1976 Pittsburgh Steelers season


The 1976 Pittsburgh Steelers season was the team's 44th in the National Football League. The Steelers started the season looking to become the first team in the Super Bowl era to win three-straight league championships. However, many thought that would be in doubt after the team started 1–4 and saw quarterback Terry Bradshaw injured in the week 5 loss to the Cleveland Browns after a vicious sack by Joe "Turkey" Jones that has since become immortalized in NFL Films as part of the Browns-Steelers rivalry.

Season

Despite the setbacks, the Steelers would turn it around behind the strength of the Steel Curtain and its dual threat at running back in Franco Harris and Rocky Bleier, who each rushed for over 1,000 yards, finishing 10–4 and posting five shutouts. Rookie quarterback Mike Kruczek wound up going 6–0 starting in place of Bradshaw, largely due to the strength of the ground game. This would also stand as an NFL record for best start for a rookie quarterback until 2004—when the Steelers' own Ben Roethlisberger more than doubled that record and went 13–0 as a starter his rookie season.

Playoffs

However, injuries to both Bleier and Harris in the AFC Divisional Playoff game against the Baltimore Colts sidelined them both for the following week's AFC Championship game against the Oakland Raiders. Without both of their 1,000-yard rushers, the Steelers lost to the Raiders by a score of 24-7. Even with Pittsburgh coming up short, many Steelers fans—including the Rooney family themselves—consider the 1976 Steelers the best team in franchise history, even better than all six world championship teams. Jack Lambert, who won 4 Super Bowls with the Steelers between 1974 and 1979, claimed that the 1976 Steelers team was the best team that he ever played for, and subsequently, the loss to the Raiders in the AFC Championship game was the most painful loss of his career. He is convinced that they would have beaten the Raiders and gone on to win that season's Super Bowl had Harris and Bleier both been healthy and available for said AFC Championship game.
In 2007, ESPN.com named the 1976 Steelers the greatest defense in NFL history, noting, "the 1976 unit was the best. Here's why: 28. That's how many points the Steel Curtain surrendered in the last nine games of the season. That's a total. As a result, Pittsburgh, which started the season 1–4, made it all the way to the AFC Championship Game. Only 1 of the 7 teams the Steelers played during the streak finished the season with a winning record and none made the playoffs. The Steelers' defense had Hall of Famers Mean Joe Greene, Jack Lambert, Jack Ham and Mel Blount. And eight Steelers defensive players made the 1976 Pro Bowl team: cornerback J.T. Thomas, defensive end L. C. Greenwood, Greene, Ham, Lambert, defensive back Glen Edwards, safety Mike Wagner, and Blount."

Personnel

Staff

Roster

Regular season

Schedule

Game summaries

Week 1 (Sunday September 12, 1976): at [Oakland Raiders]

at Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum, Oakland, California
Scoring Drives:
at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
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at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
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at Metropolitan Stadium, Bloomington, Minnesota
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was injured on a sack by Turkey Jones and missed six weeks.

Week 6 (Sunday October 17, 1976): vs. [Cincinnati Bengals]

at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Scoring Drives:
at Giants Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey
Scoring Drives:
NOTE: This was the first of 5 wins by shutout.

Week 8 (Sunday October 31, 1976): vs. [San Diego Chargers]

at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
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at Arrowhead Stadium, Kansas City, Missouri
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at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Scoring Drives:
at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
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at Riverfront Stadium, Cincinnati
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at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
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at Astrodome, Houston, Texas
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Notes

Postseason

Game summaries

AFC Divisional Playoff (Sunday December 19, 1976): at [Baltimore Colts]

at Memorial Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland
Scoring Drives:
Notes: Pittsburgh gained an NFL record 524 total yards, Franco Harris and Rocky Bleier were lost to injuries.

AFC Championship (Sunday December 26, 1976): at [Oakland Raiders]

at Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum, Oakland, California
Scoring Drives: