–3–1 NBC

Standings

AFC Central
  • view
  • talk
  • edit
W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
Pittsburgh Steelers 10 3 1 .750 4–2 7–3–1 305 189 W2
Houston Oilers 7 7 0 .500 4–2 7–4 236 282 W1
Cincinnati Bengals 7 7 0 .500 3–3 5–6 283 259 L3
Cleveland Browns 4 10 0 .286 1–5 3–8 251 344 L2

Game summaries

Week 1 (Sunday, September 15, 1974): vs. Baltimore Colts

Week 1: Baltimore Colts (0–1) at Pittsburgh Steelers (1–0)
Period 1 2 34Total
Colts (0–1) 0 0 000
Steelers (1–0) 3 13 7730

at Three Rivers StadiumPittsburgh, Pennsylvania

  • Date: September 15, 1974
  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EDT
  • Game weather: 72 °F or 22.2 °C, relative humidity 69%, wind 9 miles per hour (14 km/h; 7.8 kn) (Partly Cloudy)
  • Game attendance: 48,890
  • Referee: Gordon McCarter
  • TV announcers (NBC): Jay Randolph (play by play) and Paul Maguire (color commentator)
  • [6]
Team Category Player Statistics
BAL Passing Bert Jones 8/17, 100 YDS, 2 INTs
Rushing Lydell Mitchell 9 CAR, 44 YDS
Receiving Glenn Doughty 3 CAR, 58 YDS
PIT Passing Joe Gilliam 18/37, 289 YDS, 2 TDs, 1 INT
Rushing Franco Harris 13 CAR, 49 YDS, 1 TD
Receiving Randy Grossman 3 REC, 52 YDS
Scoring summary
Quarter Time Drive Team Scoring information Score
Plays Yards TOP BAL PIT
1 Steelers 31-yard field goal by Gerela 0 3
2 Steelers Swann 61-yard touchdown reception from Gilliam, Gerela kick no good 0 9
2 Steelers Lewis 4-yard touchdown reception from Gilliam, Gerela kick good 0 16
3 Steelers Harris 4-yard touchdown run, Gerela kick good 0 23
4 Steelers Fuqua 4-yard touchdown run, Gerela kick good 0 30
"TOP" = time of possession. For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football. 0 30
Colts Game Statistics Steelers
11 First downs 18
34–118 Rushes–yards 29–103
102 Passing yards 289
9–20–2 Passes 18–37–1
6–54 Sacked–yards 0–0
48 Net passing yards 289
166 Total yards 392
98 Return yards 73
8–33.3 Punts 4–45.5
3–2 Fumbles–lost 3–1
3–20 Penalties–yards 4–32

In week 1, the Steelers started #17 Joe Gilliam as he completed 17 of his 31 passes for 257 yards, 2 TDs, and an interception. Gilliam became the first African-American quarterback in league history to play in a game as the designated opening-day starter. The defense held Baltimore to 166 total yards and forced 4 turnovers in the shutout win.

Week 2 (Sunday, September 22, 1974): at Denver Broncos

Week 2: Pittsburgh Steelers (1–0–1) at Denver Broncos (0–1–1)
Period 1 2 34OTTotal
Steelers (1–0–1) 7 7 147035
Broncos (0–1–1) 21 0 77035

at Mile High StadiumDenver, Colorado

  • Date: September 22, 1974
  • Game time: 4:00 p.m. EDT
  • Game weather: 57 °F or 13.9 °C, relative humidity 48%, wind 7 miles per hour (11 km/h; 6.1 kn) (Sunny)
  • Game attendance: 51,068
  • Referee: Tommy Bell
  • TV announcers (NBC): Jay Randolph (play by play) and Paul Maguire (color commentator)
  • [7]
Team Category Player Statistics
PIT Passing Joe Gilliam 31/50, 348 YDS, 1 TD, 2 INTs
Rushing Franco Harris 20 CAR, 70 YDS
Receiving Franco Harris 9 REC, 84 YDS
DEN Passing Charley Johnson 6/15, 129 YDS, 2 TDs, 1 INT
Rushing Otis Armstrong 19 CAR, 131 YDS
Receiving Otis Armstrong 5 REC, 86 YDS, 2 TDs
Scoring summary
Quarter Time Drive Team Scoring information Score
Plays Yards TOP PIT DEN
1 11:10 1 45 0:07 Broncos Armstrong 45-yard touchdown reception from Johnson, Turner kick good 0 7
1 9:52 3 73 1:18 Steelers Davis 61-yard touchdown reception from Gilliam, Gerela kick good 7 7
1 7:07 8 59 2:45 Broncos Moses 7-yard touchdown reception from Johnson, Turner kick good 7 14
1 5:44 1 1 0:07 Broncos Keyworth 1-yard touchdown run, Turner kick good 7 21
2 0:52 17 87 8:06 Steelers Gilliam 1-yard touchdown run, Gerela kick good 14 21
3 9:36 7 37 4:24 Steelers Davis 1-yard touchdown run, Gerela kick good 21 21
3 3:12 3 41 1:41 Broncos Odoms 3-yard touchdown reception from Ramsey, Turner kick good 21 28
3 0:07 6 73 3:05 Steelers Davis 1-yard touchdown run, Gerela kick good 28 28
4 13:01 4 16 1:48 Steelers Fuqua 1-yard touchdown run, Gerela kick good 35 28
4 7:08 3 50 2:21 Broncos Armstrong 23-yard touchdown reception from Ramsey, Turner kick good 35 35
"TOP" = time of possession. For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football. 35 35
Steelers Game Statistics Broncos
33 First downs 20
40–160 Rushes–yards 37–156
348 Passing yards 191
31–50–2 Passes 12–27–2
3–24 Sacked–yards 3–15
324 Net passing yards 176
484 Total yards 332
121 Return yards 145
6–41.7 Punts 7–44.4
3–2 Fumbles–lost 1–1
12–91 Penalties–yards 7–61

In week 2, the Steelers were carried to a 35–35 OT tie with #32 Franco Harris' running game and #17 Joe Gilliam's 348 passing yards. It was the first regular season overtime game in NFL history. Denver coach John Ralston said of Gilliam that "it was possibly the finest performance I have ever seen by a quarterback."

Week 3 (Sunday, September 29, 1974): vs. Oakland Raiders

Week 3: Oakland Raiders (2–1) at Pittsburgh Steelers (1–1–1)
Period 1 2 34Total
Raiders (2–1) 7 10 0017
Steelers (1–1–1) 0 0 000

at Three Rivers StadiumPittsburgh, Pennsylvania

  • Date: September 29, 1974
  • Game time: 4:00 p.m. EDT
  • Game weather: 66 °F or 18.9 °C (Light Rain)
  • Game attendance: 48,304
  • Referee: Pat Haggerty
  • TV: NBC
Game Summaries

week 1: vs. Baltimore Colts

Baltimore Colts (0–0) at Pittsburgh Steelers (0–0)
Period 1 2 34Total
Colts 0 0 000
Steelers 3 13 7730

at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

  • Date: Sunday, September 15
  • Game time: 1 p.m., ET
  • Game weather: 72 °F or 22.2 °C (Partly Cloudy)
  • Game attendance: 48,890
  • Referee: Gordon McCarter
  • TV: NBC
Game information
  • Top Passer: Joe Gilliam (PIT): 257 Yds
  • Top Rusher: Franco Harris (PIT): 49 Yds
  • Top Receiver: Lynn Swann (PIT): 94 Yds

In week 1, the Steelers started #17 Joe Gilliam as he completed 17 of his 31 passes for 257 yards, 2 TDs, and an interception. Gilliam became the first African-American quarterback in league history to play in a game as the designated opening-day starter. The defense held Baltimore to 166 total yards and forced 4 turnovers in the shutout win. (1–0)

week 2: at Denver Broncos

Pittsburgh Steelers (1–0) at Denver Broncos (0–1)
Period 1 2 34OTTotal
Steelers 7 7 147035
Broncos 21 0 77035

at Mile High Stadium, Denver, Colorado

  • Date: Sunday, September 22
  • Game time: 4 p.m., ET
  • Game weather: 57 °F or 13.9 °C (Sunny)
  • Game attendance: 50,858
  • Referee: Tommy Bell
  • TV: NBC
Game information
  • Denver – Armstrong 45 pass from Johnson (Turner kick) 0–7
  • Pittsburgh – Davis 61 pass from Gilliam (Gerela kick) 7–7
  • Denver – Moses 7 pass from Johnson (Turner kick) 7–14
  • Denver – Keyworth 1 run (Turner kick) 7–21
  • Pittsburgh – Gilliam 1 run (Gerela kick) 14–21
  • Pittsburgh – Davis 1 run (Gerela kick) 21–21
  • Denver – Odoms 3 pass from Ramsey (Turner kick) 21–28
  • Pittsburgh – Davis 1 run (Gerela kick) 28–28
  • Pittsburgh – Fuqua 1 run (Gerela kick) 35–28
  • Denver – Armstrong 23 pass from Ramsey (Turner kick) 35–35
  • Top Passer: Joe Gilliam (PIT) 348Yds
  • Top Rusher: Otis Armstrong (DEN) 131Yds
  • Top Receiver: Otis Armstrong (DEN) 86Yds

In week 2, the Steelers were carried to a 35–35 OT tie with #32 Franco Harris' running game and #17 Joe Gilliam's 348 passing yards. It was the first regular season overtime game in NFL history. Denver coach John Ralston said of Gilliam that "it was possibly the finest performance I have ever seen by a quarterback." (1–0–1)

week 3: vs. Oakland Raiders

Oakland Raiders (1–1) at Pittsburgh Steelers (1–0–1)
Period 1 2 34Total
Raiders 7 10 0017
Steelers 0 0 000

at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

  • Date: Sunday, September 29
  • Game time: 4 p.m., ET
  • Game weather: 66 °F or 18.9 °C (Light Rain)
  • Game attendance: 48,304
  • Referee: Pat Haggerty
  • TV: NBC
Game information

In week 3, after 2 brilliant games by #17 Joe Gilliam, the Raiders came to Pittsburgh for a rematch of the 1973 Divisional Round Playoff game in which Oakland won. However, a fluttering Gilliam completed 10 of his 31 passed which laid the first defeat on Pittsburgh. To make things worse, #32 Franco Harris was injured and would miss the next 2 games. Damp and dark weather hung over the stadium and Terry Bradshaw's relief of Gilliam with a little under 2 minutes left in the game drew cheers from remaining fans. (1–1–1)

week 4: at Houston Oilers

Pittsburgh Steelers (1–1–1) at Houston Oilers (1–2–1)
Period 1 2 34Total
Steelers 0 3 3713
Oilers 0 7 007

at Houston Astrodome, Houston, Texas

  • Date: Sunday, October 6
  • Game time: 2 p.m., ET
  • Game weather: Dome (indoors)
  • Game attendance: 30,049
  • Referee: Bob Frederic
  • TV: NBC
Game information
  • Houston – B. Johnson 47 run (Butler kick) 0–7
  • Pittsburgh – FG Gerela 37 3–7
  • Pittsburgh – FG Gerela 27 6–7
  • Pittsburgh – Pearson 9 run (Gerela kick) 13–7

In week 4, the Steelers recovered from the loss at home by beating Houston. #17 Joe Gilliam didn't recover completely; he threw for only 202 yards and 2 interceptions. However, on the game's lone touchdown drive, Gilliam completed 4 consecutive passes. Without #32 Franco Harris, the offense would continuously fall apart. (2–1–1)

week 5: at Kansas City Chiefs

Pittsburgh Steelers (2–1–1) at Kansas City Chiefs (2–2)
Period 1 2 34Total
Steelers 7 17 10034
Chiefs 3 7 7724

at Arrowhead Stadium, Kansas City, Missouri

  • Date: Sunday, October 13
  • Game time: 2 p.m., ET
  • Game weather: 55 °F or 12.8 °C
  • Game attendance: 65,517
  • Referee: Bernie Ulman
  • TV: NBC
Game information

In week 5, the Steelers came away from Kansas City with a 10-point win, 34–24, behind #27 Glen Edwards' 49-yard interception return. The Chiefs used a combined three quarterbacks to throw 7 interceptions. However, #17 Joe Gilliam's play was still deteriorating, and after the horrible performance in next week's game he was benched. (3–1–1)

week 6: vs. Cleveland Browns

Cleveland Browns (1–4) at Pittsburgh Steelers (3–1–1)
Period 1 2 34Total
Browns 0 13 0316
Steelers 7 7 3320

at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

  • Date: Sunday, October 20
  • Game time: 1 p.m., ET
  • Game weather: 42 °F or 5.6 °C (Cloudy)
  • Game attendance: 48,100
  • Referee: Ben Dreith
  • TV: NBC
Game information

In week 6, the Steelers offense continued to flutter with #17 Joe Gilliam's 5 out of 18 and 78 yard passing performance (despite the return of #32 Franco Harris). In the 3 games after the loss to Oakland, the defense forced 15 turnovers, and that is how the Steelers managed to win all 3 games. The front four of #78 Dwight White, #63 Ernie Holmes, #75 Joe Greene, and #68 L. C. Greenwood had become dominant. Together, they became known as the Steel Curtain. After 6 games, the Steelers were 4–1–1, however, the offense was going to need some help if they were to become a contender. In week 7, the Steelers found that help. (4–1–1)

week 7: vs. Atlanta Falcons

Atlanta Falcons (2–4) at Pittsburgh Steelers (4–1–1)
Period 1 2 34Total
Falcons 0 14 0317
Steelers 14 0 3724

at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

  • Date: Monday, October 28
  • Game time: 9 p.m., ET
  • Game weather: 55 °F or 12.8 °C (Clear)
  • Game attendance: 48,094
  • Referee: Jim Tunney
  • TV: ABC
Game information

In week 7, #12 Terry Bradshaw replaced the failing #17 Joe Gilliam. By 1974, the 5-year veteran was known as the unpredictable and inconsistent quarterback of the Pittsburgh Steelers. He was often overlooked by fans and coaches for making mistakes. It was at this time Bradshaw was going through some emotional problems. He had lost his starting job and fans and players continuously doubted and sometimes mocked him. A failing relationship with his head coach continued to decline. He was often in seclusion at his home as well. Yet, his team did miss him after he watched the first 6 games from the sidelines. However, on a Monday night against Atlanta, Bradshaw returned. The backfield that would start 4 of the next 6 Super Bowls was finally in place. Runningbacks #32 Franco Harris and #20 Rocky Bleier combined for over 200 yards rushing as the Steelers rolled to a 24–17 win. (5–1–1)

week 8: vs. Philadelphia Eagles

Philadelphia Eagles (4–3) at Pittsburgh Steelers (5–1–1)
Period 1 2 34Total
Eagles 0 0 000
Steelers 7 10 10027

at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

  • Date: Sunday, November 3
  • Game time: 1 p.m., ET
  • Game weather: 71 °F or 21.7 °C (Light Rain)
  • Game attendance: 47,996
  • Referee: Tommy Bell
  • TV: CBS
Game information

In week 8, the Steelers won behind another shutout by the defense that included a 52-yard interception return by #47 Mel Blount. It was one of two career interceptions returned for touchdowns by the Hall of Famer. #12 Terry Bradshaw was still a colt who had not yet been broken; Chuck Noll's patience with him continued to disappear. (5–1–1)

week 9: at Cincinnati Bengals

Pittsburgh Steelers (6–1–1) at Cincinnati Bengals (5–3)
Period 1 2 34Total
Steelers 0 3 0710
Bengals 0 10 7017

at Riverfront Stadium, Cincinnati, Ohio

  • Date: Sunday, November 10
  • Game time: 4 p.m., ET
  • Game weather: 48 °F or 8.9 °C
  • Game attendance: 57,532
  • Referee: Norm Schachter
  • TV: NBC
Game information
  • Cincinnati – Williams 2 run (Muhlmann kick) 0–7
  • Cincinnati – FG Muhlmann 30 0–10
  • Pittsburgh – FG Gerela 24 3–10
  • Cincinnati – Williams 1 run (Muhlmann kick) 3–17
  • Pittsburgh – Pearson 1 run (Gerela kick) 10–17

In week 9, the Steelers lost to division rival Cincinnati, 17–10. The offense was again struggling, and #12 Terry Bradshaw was benched again, in favor of 5-year veteran #5 Terry Hanratty. (5–2–1)

week 10: at Cleveland Browns

Pittsburgh Steelers (6–2–1) at Cleveland Browns (3–6)
Period 1 2 34Total
Steelers 7 6 01326
Browns 3 3 10016

at Cleveland Municipal Stadium, Cleveland, Ohio

  • Date: Sunday, November 17
  • Game time: 1 p.m., ET
  • Game weather: 42 °F or 5.6 °C
  • Game attendance: 77,195
  • Referee: Fred Silva
  • TV: NBC
Game information
  • Cleveland – FG Cockroft 44 0–3
  • Pittsburgh – Shanklin 28 pass from Hanratty (Gerela kick) 7–3
  • Pittsburgh – FG Gerela 32 10–3
  • Cleveland – FG Cockroft 35 10–6
  • Pittsburgh – FG Gerela 32 13–6
  • Cleveland – Green 36 interception return (Cockroft kick) 13–13
  • Cleveland – FG Cockroft 18 13–16
  • Pittsburgh – FG Gerela 23 16–16
  • Pittsburgh – Thomas 14 fumble recovery return (Gerela kick) 23–16
  • Pittsburgh – FG Gerela 22 26–16

In this week 10 matchup, the Steelers defeated the hosting Browns team for the first time in Cleveland since 1964. However, #5 Terry Hanratty completed only 2 of his passes and threw 3 interceptions. He was relieved by Gilliam, and the quarterback controversy had become a real problem for Pittsburgh. However, the rest of the team was playing at a championship level following this madcap game. The turning point came on a miscue in the Browns backfield. Cleveland quarterback Brian Sipe collided with Billy Lefear on the handoff and the ball squirted loose. #74 Joe Greene barged in, grabbed the ball and looked to his left where J.T. Thomas was coming up fast. Greene flipped him the ball and Thomas ran it in from 14 yards out. Earlier in the game, Greene intercepted Sipe and rumbled down to the 14, setting up a Roy Gerela field goal. #32 Franco Harris ran for 156 yards and the defense forced 6 turnovers (overcoming 7 of their own) as the Steelers rallied to defeat the Browns and remain in first place in the AFC Central. (7–2–1)

week 11: at New Orleans Saints

Pittsburgh Steelers (7–2–1) at New Orleans Saints (4–6)
Period 1 2 34Total
Steelers 7 7 14028
Saints 0 0 707

at Tulane Stadium, New Orleans, Louisiana

  • Date: Monday, November 25
  • Game time: 9 p.m., ET
  • Game weather: 56 °F or 13.3 °C
  • Game attendance: 69,010
  • Referee: Ben Dreith
  • TV: ABC
Game information

In week 11, #12 Terry Bradshaw was welcomed back into the lineup after the performance by #5 Terry Hanratty. However, in this 28–7 win over the Saints, Bradshaw ran for more yards than he passed. In less than two months, Super Bowl IX was going to be played on the same field. (8–2–1)

week 12: vs. Houston Oilers

Houston Oilers (5–6) at Pittsburgh Steelers (8–2–1)
Period 1 2 34Total
Oilers 0 7 3313
Steelers 3 7 0010

at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

  • Date: Sunday, December 1
  • Game time: 1 p.m., ET
  • Game weather: 38 °F or 3.3 °C (Light Rain)
  • Game attendance: 41,195
  • Referee: Dick Jorgensen
  • TV: NBC
Game information
  • Pittsburgh – FG Gerela 44 3–0
  • Houston – Willis 6 pass from Pastorini (Butler kick) 7–3
  • Pittsburgh – Harris 31 pass from Bradshaw (Gerela kick) 10–7
  • Houston – FG Butler 42 10–10
  • Houston – FG Butler 34 10–13

In week 12, #75 Joe Greene was allowed to use his new technique called the "Stunt 4–3." He would jump in the gap between the guard and the center, and then blow through the gap. Teams were forced to commit so many blockers to Greene, that his teammates often went unblocked. However, this still couldn't stop the lowly Oilers from beating them 13–10. (8–3–1)

week 13: at New England Patriots

Pittsburgh Steelers (8–3–1) at New England Patriots (7–5)
Period 1 2 34Total
Steelers 0 12 7221
Patriots 7 3 0717

at Schaefer Stadium, Foxboro, Massachusetts

  • Date: Sunday, December 8
  • Game time: 1 p.m., ET
  • Game weather: 50 °F or 10 °C
  • Game attendance: 52,107
  • Referee: Jim Tunney
  • TV: NBC
  • Pro-Football-Reference.com
Game information
  • New England – Herron 17 pass from Plunkett (Smith kick)0–7
  • Pittsburgh – FG Gerela 40 3–7
  • Pittsburgh – Harris 2 run (kick blocked) 9–7
  • Pittsburgh – FG Gerela 27 12–7
  • New England – FG Smith 20 12–10
  • Pittsburgh – Swann 7 pass from Bradshaw (Gerela kick) 19–10
  • Pittsburgh – Safety, Greenwood tackled Plunkett in end zone 21–10
  • New England – Herron 5 run (Smith kick)21–17

In week 13, #75 Joe Greene became frustrated and threatened to quit the Steelers after losing to the Oilers the previous week. However, he returned for the most important game of the season in New England. With the win, the Steelers would win the division, as well as clinch their third straight playoff berth. The players were nervous and tense, however, the Steelers made quick work of the Patriots, 21–17. The Steeler offense was finally clicking. (9–3–1)

week 14: vs. Cincinnati Bengals

Cincinnati Bengals (7–6) at Pittsburgh Steelers (9–3–1)
Period 1 2 34Total
Bengals 0 0 303
Steelers 7 10 7327

at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

  • Date: Saturday, December 14
  • Game time: 1 p.m., ET
  • Game weather: 37 °F or 2.8 °C (Drizzle)
  • Game attendance: 42,878
  • Referee: Bernie Ulman
  • TV: NBC
Game information

In week 14, the Steelers beat the Bengals in a meaningless game with their offense rolling and their defense dominating. (10–3–1)

Stats

Passing

Passing
Player Pos G GS QBrec Cmp Att Cmp% Yds TD TD% Int Int% Y/A AY/A Y/C Y/G Lng Rate Sk Yds NY/A ANY/A Sk% 4QC GWD
Gilliam QB 9 6 4–1–1 96 212 45.3 1274 4 1.9 8 3.8 61 6.0 4.7 13.3 141.6 55.4 7 79 5.46 4.18 3.2 1 1
Bradshaw QB 8 7 5–2–0 67 148 45.3 785 7 4.7 8 5.4 56 5.3 3.8 11.7 98.1 55.2 10 104 4.31 2.92 6.3
Hanratty QB 3 1 1–0–0 3 26 11.5 95 1 3.8 5 19.2 35 3.7 -4.2 31.7 31.7 15.5 1 13 3.04 -4.56 3.7 1 0
Team Total 14 10–3–1 166 386 43 2154 12 3.1 21 5.4 61 5.6 3.8 13.0 153.9 48.9 18 196 4.5 4.85 3.10 2 1
Opp Total 14 147 339 43.4 1872 14 4.1 25 7.4 5.5 3.03 12.7 133.7 44.3 52 406 13.3 3.7 1.6

Rushing

Rushing
Player Pos G GS Att Yds TD Lng Y/A Y/G A/G

Receiving

Receiving
Player Pos G GS Rec Yds Y/R TD Lng R/G Y/G Ctch%

Kicking

Kicking
Games 0–19 20–29 30–39 40–49 50+ Scoring
Player Pos G GS FGA FGM FGA FGM FGA FGM FGA FGM FGA FGM FGA FGM Lng FG% XPA XPM XP%

Punting

Punting
Player Pos G GS Pnt Yds Lng Blck Y/P

Kick Return

Kick Return

Punt Return

Punt Return

Sacks

Sacks
Player Pos G GS Sk

Interceptions

Interceptions

Fumbles

Fumbles

Tackles

Tackles

Scoring Summary

Scoring Summary

Team

Team
Total Yds & TO Passing Rushing Penalties
Player PF Yds Ply Y/P TO FL 1stD Cmp Att Yds TD Int NY/A 1stD Att Yds TD Y/A 1stD Pen Yds 1stPy
Team Stats 305 4375 950 4.6 40 19 251 166 386 1958 12 21 4.8 98 546 2417 19 4.4 136 104 978 17
Opp. Stats 189 3074 863 3.6 47 22 200 147 339 1466 14 25 3.7 83 472 1608 7 3.4 87 76 575 30
Lg Rank Offense 6 8 24 25 9 10 21 15 14 20 4 2 5 4
Lg Rank Defense 2 1 1 1 3 6 1 13 3 1 12 6 2 4

Quarter-by-quarter

Quarter-by-quarter
Team 1 2 3 4 OT T
Steelers 69 102 78 56 0 305
Opponents 41 74 44 30 0 189

Postseason summary

Divisional

AFC Divisional Playoff: Buffalo Bills (9–5) at Pittsburgh Steelers (10–3–1)
Period 1 2 34Total
Bills 7 0 7014
Steelers 3 26 0332

at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

  • Date: December 22
  • Game time: 1:00 p.m.
  • Game weather: Light snow, 33 °F (1 °C)
  • Game attendance: 48,321
  • Referee: Norm Schachter
  • TV announcers (NBC): Jim Simpson and John Brodie
  • Box Score
Game information
First quarter
Second quarter
  • PIT – Rocky Bleier 27-yard pass from Terry Bradshaw. Steelers 9–7.
  • PIT – Franco Harris 1-yard run (Roy Gerela kick). Steelers 16–7.
  • PIT – Franco Harris 4-yard run. Steelers 22–7.
  • PIT – Franco Harris 1-yard run (Roy Gerela kick). Steelers 29–7.
Third quarter
  • BUF – O. J. Simpson 3-yard pass from Joe Ferguson (John Leypoldt kick). Steelers 29–14.
Fourth quarter
  • PIT – Roy Gerela 22-yard field goal. Steelers 32–14.
Top passers
Top rushers
Top receivers

AFC Championship Game (Sunday, December 29, 1974): at Oakland Raiders

AFC Championship Game: Pittsburgh Steelers (12–3–1) at Oakland Raiders (13–3)
Period 1 2 34Total
Steelers (12–3–1) 0 3 02124
Raiders (13–3) 3 0 7313

at Oakland–Alameda County ColiseumOakland, California

  • Date: December 29, 1974
  • Game time: 4:00 p.m. EST
  • Game weather: 53 °F or 11.7 °C, Partly cloudy
  • Game attendance: 53,515
  • Referee: Jim Tunney
  • TV announcers (NBC): Curt Gowdy, Al DeRogatis, and Don Meredith
Game Summaries

AFC Divisional: vs. Buffalo Bills

Pittsburgh Steelers 32, Buffalo Bills 14
Period 1 2 34Total
Bills 7 0 7014
Steelers 3 26 0332

at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

  • Date: Sunday, December 22
  • Game time: 1:00 pm EST
  • Game weather: 34 °F or 1.1 °C, Light snow
  • Game attendance: 48,321
  • Referee: Norm Schachter
  • TV announcers (NBC): Jim Simpson and John Brodie
Game information
  • Pittsburgh – FG Gerela 21 PIT 3–0
  • Buffalo – Seymour 22 pass from Ferguson (Leypoldt kick) BUF 7–3
  • Pittsburgh – Bleier 27 pass from Bradshaw (kick blocked) PIT 9–7
  • Pittsburgh – Harris 1 run (Gerela kick) PIT 16–7
  • Pittsburgh – Harris 4 run (kick blocked) PIT 22–7
  • Pittsburgh – Harris 1 run (Gerela kick) PIT 29–7
  • Buffalo – Simpson 3 pass from Ferguson (Leypoldt kick) PIT 29–14
  • Pittsburgh – FG Gerela 22 PIT 32–14

In this Divisional Round playoff game, the Steelers were described as the only team in the playoffs without a quarterback and were expected to lose at home to Buffalo. The last time the Steelers faced the Bills, O. J. Simpson had rushed for 189 yards and the defense was concerned about him. However, by halftime the Steelers had dominated the line of scrimmage and the offense took time away from the Bills as the Steelers went up 29–7. #12 Terry Bradshaw was in the best game of his career. By the end of the game, O. J. was held to 49 yards rushing in his only playoff game of his career. After three weeks of solid performance by everyone, the Steelers were ready to rematch the Oakland Raiders in the AFC Championship Game.

AFC Championship: at Oakland Raiders

Pittsburgh Steelers 24, Oakland Raiders 13
Period 1 2 34Total
Steelers 0 3 02124
Raiders 3 0 7313

at Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum, Oakland, California

  • Date: Sunday, December 29
  • Game time: 4:00 pm EST
  • Game weather: 53 °F or 11.7 °C, Partly cloudy
  • Game attendance: 53,515
  • Referee: Jim Tunney
  • TV announcers (NBC): Curt Gowdy, Al DeRogatis, and Don Meredith
Game information

In the 1974 AFC Championship Game, all the hype was centered around the Raiders who had ended Miami's reign in stunning a play that went into NFL Lore as the "Sea of Hands". Raiders coach, John Madden however went a little too far in his praising of both teams when he said that when the two best teams in professional football get together, Miami Dolphins and the Oakland Raiders, great things will happen. Steelers stoic head coach Chuck Noll galvanized the team's spirit by making an unexpected comment. He said that the best team in the NFL was the team in this room. The Steelers would dominate the Raiders in Oakland by using the Stunt 4–3 and stopping the great Oakland offensive line. The Steelers rushed for over 200 yards as the Raiders rushed for a mere 29. Franco Harris ran for the final touchdown and sealed the first Super Bowl appearance in Steelers' history. This game would set the tone for what to come for the rest of the decade.

Super Bowl IX: vs. Minnesota Vikings

Pittsburgh Steelers 16, Minnesota Vikings 6
Period 1 2 34Total
Steelers 0 2 7716
Vikings 0 0 066

at Tulane Stadium, New Orleans, Louisiana

  • Date: Sunday, January 12
  • Game time: 3:00 pm EST
  • Game weather: Overcast, 51 °F or 10.6 °C, wind 17 mph, relative humidity 72%
  • Game attendance: 80,997
  • Referee: Bernie Ulman
  • TV announcers (NBC): Curt Gowdy, Al DeRogatis, and Don Meredith
  • Pro-Football-Reference.com
Game information

Approaching Super Bowl IX, Chuck Noll told his team to go out with no bed check and get the town out of their system. The team had a good time in New Orleans (everyone but #78 Dwight White, who was sick and in the hospital). By Wednesday, they were begging for a bed check. However, that time he gave them and the subsequent responsible attitude was a wonderful way to approach the big game. Noll's approach was in direct contrast to that of Vikings' head coach Bud Grant who had been to two previous Super Bowls, both of which the Vikings lost. The Vikings didn't have a relaxed atmosphere; they were very tense compared to the chilled and relaxed Steelers. Despite the trip to the hospital, #78 Dwight White played and scored the first points in the defensive battle on the first safety in Super Bowl history. The Steelers shut down the Minnesota run game that wanted to attack their opponent's strength the way the Steelers had against Oakland and Buffalo. The Vikings ran 20 times for 17 yards and #10 QB Fran Tarkenton completed just 11 of his 27 passes and threw three interceptions (1 to #75 Joe Greene though he didn't run very far). #32 Franco Harris ran farther than anyone ever had in the Super Bowl to that point, setting a record with 158 yards rushing. He was named the game's Most Valuable Player. The Steelers became champions for the first time in their 42-year history when #12 Terry Bradshaw threw a strike to #87 Larry Brown for a TD.

Awards, honors and records

References

  1. ^ Jenkins, Dan (December 23, 1974). "For Openers, Super Bowl VIII½". Sports Illustrated.
  2. ^ 1974 Pittsburgh Steelers Media Guide.
  3. ^ 1974 Pittsburgh Steelers Media Guide.
  4. ^ 1975 Pittsburgh Steelers Media Guide.
  5. ^ "1974 Pittsburgh Steelers". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved December 17, 2014.
  6. ^ Pro Football Reference; Baltimore Colts at Pittsburgh Steelers – September 15th, 1974
  7. ^ Pro Football Reference; Pittsburgh Steelers at Denver Broncos – September 22nd, 1974

External links

  • 1974 Pittsburgh Steelers season at Profootballreference.com
  • 1974 Pittsburgh Steelers season statistics at jt-sw.com
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Formerly the Pittsburgh Pirates (1933–1939)
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Pittsburgh Steelers Super Bowl IX champions
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Pittsburgh Steelers
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