1975 Pittsburgh Steelers season

The 1975 Pittsburgh Steelers season was the franchise's 43rd in the National Football League (NFL). The Steelers were defending champions for the first time in their forty-year history and repeated as league champions. The team was led by a dominating defense and a quick offense, and won Super Bowl X over the Dallas Cowboys, 21–17. The 1975 Steelers had one of the greatest defensive teams of all time. The team posted their best defensive numbers since 1946, and scored more points than any other Steelers team, later surpassed by two points in 2010.

1975 Pittsburgh Steelers season
OwnerArt Rooney
General managerDaniel M. Rooney
Head coachChuck Noll
Home fieldThree Rivers Stadium
Results
Record12–2
Division place1st AFC Central
Playoff finishWon Divisional Playoffs
(vs. Colts) 28–10
Won AFC Championship
(vs. Raiders) 16–10
Won Super Bowl X
(vs. Cowboys) 21–17
Pro Bowlers
AP All-Pros
7
  • Mel Blount (1st team)
  • L. C. Greenwood (1st team)
  • Jack Ham (1st team)
  • Franco Harris (2nd team)
  • Joe Greene (2nd team)
  • Jack Lambert (2nd team)
  • Lynn Swann (2nd team)
Team MVPMel Blount
Team ROYJohn Banaszak

In 2007, the 1975 Steelers were ranked as the seventh greatest Super Bowl champions on the NFL Network's documentary series America's Game: The Super Bowl Champions, with team commentary from Lynn Swann, Dwight White, and Mike Wagner, and narrated by Bruce Willis. More than a decade later, the team ranked #10 on the 100 greatest teams of all time presented by the NFL on its 100th anniversary.[1][2] The 1975 Steelers' +211 point differential stands as the best in franchise history. They won by at least 21 points six times, with their season superlative 37–0 shutout at San Diego in the opener on September 21.[3][4]

Offseason

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NFL Draft

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1975 Pittsburgh Steelers draft
RoundPickPlayerPositionCollegeNotes
126Dave Brown * CBMichiganplayed one season for Steelers; selected by the Seattle Seahawks in the expansion draft
251Bob Barber DEGramblingplaying for Packers; 1976-79
378Walter White TEMarylandTraded to Chiefs
4104Harold Evans LBHouston
5130Brent Sexton DBElon
6156Marvin Crenshaw TNebraska
7180Wayne Mattingly TColorado
8208Al Humphrey DETulsa
9234Bruce Reimer RBNorth Dakota State
10260Archie Grey WRWyoming
11286Randy Little TEWest Liberty
12312Greg Murphy DEPenn State
13337Bob Gaddis WRMississippi Valley Stateplayed mostly in CFL
14364Mike Collier RBMorgan Stateplayed one season for Steelers
15390Marty Smith DTLouisville
16415Miller Bassler TEHouston
17442Stan Hegener GNebraska

Personnel

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Staff

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1975 Pittsburgh Steelers staff

Front office

  • Chairman of the board – Arthur J. Rooney
  • President – Daniel M. Rooney
  • Vice president – John R. McGinley
  • Vice president – Arthur J. Rooney, Jr.
  • Public relations director – Ed Kiely
  • Traveling secretary – James A. Boston
  • Publicity director – Joe Gordon
  • Controller – Robert P. Quinn
  • Accountant – Dennis P. Thimons
  • 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. George P. Boucek
  • Trainer – Ralph Berlin
  • Assistant trainer – Robert Milie
  • Equipment manager – Anthony Parisi
  • Field manager – Jack Hart
  • Film director – Bob McCartney
  • Photographer – Harry Homa

[5]

Roster

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1975 Pittsburgh Steelers final roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Reserve lists


Practice squad[6][7][8]
Rookies in italics
43 active, 1 inactive

Preseason

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During the preseason, the Steelers acquired undrafted free-agent, John Banaszak. The Defensive tackle from Eastern Michigan played in three games and later became the 1975 Team ROY (Rookie of the Year).

Schedule

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WeekDateOpponentResultVenue
1August 1College All-StarsW 21–14Soldier Field
2August 9Philadelphia EaglesL 14–17Three Rivers Stadium
3August 17Oakland RaidersL 21–24Memorial Stadium
4August 22at Baltimore ColtsW 31–10Memorial Stadium
5August 30New York GiantsL 7–24Palmer Stadium
6September 6New Orleans SaintsW 24–13Three Rivers Stadium
7September 13at Dallas CowboysL 16–17Texas Stadium

Regular season

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Schedule

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WeekDateOpponentResultVenue
1September 21at San Diego ChargersW 37–0San Diego Stadium
2September 28Buffalo BillsL 21–30Three Rivers Stadium
3October 5at Cleveland BrownsW 42–6Cleveland Municipal Stadium
4October 12Denver BroncosW 20–9Three Rivers Stadium
5October 19Chicago BearsW 34–3Three Rivers Stadium
6October 26at Green Bay PackersW 16–13County Stadium
7November 2at Cincinnati BengalsW 30–24Riverfront Stadium
8November 9Houston OilersW 24–17Three Rivers Stadium
9November 16Kansas City ChiefsW 28–3Three Rivers Stadium
10November 24at Houston OilersW 32–9Houston Astrodome
11November 30at New York JetsW 20–7Shea Stadium
12December 7Cleveland BrownsW 31–17Three Rivers Stadium
13December 13Cincinnati BengalsW 35–14Three Rivers Stadium
14December 20at Los Angeles RamsL 3–10Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum

Game summaries

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Week 1

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1234Total
Steelers101031437
Chargers00000

In the Week 1 game, the Steelers opened the season as defending champions, and crushed the Chargers, 37-0, in San Diego.[3][4] (1-0)

Week 2

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1234Total
Bills01013730
Steelers0071421

In Week 2, the Steelers, coming off a crushing defeat of the Chargers in Week 1, came to play revenge eager Buffalo in Pittsburgh. The Bills had been beaten the previous year by the Steelers in the playoffs, 32-14. Chuck Noll had warned the team the previous week that the team did not play very well, however, the players ignored him and were beaten by future Hall of Fame RB O.J. Simpson, 30-21. He rushed for 227 yards, including an 88-yard touchdown run in the 3rd quarter. (1-1)

Week 3

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1234Total
Steelers72101442
Browns00066

In this Week 3 matchup, the Steelers would be hosted by the Cleveland Browns. These two teams had already been established as one of the league's best rivalries by this time, and Joe Greene's infamous kicking of the Browns lineman Bob McKay only fueled the rivalry. The fight that broke out afterwards caught it on fire. Greene was later fined $500 while the Steelers beat the Browns, 42-6. (2-1) This was the first of eleven consecutive victories for the Steelers.

Week 4

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1234Total
Broncos36009
Steelers7100320
  • Date: October 12
  • Location: Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
  • Game start: 1:00 p.m., EST
  • Game attendance: 49,164
  • Game weather: 59 °F (15 °C) (Mostly Cloudy)
  • Referee: Dick Jorgensen
  • Television network: NBC

In Week 4, the Steelers beat the Denver Broncos in Three Rivers, 20-9. (3-1)

Week 5

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1234Total
Bears03003
Steelers010101434
  • Date: October 19
  • Location: Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
  • Game start: 1:00 p.m., EST
  • Game attendance: 47,579
  • Game weather: 50 °F (10 °C) (Cloudy)
  • Referee: Norm Schachter
  • Television network: CBS

In Week 5, the Steelers crushed Chicago, 34-3. Three weeks after the Steelers were beaten by Buffalo, the team was 4-1, and had allowed only 18 points during the last three weeks while scoring 96. (4-1)

Week 6

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1234Total
Steelers3100316
Packers067013

In Week 5, the Packers would host the Steelers in Milwaukee, however, the tense battle ended in Pittsburgh's favor, 16-13. (5-1)

Week 7

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1234Total
Steelers01013730
Bengals3002124

In Week 7, the Steelers played the Bengals in Riverfront Stadium and won the game, 30–24. (6–1)

Week 8

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1234Total
Oilers073717
Steelers1070724
  • Date: November 9
  • Location: Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
  • Game start: 1:00 p.m., EST
  • Game attendance: 49,460
  • Game weather: 75 °F (24 °C) (Sunny)
  • Referee: Jim Tunney
  • Television network: NBC

In this heated Week 8 battle, the Steelers would play host to the Houston Oilers. Pittsburgh sealed the win with a 4th quarter touchdown pass from #12 Terry Bradshaw to #82 John Stallworth that placed them at the top of the division. (7-1)

Week 9

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1234Total
Chiefs03003
Steelers0714728
  • Date: November 16
  • Location: Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
  • Game start: 1:00 p.m., EST
  • Game attendance: 48,803
  • Game weather: 55 °F (13 °C) (Partly Cloudy)
  • Referee: Bernie Ulman
  • Television network: NBC

In Week 9, the Steelers beat the Chiefs, 28-3. (8-1)

Week 10

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1234Total
Steelers21331432
Oilers03069

In Week 10, the Steelers defeated the Oilers again, this time in Houston 32-9, and secured a playoff spot. (9-1)

Week 11

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1234Total
Steelers01010020
Jets00077

In Week 11, the Steelers beat the Jets 20-7. (10-1)

Week 12

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1234Total
Browns3140017
Steelers7314731
  • Date: December 7
  • Location: Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
  • Game start: 1:00 p.m., EST
  • Game attendance: 47,962
  • Game weather: 38 °F (3 °C) (Sunny), Wind 11 mph (18 km/h)
  • Referee: Pat Haggerty
  • Television network: NBC

In another defeat of Cleveland in Week 13, 31-17, the Steelers continued their winning streak to 10. (11-1)

Week 13

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1234Total
Bengals070714
Steelers1477735
  • Date: Saturday, December 13
  • Location: Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
  • Game start: 12:30 p.m., EST
  • Game attendance: 48,889
  • Game weather: 57 °F (14 °C), (Sunny) wind 8 mph (13 km/h)
  • Referee: Ben Dreith
  • Television network: NBC

In Week 13, the Steelers finished the sweep of the division by beating the Bengals again, 35-14. (12-1)

Week 14

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1234Total
Steelers30003
Rams030710

In the meaningless Week 14 game, the Steelers were beaten by Los Angeles, 10-3. (12-2)

Standings

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AFC Central
WLTPCTDIVCONFPFPASTK
Pittsburgh Steelers(1)1220.8576–010–1373162L1
Cincinnati Bengals(4)1130.7863–38–3340246W1
Houston Oilers1040.7142–47–4293226W3
Cleveland Browns3110.2141–52–8218372L1

Stats

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Quarter-by-quarter

Quarter-by-quarter
1234OTT
Steelers63118811110373
Opponents96223680162

Postseason

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Schedule

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WeekDateOpponentResultVenue
DivisionalDecember 27Baltimore ColtsW 28–10Three Rivers Stadium
AFC ChampionshipJanuary 4Oakland RaidersW 16–10Three Rivers Stadium
Super Bowl XJanuary 18Dallas CowboysW 21–17Miami Orange Bowl

Game summaries

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Divisional

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1234Total
Colts073010
Steelers7071428
  • Franco Harris gained 152 yds rushing, one yard less than the Baltimore Colts offense. Andy Russell set a record for longest playoff fumble return.

AFC Championship

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1234Total
Raiders0001010
Steelers0301316
  • Date: January 4
  • Location: Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
  • Game start: 1:00 p.m. EST
  • Game attendance: 50,609
  • Game weather: 16 °F (−9 °C) (Blowing Snow)
  • Referee: Ben Dreith
  • TV announcers (NBC): Curt Gowdy, Al DeRogatis, and Don Meredith

Pittsburgh won the game, despite giving up eight turnovers.[9]

Super Bowl

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1234Total
Cowboys730717
Steelers7001421
  • Lynn Swann earned the MVP award catching 4 receptions for 161 yards.
  • The Pittsburgh Steelers won their 2nd of their 6 Super Bowl championships.

Awards, honors, and records

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References

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