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Lynn Swann
Lynn Swann Super Bowl X 1976
Pittsburgh Steelers WR Lynn Swann in Super Bowl X in January 1976
Personal Information
Position(s)
Wide receiver
Jersey #(s)
88
Nationality American
Born March 7 1952 (1952-03-07) (age 72), in Alcoa, Tennessee, U.S.
Career information
Year(s) 19741982
NFL Draft 1974 / Round: 1 / Pick: 21
College Southern California
Professional teams
Career stats
Receptions 336
Receiving Yards 5,462
Touchdowns 51
Stats at pro-football-reference.com
Career highlights and awards

Lynn Curtis Swann (born March 7, 1952) is a retired former professional football wide receiver who played for the NFL's Pittsburgh Steelers from 1974-1982. He attended USC and played football as a wide receiver of the USC Trojans, where he was a consensus All-American. He is regarded as one of the most popular and one of the greatest wide receivers of his generation. He was drafted by the Steelers in the first round of the 1974 NFL draft. With the Steelers, Swann won four Super Bowls, was selected to three Pro Bowls, and was named MVP of Super Bowl X. Swann was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2001 and the College Football Hall of Fame in 1993.

Early life[]

Swann was born March 7, 1952, in Alcoa, Tennessee, in the foothills of the Great Smoky Mountains near Knoxville.

The Swann family moved to San Mateo, California, in the San Francisco Bay Area when Lynn was 2.[1] As a youth, Swann was raised in neighboring Foster City and attended Junípero Serra High School, where in addition to playing football, he was a track star, leaping 24 ft 10 in (7.57 m) in the long jump. At the 1970 CIF California State championship meet, Swann won the state title, defeating future Olympic gold medalist Randy Williams.Template:Category handler/numbered[citation needed]

Professional football career[]

Swann was selected in the first round of the 1974 NFL Draft by the Pittsburgh Steelers with the 21st overall pick. The Steelers draft class of '74 is considered one of the best in NFL history and included four eventual Hall of Famers: Swann, John Stallworth, Mike Webster, and Jack Lambert.

Swann spent his entire NFL career with the Steelers and wore the jersey number 88. As a rookie in 1974, he led the NFL with 577 punt-return yards, a franchise record and the fourth-most in NFL history at the time. He went on to win a championship ring with the Steelers in Super Bowl IX, but did not record any receptions in the tough defensive struggle (Pittsburgh quarterback Terry Bradshaw completed only nine passes in the game). However, he returned three punts for 34 yards.

The following season, 1975, became the highlight of Swann's career. He caught 49 passes for 781 yards and a league-leading 11 touchdowns. In the AFC title game against the Oakland Raiders, George Atkinson knocked Swann out of the game with a very hard but legal hit. He suffered a severe concussion that forced him to spend two days in a hospital, but surprised many by returning to play for Super Bowl X. Swann recorded four catches for a Super Bowl-record 161 yards and a touchdown in the game, assisting the Steelers to a 21–17 win over the Dallas Cowboys and became the first wide receiver to earn Super Bowl MVP honors.

Swann was unique among football players in that he credited his experiences in dance earlier in life with contributing to his aptitude on the football field. A 1981 interview which aired on Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood showed him on the field, and then in the Pittsburgh dance studio where he later underwrote scholarships.[2]

Three seasons later, the Steelers made it to Super Bowl XIII. In the game, Swann caught seven passes for 124 yards and scored the final touchdown for Pittsburgh in their 35–31 win over Dallas. The Steelers made it back to the Super Bowl again in the 1979 season, and Swann caught five passes for 79 yards and a touchdown at the Rose Bowl in Pittsburgh's 31–19 win over the Los Angeles Rams in Super Bowl XIV. Overall, Swann gained 364 receiving yards and 398 all-purpose yards in his four Super Bowls, which were both Super Bowl records at the time.

Swann retired after the 1982 season with four Super Bowl rings. In his nine-year career, he amassed 336 career receptions for 5,462 yards and 51 touchdowns, 72 rushing yards on 11 attempts and a touchdown, and 739 punt return yards and a touchdown. He was a Pro Bowl selection three times (1975, 1977, 1978), and was selected to the 1970s All-Decade Team.

Swann was named to the All-Pro team in 1975, 1977, and 1978, and was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2001, a year before his teammate John Stallworth.

NFL statistics[]

Legend
Won the Super Bowl
Super Bowl MVP
Bold Career high
NFL career player statistics
Year Team GP Rec Yards Avg TD
1974 PIT 12 11 208 18.9 2
1975 PIT 14 49 781 15.9 11
1976 PIT 12 28 516 18.4 3
1977 PIT 14 50 789 15.8 7
1978 PIT 16 61 880 14.4 11
1979 PIT 13 41 808 19.7 5
1980 PIT 13 44 710 16.1 7
1981 PIT 13 34 505 14.9 5
1982 PIT 9 18 265 14.7 0
Career[3] 116 336 5,462 16.3 51

References[]

External links[]

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