ON THIS DAY: December 16, 2000, Steelers play last game at Three Rivers Stadium
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By Matt Simmons
PITTSBURGH, Pa. — As the 2000 season wound down, the Steelers prepared to say goodbye to Three Rivers Stadium. It was their first winning season since 1997 and, though the team did not qualify for the playoffs, a better send off for the stadium would be hard to imagine.
Jack Lambert, Franco Harris, Jack Ham, and Mel Blount waved to the twirling Terrible Towels about them as they walked out for the coin toss, which was the only thing to go the Redskin’s way that afternoon.
The exuberant cheers of the crowd softened the melancholy end of the stadium, but the game was of little consequence in the end as the Steelers again failed to make the playoffs.
Bettis ran for 100 yards, but also reflected on those who came before him saying: “The atmosphere was incredible. It makes you realize when you put on this jersey, you’re not just representing yourself but every guy who played here and gave it up on that field.”
The sun rose over Three Rivers Stadium for the last time on Feb. 11, 2001. Crowds ringed the downtown landmark and the river shorelines and bridges were packed with humanity while final checks were made inside the stadium by experts from Controlled Demolition, Inc.
Five unmanned Channel 11 cameras huddled together in the middle of the stadium as helicopters hovered above and breathless commentary filled airtime for those watching at home. The suspense in the chilly air was as taut as any championship game. The giant loomed tall, enjoying its last moments of triumph over gravity.
Three Rivers Stadium had already seen more than its fair share of moments where time seemed to stand still. The edifice in the City of Champions dominated downtown views for three decades and boasted of the trophies and treasures hidden within, earned at the cost of blood, sweat and tears shed by players and fans alike.
It took only two years to build Three Rivers, but it took nearly 20 years of discussion to get to groundbreaking day on April 25, 1968. Ultimately, the project would transform the North Shore and Oakland as well, with the resulting demolition of Forbes Field.
Like the Pirates, the Steelers’ ultimate victories would come elsewhere, but it was in Three Rivers Stadium where balls seemed to hang in the air while the crowd held its breath. Sometimes they came down unfavorably, breaking hearts and dashing dreams – but then there were the other times. The times when flashbulbs lasted an eternity and the cheering went mute as expectant fans prayed for a miracle to be performed right in front of them.
The Immaculate Reception, as Myron Cope coined it, is such a beloved moment in team history that a monument still stands in the parking lot outside Heinz Field where Franco Harris snatched victory from the Oakland Raiders.
Despite being a wellspring of ego-sustaining victories through the tough economic years it was open, the somewhat charmless Three Rivers struggled through updates. In the final analysis, it wasn’t the structure that failed, it was the inability to add enough luxury boxes to suit team owners and a design that was a compromise between two disparate sports but a master of neither.
With so much history hugged by the stands inside and Three Rivers’ fate sealed, fans were eager to grab a piece of the iconic stadium. Worried about a repeat of Forbes Field, which was ransacked as fans stripped out seats and anything else they could walk out with, security was tightened and an auction planned.
Thousands attended the auction at the Civic Arena and prices were lofty as even locker room trash cans sold for $175. Seats and sections of turf were the most popular items.
Cleared and stripped of anything interesting or valuable, there was only one thing left to do with the shell of memories the stadium had become.
In order to make the transition as seamless as possible, the new stadium and neighboring ballpark were built simultaneously as Three Rivers wound down. As a result, the nearest part of Heinz Field was a mere 60 feet away from Three Rivers, which made the planned implosion a little trickier than normal.
It’s estimated that over 20,000 people went to Point State Park to watch Pittsburgh’s greatest monument to sports conquest crumble to dust. Thousands more lined Mount Washington and other high points around the city.
The charges were set off to bring down the stadium in a sequence of sections, rather than all at once, to minimize vibrations and potential damage to the surrounding structures. After the last tonnage of concrete hit terra firma fireworks were launched to celebrate the end of the era.