Music City Miracle

The Music City Miracle is the name commonly given to a play that took place on January 8, 2000 during the National Football League's 1999–2000 playoffs. It occurred at the end of the Wild Card Playoff game between the Tennessee Titans and Buffalo Bills at Adelphia Coliseum (now known as LP Field) in Nashville, Tennessee.

Game details
Going into the game, Bills coach Wade Phillips created a stir by starting quarterback Rob Johnson, rather than Doug Flutie, who had started 15 games and had led the team to the playoffs.

First half
After a scoreless 1st quarter, the Titans opened up the scoring when Jevon Kearse sacked Buffalo quarterback Rob Johnson in the end zone for a safety. Johnson completed just 10 of 22 passes while being sacked 6 times, including twice by Kearse. Wide receiver Derrick Mason returned the free kick 42 yards to the Bills' 28-yard line; five plays later, Tennessee quarterback Steve McNair scored on a 1-yard touchdown run. After forcing a punt, the Titans drove 56 yards in 11 plays. Kicker Al Del Greco initially missed a 45-yard field goal attempt, but the Bills were penalized for defensive holding on the play and Del Greco's second attempt was good from 40 yards on the last play of the half. At the end of the half, the Bills were trailing 12-0 and had managed to gain only 64 yards, while also losing 44 yards on 9 penalties.

Second half
In the second half, the Bills managed to rally back. On Buffalo's first play of the third quarter, Antowain Smith broke off a 44-yard run, sparking a 62-yard drive that ended with his 4-yard touchdown run 4 plays later. Later on, the Bills drove 65 yards, featuring a 37-yard completion from Johnson to Eric Moulds, with a roughing the passer penalty on Kearse adding another 15. Smith finished the drive with another 4-yard touchdown run, giving the Bills a 13-12 lead after receiver Kevin Williams dropped a pass from Johnson on the two-point conversion attempt.

Conclusion
Late in the 4th quarter, the stage was set for an exciting finish. Tennessee received the ball with 6:15 remaining. Titans receiver Isaac Byrd's 16-yard punt return and five carries from Eddie George for 17 yards set up a wobbly 36-yard field goal by Al Del Greco. The Titans took a 15-13 lead with 1:48 to go.

On the ensuing drive, with no timeouts remaining, Bills quarterback Rob Johnson led the Bills on a 5-play, 37-yard drive to the Titans' 24 yard line. On the last play from scrimmage, Johnson played with only one shoe on. He had lost the shoe in a scramble, and with the clock running, he had no time to put it back on. With only 16 seconds remaining in the game, Steve Christie, the Bills' kicker, made a 41-yard field goal to put Buffalo in the lead, 16-15.

Moments later, Christie kicked off, and Titans player Lorenzo Neal received. Neal handed the ball off to Titans tight end Frank Wycheck, who threw a lateral across the field to another Titans player, Kevin Dyson, who then ran down the sidelines for a 75-yard touchdown.

The play was named "Home Run Throwback" by the Titans and was developed by Special Teams Coordinator Alan Lowry. The Titans ran the play regularly in practices during the regular season, though the practices usually involved Derrick Mason, who had been injured earlier in the game and was unavailable for the situation. Dyson, as one of the team's lead wide receivers, rarely practiced with the special teams unit and was largely unfamiliar with the layout of the play. Nevertheless, his execution of Lowry's vision was flawless.

Official review
Per the instant replay rules, a booth review was called. The play was reviewed by referee Phil Luckett because it was uncertain if the ball had been a forward pass, which is illegal on a kickoff return. After a long official review, video was inconclusive to overturn, and the ruling on the field was upheld as a touchdown.

The Titans made one final kickoff, and the clock expired during the Bills' return. The Titans held on to win by a score of 22-16.

Analysis
As Titans' coach Jeff Fisher pointed out, the original objective of the play was not to achieve a direct score (a touchdown); it was to have the receiver (Dyson) advance the ball into the range of Del Greco, the Titans’ placekicker. To do this, Dyson would have to advance the ball to a down-field spot well within the kicker’s range. Fisher later stated that as the play continued with Dyson getting closer to the Bills’ end zone, he was concerned that Dyson would be tackled without scoring with no time remaining.

As the play was drawn up, the receiver of the kickoff was also supposed to execute the lateral. The Titans' tight end, Frank Wycheck, was supposed to receive the ball and throw the lateral. However, Wycheck was completely out of position to receive the kickoff.

Wycheck was between Dyson (on the left side facing downfield) and Neal (on the right side), with Wycheck closer to Neal. Lorenzo Neal then met Wycheck on the run and handed the ball to him. Wycheck, who had been running laterally toward Neal (to the right side of the field), knew that the play required him to execute a lateral to Dyson, who was on the left side of the field. Wycheck continued his lateral run to the right so it appeared to be a developing single reverse (by Neal and Wycheck) end-around run to the right (by Wycheck).

Wycheck then abruptly stopped, by planting his passing foot and pivoting to his left. Once he'd aligned himself to throw the lateral (i.e., a pass which does not advance in yardage down field), he threw a low pass to Dyson. Dyson scooped the pass up ankle-high, turned to his left and began running straight down field.

Dyson himself later commented that the only Bills player who was in position to have a chance of a play on him was the kicker. And as Dyson stated, if he (Dyson) a starting NFL wide receiver, could not outrun a place kicker, he (Dyson) didn’t belong in the NFL.

Aftermath
The victory, in front of a franchise-record crowd at Adelphia Coliseum, allowed the Tennessee franchise to advance to the divisional round of the AFC playoffs for the first time since 1993, when they were still in Houston. Subsequent victories over the Indianapolis Colts and Jacksonville Jaguars sent the Titans to Super Bowl XXXIV to face the St. Louis Rams, where they lost by a touchdown in another game that went down to the final seconds, known as "One yard short" or "The Tackle."

It could be said that the game served as revenge for the Titans/Oilers franchise for The Comeback in the 1992-93 playoffs, where the Bills came back from a 32-point deficit to defeat the Houston Oilers, 41–38, in overtime.

For the Bills, it led to the firing of special teams coach Bruce DeHaven, who had been with the team for thirteen seasons. (DeHaven has since been re-hired by the Bills in the same position in 2010.) One year later, Phillips was fired (partly due to his failure to lead the Bills past the first round of the playoffs during his tenure) and replaced by Titans defensive coordinator Gregg Williams.

The Music City Miracle was added to the list of infamous moments in Buffalo sports history, joining Wide Right and No Goal. It was Buffalo's last postseason game to date.

NFL Films hired a computer analyst to determine if Luckett had made the correct call. They determined that the ball had in fact, not traveled forward and that Luckett had made the correct ruling.

Radio call
The following is a transcript of the radio call of this play by Mike Keith and Pat Ryan on the Tennessee Titans Radio Network:

But then a question of whether or not Wycheck's lateral to Dyson was actually a lateral arose. Luckett reviewed the play, and once Luckett had decided that the call would stand, Keith said this:

When he announced his ruling, Keith and Ryan had another exchange: