The Seattle Seahawks had greatness in their grasp, the end zone in their sights, Tom Brady and the New England Patriots on the ropes and Marshawn Lynch in their backfield.
What could go wrong?
Super Bowl 49 between the two teams who are playing again Sunday in Super Bowl 60 came down to this: Trailing 28-24, Seattle had the ball at the Patriots 1 with 26 seconds, a timeout and three plays to try to win the game and hoist their second straight Lombardi Trophy.
Lynch had just bulled his way to the 1 after Jermaine Kearse's juggling 33-yard catch bounced off his legs and into his arms while he was on the ground at the Patriots 5-yard line.
''I tipped the ball and Kearse still caught it,'' former cornerback Malcolm Butler recounted this week in a radio row interview with Boston's WEEI-FM. ''I said this game is over. We lose, it's my fault, even though I made a great play. It wasn't good enough.''
On the New England sideline sat Brady, who had witnessed two other improbable catches that led to devastating Super Bowl defeats: David Tyree's 32-yard helmet-pinning catch that helped the New York Giants deny the Patriots a perfect season, and Mario Manningham's 38-yard sideline reception four years later that again helped Eli Manning prevail.
''And then I got another opportunity,'' Butler said.
A second chance