The Miracle in the Desert: When Rodgers’ Hail Mary Met Fitzgerald’s “Hail Larry”

🏈 10 Seconds of Impossibility

Some football games are forgotten by the next morning; others are etched into the soul of the sport forever. On January 16, 2016, the University of Phoenix Stadium hosted a contest that defied every law of probability. In this NFC Divisional Playoff, the Arizona Cardinals and Green Bay Packers engaged in a heavyweight bout that featured not one, but two “miracles” that left the world breathless.

Cardinals Fly Over Pack

Article from Jan 17, 2016 The Forum (Fargo, North Dakota)

The Duel of Legends

Trailing 20-13 with less than a minute remaining, Green Bay appeared finished. Facing a daunting 4th-and-20 from their own 4-yard line, Aaron Rodgers did the impossible, launching a 60-yard strike to Jeff Janis to keep the drive alive. Seconds later, with the clock at triple zeros, Rodgers evaded a blitz and heaved a 41-yard “Hail Mary” into the end zone. Janis hauled it in between two defenders, silencing the desert crowd and sending the game into overtime tied at 20-20.

Before the extra period could even begin, drama struck at midfield. Referee Clete Blakeman’s coin toss famously failed to flip in the air, leading to a controversial re-toss that eventually gave the Cardinals possession.

What followed was the legendary “Hail Larry.” On the very first play of overtime, Carson Palmer spun away from a certain sack and found a wide-open Larry Fitzgerald. The veteran receiver didn’t just catch the ball; he embarked on an iconic 75-yard sprint, weaving through the Packers’ secondary down to the 5-yard line. Two plays later, Palmer flicked a 5-yard shovel pass back to Fitzgerald for the walk-off touchdown. The stadium exploded as “Larry Legend” was swarmed by teammates, capping an 8-catch, 176-yard masterpiece.

A Legacy of Resilience

The Cardinals’ 26-20 victory remains one of the most thrilling finishes in NFL postseason history. It was a game where the stats—like Rodgers’ desperation throws and Fitzgerald’s yardage—only tell half the story. The “Miracle in the Desert” was about the thin line between a season’s end and football immortality, proving that as long as there is time on the clock and legends on the field, anything is possible.

Thanks for the infor Newspapers.com amd Pro-Football-Reference.com

By Darin

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *