|  | 
| Chuck Noll Hall of Fame | 
On the surface, Chuck Noll and 
Vince Lombardi were very different coaches.  Lombardi was hard as nails 
on his players and he motivated his team with emotional talks and take 
your breath away rants and raves on the practice field.  Noll was direct
 and a man of few words.  When Noll did elaborate, sometimes he lost the
 thread of his message and his players lost the meaning.  Mostly, he 
kept it simple. 
 
But
 both coaches spent endless amounts of time to reach the same two 
objectives: 1. Creating the toughest team in  the NFL.  2. Creating the 
most fundamentally sound team in the NFL. 
Who could argue that Noll's Steelers and Lombardi's Packers were not both tough and fundamentally sound.  
|  | 
| Vince Lombardi Hall of Fame | 
Lombardi's
 catch phrase, "winning is everything,"  has often been misunderstood to
 mean that 
winning by any means is acceptable.  But his players would 
likely tell us that the "any means" had more to do with their training 
than things they would do to opposing teams.  By sacrificing their 
bodies and routinely using every ounce of energy in practice, they 
became a formidable team on the field.  Lombardi sought to have his 
players better prepared than any other team.
 
Noll's
 catchphrase was "whatever it takes." Again, it's easily misunderstood. 
 Noll expanded on the notion to say that "whatever it takes"  to become the best team 
 was his meaning.  For Noll, like Lombardi, it was all about sacrifice 
for the team, work for the team, playing your role for the team.  
For
 both Lombardi and Noll, their objectives of toughness and fundamentals 
was demonstrated and forever remembered in two of pro football's 
greatest highlights.   
Packers' 1967 NFL Championship Game 
|  | 
| Ice Bowl Program | 
The Packers played the Dallas Cowboys for the NFL
Championship on the last day of the year in 1967.  The Packers had a secret weapon—Mother Nature.  Few NFL games have been so well celebrated
and memorialized.  The Packers had seen
plenty of cold weather before this game, but the so-called “Ice Bowl” was the
start of much of the lore and legend surrounding Lambeau Field.  From this game forward, Green Bay fans would
not just tolerate the cold at Lambeau, they would relish their “frozen tundra.”
The Cowboys were leading, 17–14, on the Packers’ frigid home field in
the fourth quarter.  With only 4:50 on
the clock, Lombardi’s offense looked 68 yards downfield to the goal and began a
12-play drive for the win.  They would
need almost every second.   
A determined
Starr completed a pass out in the flat to Donny Anderson for a 6-yard gain.  Chuck Mercein found enough running room
outside for a first down.  Starr tossed
one down the middle to Dowler over the 50-yard line and Cornell Green who was
struggling with his footing was able to grab and throw Dowler down hard on the
tackle to the frozen ground.  It was nip
and tuck all the way.  Anderson received
a handoff from Starr, but was tackled in the backfield.  It was second down and 19 yards to go for a
first on a field that was quickly becoming an ice skating rink.  Starr looked around and tossed Anderson an
outlet pass that the halfback turned into another 12-yard gain.  Starr followed with another short pass to
Anderson who gained the first down. 
Chuck Mercein was targeted next and after the catch he ran the ball down
to the Dallas 11-yard line.  Mercein had the hot hand and took a
handoff from Starr and ran it up the middle to the 2-yard line.  Anderson rushed to within inches of the goal
and a first down.  The tough, determined
Cowboys’ defense stuffed two Donny Anderson drives.  Starr went to the sideline and told Lombardi
since the backs were slipping, he would take the ball himself on a wedge play,
which normally goes to the fullback. 
Lombardi famously responded, “Then do it and let’s get the hell out of
here.” 
As Starr jogged back on the field, the
tension in the stands was almost unbearable.
Starr stood behind center with 13 seconds remaining at the
1-yard line with no time outs.  He raised
his hands to quiet the crowd and the ball was snapped on a quick count.  Jerry Kramer jumped out at Jethro Pugh,
hitting him low, followed by Packer center Ken Bowman hitting Pugh high.  Cleats scratched on ice and Pugh was driven
backwards.  Starr shadowed Kramer and
plunged into the end zone for the score. 
Mercein, who thought Starr was going to hand off to him, trailed the play
and raised his arms in the air so the officials knew he was not pushing Starr
into the end zone—an infraction that might have caused the Packers the
game.  Millions watching thought Mercein
was signaling a score! The fans realized that Starr had scored and in the midst
of an arctic field of dreams came the deafening roar of the crowd.  Chandler kicked the extra point. 
Defining Moment for Noll’s Steelers 
|  | 
| Immaculate Reception Commemorative Football | 
The defining moment that ended the string of frustration and
put the Steelers into a new winning way came at the very end of the divisional
playoff game on December 23, 1972.  Pittsburgh
had the ball on its own 20-yard line with just 1 minute 20 seconds to go trailing the Oakland Raiders 7–6.  Bradshaw was no miracle worker in those days
and five plays later, the Steelers were still 60 yards from pay dirt with only
22 seconds remaining.  Bradshaw threw
over the middle to “Frenchy” Fuqua, but Raiders’ defensive back Jack Tatum
crashed into Fuqua and the ball with such force that the ball flew backward
like it had been redirected by some unknown hand.  Franco Harris grabbed the ball off his
shoelaces in stride and eluded tacklers on his way to the end zone for the
score and the win.  The play was called
the “Immaculate Reception.”  Although the Steelers went on to lose the AFC
Championship to the Dolphins, they made an impression with football fans, their
competitors, and most importantly, themselves. 
They had arrived.  Noll’s Steelers
were winners and now with the Immaculate Reception, it seemed like they had
fans in high places.
Harris
 personified what it meant to play fundamentally sound and give it 
everything he had.  Although he was apparently out of the play, he kept 
his head in it and when the ball bounced off Tatum  he was able to pick 
it up and run for the score.  The extra point gave the Steelers a 13–7 victory.
In the waning moments of both games, the players took stock of themselves and played solid fundamental football as a team.
Chuck Noll, the great Steelers' coach and one of the greatest coaches in NFL history died this past week.  
Copyright 2014, Sporting Chance Press
Sporting Chance Press is the publisher of 
Pillars of the NFL: Coaches Who Have Won Three or More Championships that is available at select bookstores, Amazon, and the 
publisher's web site.