Gregg Doyel of CBSSportsline.com writes that Santonio Holmes’ game-winning touchdown grab was the best catch in NFL history.
You can’t dispute that Pittsburgh receiver Santonio Holmes, given the stakes and the degree of difficulty, just gave us the greatest catch in the history of professional football — a 6-yard, leaping, tightrope grab in the back corner of the end zone with 35 seconds left to give the Steelers a 27-23 victory Sunday night against Arizona in Super Bowl XLIII.
The ball was high, and heading out of bounds. Holmes wasn’t merely going to have to make a leaping catch — that’s routine enough; Holmes himself said later that he didn’t leap, but he did a little bit — but he had to make a leaping catch as his momentum was taking him out the side door near the back of the end zone. Leap, focus on the ball long enough to make the catch, then forget about the hands and worry about the feet. Get them down, both of them, because this isn’t Ohio State, son. Two feet down in the NFL, or it’s no catch.
Do all that … oh, and did we mention this is the Super Bowl? And that there is less than a minute left? That the other team leads 23-20?
Doyel goes onto compare Holmes’ catch to Lynn Swann’s in Super Bowl X and David Tyree’s in last year’s Super Bowl.
Swann and Tyree made their catches in the Super Bowl, so they’re still in the running. I guess. But neither guy made his catch in the end zone. Neither guy scored on the play. Swann made the prettiest catch we’ve ever seen, and Tyree made one of the most difficult catches we’ve ever seen, but they came in the middle of the field. Tyree’s grab led to the winning touchdown, true, but it didn’t score it. So give Swann credit for being a ballerina in cleats, and applaud Tyree for making one of the most ridiculous catches you’ve ever seen.
But don’t compare their non-scoring catches to what Holmes did — not just in the end zone in the Super Bowl, but in the final minute with his team trailing 23-20.
I don’t find myself saying this too often but I actually agree with Doyel. I didn’t think that anything could top Tyree’s catch last year considering the degree of difficulty in which he had to hang onto the ball by pressing it against his helmet while he was falling to the ground and wrestling with Rodney Harrison at the same time. But if you were like me last night when Holmes caught that ball you said, “No way – no way was he in.” But he was and it was incredible.
Holmes had to use his hands and his hands only to snag that ball. Not only that, but he also had three defenders around him and while Roethlisberger’s pass was placed in a spot only Holmes could catch it, it was still sailing well out of bounds when the Steeler wideout snagged it out of the air. And as Doyel points out, when you factor in the magnitude of the game and the fact that Holmes had to get two feet down while his momentum was being carried out of bounds, it all adds up to the greatest catch ever.
Posted in: NFL, Super Bowl
Tags: Arizona Cardinals, Ben Roethlisberger, David Tyree, David Tyree Super Bowl catch, Lynn Swan Super Bowl X catch, Lynn Swann, Pittsburgh Steelers, Santonio Holmes, Santonio Holmes Super Bowl catch, Santonio Holmes Super Bowl catch greatest ever, Santonio Holmes vs. David Tyree Super Bowl catches, Steelers beat Cardinals in Super Bowl, Super Bowl 43, Super Bowl XLIII
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It would have been the best, IF he had both his feet down. Look on the EastValleyTribune.com page A1. His bottom shoe patterns DO NOT match so his right foot was not on the field.
Holmes made a great play with the highest stakes on the line but he didn’t have a defender near him nor did he have to fight for the ball all the way to the ground and not let it touch, while falling on his back. You see guys make the same catch Holmes did every single week on Sportscenter.
Call Holmes’ the greatest touchdown catch ever but Tyree’s stands alone as the greatest catch ever.
I’m not all about saying so-and-so is the best ever. I will say that Holmes’ catch was absolutely stunning, especially considering he let the potential game winner slip through his hands just a few seconds before that. I’m with you, Anthony — when it happened, I didn’t think there was any way he caught that ball.
Judy – Are you serious? That photo could have been taken before or after he touched his right foot down. It just shows a moment in time, not the entire play. Here it is so people know what we’re talking about.
It sure looked like both feet were cleanly down.
I thought his feet were down and the refs made the right call. What an amazing catch after missing on the identical play to the opposite side. Perfect throw by Roethlisberger.
when you look at all the pictures in progression this is the closest he gets to both feet in. Case in point.
Again, pictures are just a snapshot in time. You can string several of them together, but a video they do not make.
John Paulsen, I have searched the internet and can’t seem to find a previous second photo or a post second photo could you possibly post one so I can believe Holmes had two feet on the field. Seems as though this was a photo finish. Or is this the reason there was NOT a women officiating the game ?
I am basing my comments on what I saw during the game via the video, where it looked like he got both feet in. The booth reviewed it and confirmed that it was a catch — or did they just not have enough evidence to overturn the ruling on the field?
Hmm….
that was the best catch ever by far 3 guys around him and still being able to catch it in the corner without any breathing room with both feet down bye far the best catch ever