Steelers - 5 Years at a Time (1970-1974)
Chuck Noll was hired in 1969 and won his first game. Of course, he lost the next 13. 1970 was the year of the AFL/NFL merger and the foundation of the current NFL. The Steelers moved into the AFC Central, the forerunner of today's AFC North. And, they began playing in Three Rivers.
With a fair amount of Steeler Nation running a little short of perspective in a year when we will quite possibly miss the playoffs by just one game, I'm going to look at the last 40 years (the modern Steeler Era) in five year increments. At the end, I'll provide a bit of an overview of the past 40 years for Steeler Nation. And hopefully show that there's no reason to get worked up about 2009. Things aren't bad.
I was only 3 years old in 1970, so my earliest Steeler memories begin during this block.
Tag Line - The Steelers, after decades of futility, became an NFL power.
42-27-1 (.600 pct)
Close Losses %: 37% (10 of 27)
Winning Seasons: 3/5
Double Digit Win Seasons: 3/5
Playoffs: 3 seasons/3-2 record
Championship games: 2 (1-1)
Super Bowls: 1-0
The Steelers improved on their win total in 1970 and again in 1971, showing progress under Chuck Noll. Then, after only two playoff appearances in team history, three straight trips to the postseason, two AFC championship games and one Super Bowl win. Delirium for a long-suffering fan base that would shortly be known as Steeler Nation.
I define close losses as those by 7 points or less. An offensive play here, a key stop there, and a loss might have been a win. Even if it was a 'bad' game, I'm declaring it a competitive one, based on final score. The Steelers not only had a pretty good winning percentage for the block (about the equivalent of a 10-6 season today), they almost won over a third of their losses, including the 1972 AFC Championship Game.
KEY MOMENT - Many things happened that helped turn the franchise around in this block, but the breakthrough came in the 1974 AFC Championship game. Pittsburgh trailed rival Oakland (who had knocked them out of the playoffs the prior year) 10-3 at the start of the fourth quarter. The Steelers outscored the Raiders 21-3 in the fourth and secured the first of SEVEN Super Bowl appearances. Miami's reign would be over with the Steelers' emergence (the Dolphins had appeared in three consecutive Super Bowls, winning the prior two).
SUMMARY - 1970-1974 was a watershed block for the Steelers franchise. Chuck Noll transformed perennial losers into Super Bowl champions, stocking the roster with pro bowlers and future hall of famers. And this block featured perhaps the most famous play in football history, The Immaculate Reception.
TRIVIA - The Dolphins barely made it to the Super Bowl in their undefeated 1972 season. The Browns led Miami 14-13 in the fourth quarter of the playoffs. The Dolphins had an 80 yard drive to win 20-14. We almost had a Browns - Steelers AFC title game! And in the conference finale, the Dolphins converted a fake punt on a TD drive in what turned out to be a 4 point victory.
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dolphins beat us that year...with a fake punt!
otherwise, we would have been winners that year instead! Could you imagine, we lost 21-17 to the undefeated dolphins without Swann, stallwoth, webster and lambert, who came in 1974!
Darn special teams!!
I hope they fired that guy! Just playing
"A pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty." - Winston Churchill
by PixburghArn on Dec 17, 2009 11:59 AM EST up reply actions
72 Steelers
had some pretty good players. While no Swann & Stallworth, Frank Lewis and Ron Shanklin were pretty tough WRs. Lewis had a HUGE TD catch in a ‘76 playoff game. While Bradshaw was still very unpolished, Harris was ROTY. Ranger Ray Mansfield would have been remembered as the greatest Steelers C of all time had not Webster and Dawson come along.
On defense, Wagner & Blount patrolled the secondary. Pine Edwards came off the bench and was PR. While Lambert wasn’t there Henry Davis was an able bodied MLB especially surrounded by Ham and Russell. Lambert (one of my all time fav’s) was actually hurt in IX and missed most of that Super Bowl. The entire front four was in place.
When You Run The Ball Good Things Happen
I agree
1972 was the first year I started collecting football cards and the Steelers did have some good players.
Frenchy Fuqua was my favorite Steeler in the day. And I still like Ron Shanklin. Ray Mansfield is one of the most underappreciated Steelers of the good years. He and guard Sam Davis deserve to be better remembered as excellent o-line guys.
not what I meant..
some jackass reporters had the 72 dolphins as the greatest team ever…they barely beat us in 1972 without 4 HOFers…was my argument!
Browns-Steelers Superbowl?
Too bad we’ll never get to see that. I would pay good money to go.
Bring a towel to the game. Black or gold or yellow. If you don't have one buy one, If you can't buy one, dye one!
Xbox Live Gamertag- Alf Ardanyu
by SoCalSteelerFan on Dec 17, 2009 2:18 PM EST reply actions
That would never happen even if the Browns were the NFC
Players who should be in the Hall of Fame
DIck Lebeau, Pat TIllman, Dwight White, Donnie Shell, L.C. Greenwood, Ray Guy, Steve Tasker, Greg Llyod, Andy Russel, Chris Carter and Kevin Greene
2009 Pittsburgh Steelers the Perefect Storm of Suck
Chris Henry 1983-2009 RIP
by WVPiratesfan on Dec 18, 2009 11:00 PM EST up reply actions
Thanks for the post...
I like to hear as much as I can about our history, and this gives me a little more insight into the time period. Seeing as I was -16 years old when this era began, and -12 when it ended, I’ll take all the info I can get. I have however heard a fair amount about the Dolphins of this period, as my father is a Dolphins fan, and these were his favorite teams the franchise produced.
Keep them coming upabob, I’ll keep reading.
'I’ve learned to become a flat-liner. There’s a lot out there that’ll make your heart jump if you allow it."
-Coach Tomlin
by NYSteelersFan4 on Dec 18, 2009 10:39 AM EST reply actions

































