Encyclopedia > Pittsburgh Steelers

  Article Content

Pittsburgh Steelers

The Pittsburgh Steelers are a National Football League team based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Founded: 1933.
Home stadium: Heinz Stadium[?]
Uniform colors: Black and gold
Helmet design: Solid black on the left side. The team logo, appearing only on the right side, says "Steelers" and is based on the old U.S. Steel[?] logo. The diamonds in the logo are officially known as "hypocycloids".
League championships won: 1974, 1975, 1978, 1979.
Super Bowl appearances: IX (won), X (won), XIII (won), XIV (won), XXX (lost)

Franchise history

The team was so named because of the abundant steel industry in the city. The team won four Super Bowls and is regarded as The Team of The Seventies.

The team had a dominant defense known as The Steel Curtain and an offense led by Terry Bradshaw, Franco Harris[?], Lynn Swann[?], and John Stallworth[?]. Their coach was Chuck Noll[?].

The Steelers had a long history of futility before 1972, their first postseason appearance. In fact, they had only eight winning seasons prior to that season.

During World War II, the Steelers experienced player shortages. They twice merged with other NFL franchises in order to field a team. In 1942 they merged with the Chicago Cardinals and were known as the "Car-Pitts" or "Carpets". During the 1943 season, they merged with the Philadelphia Eagles and were known as the "Steagles".

Players of note

Football Hall of Famers:

Current stars: Tommy Maddox #8[?] Hines Ward #86[?] Plaxico Burress #80[?] Joey Porter #55[?] Jason Gildon #92[?] Kendrell Bell #97[?] Alan Fanaca #66[?]

Retired numbers:

Not to be forgotten:

External links



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Sanskrit language

... set of phonological rules called sandhi and samaas which are expressed in its writing (except in so-called pada texts). Sandhi reflects the sort of blurring that ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 22.7 ms