On this day: Born June 11, 1956:
Joe Montana, American football player
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[June 10, 2020]
By Frank Pingue
(Reuters) - Getting agreement on the
greatest NFL player of all-time may be a lost cause but it would be
hard to argue that anyone was more consistently prolific on the
biggest stage than Joe Montana.
The former San Francisco 49ers quarterback went a perfect 4-0 in
Super Bowl appearances in which he completed a combined 83-of-122
passes without throwing an interception and was named the
championship game's Most Valuable Player three times.
Nicknamed Joe Cool, Montana was seemingly impervious to the pressure
of a scoreboard deficit and managed to bring a sense of calm to
every huddle.
A master of late-game comebacks, Montana led his teams to 31 fourth
quarter come-from-behind wins, including a stunning 92-yard drive in
the final minutes of the Super Bowl in early 1989 to give the 49ers
their third championship in eight years.
"What I have is recognition. The ability to see everything on the
field," Montana once said. "Position the other team to death. Keep
the ball alive and keep it moving forward. Then, at the right
moment, knock them on their ass. Own the field."
In 1982, with the upstart 49ers one win from a Super Bowl berth,
Montana capped a stunning 83-yard drive with a six-yard touchdown
pass to Dwight Clark that is known simply as 'The Catch' and
considered one of the greatest plays in NFL history.
On the magical play, Montana rolled right out of the pocket. Dallas
Cowboys players chased him down but, throwing off-balance to the
back of the end zone, Montana hit Clark's outstretched hands for the
game-winning score.
'The Catch', immortalised outside the 49ers' stadium with statues of
Montana and Clark depicting the play, ended the Cowboys' National
Football Conference dominance and launched the 49ers' dynasty as
they won their first Super Bowl two weeks later.
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San Francisco quarterback Joe Montana scrambles for yardage during
the first quarter of Super Bowl XXIV on January 28, 1990./File Photo
However, in early 1991, with the 49ers one win from playing for
their third consecutive Super Bowl title, Montana hurt his elbow on
a brutal hit. The 49ers lost the game and Montana missed the better
part of the next two seasons.
In his absence, Steve Young emerged from Montana's shadow and became
an effective leader, which created a quarterback controversy when
the latter was ready to return.
After 14 years with the 49ers, future Hall of Famer Montana was
traded to the Kansas City Chiefs and showed he still possessed
remarkable field vision and keen decision making.
In his debut season, Montana led his new team to their first
conference title game since 1969 but was knocked out of the game
with a concussion in the third quarter of a 30-13 loss.
He returned for one more season and led the Chiefs back to the
playoffs before calling time on a career during which he set the
gold standard for quarterbacks.
(Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto; Editing by Ken Ferris)
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