The replay I saw was a skycam shot until Vasher got to the 30 or so and then broke right, where his blocking fell into place. He stumbled while making a cut, and that seemed to freeze the 49ers for just enough time for him to get into the clear.
I was watching this live at Jillian's, a pool hall/sports grill in Seattle. Every Sunday, they have a big crowd in their sports room, with big screen TV's showing every NFL game at once. We were focused on the Pats and Dolphins, when we hear this roar behind us, Vasher was past the 30 at that point, and we turn around and watch a good portion of his run all the way to the goal line. EVERYONE cheered and clapped, it was such an amazing play, and we all roared as he kept going and going. We then all cheered again when they did the replay. It's also cool that the TVs are showing satellite feeds of the various FOX and CBS affiliates, so we could actually watch that play as it made its way across the screens, with just about every local contest doing a cutaway during play stoppage to show what had just happened in the Bears game.
I just saw the skycam shot on a highlight reel. I have to agree with what Skip Bayless wrote this morning: But it's highly possible that Vasher knew (or had been taught) that field-goal units are made up of a team's slowest and least athletic players -- elephantine linemen, a couple of linebackers on either edge, a long snapper, a holder and a kicker. Those first five would-be tacklers that he spun away from had the exact size and approximate speed of refrigerators. Still, it's damn impressive that he hung around and waited (for what seemed like ages) for them to commit to a direction, and then spun the hell out of there. He was really patient and controlled his pace so the blocks up the right side ended up being timed perfectly. Wow. It did seem like everyone was lumbering a bit, but I've been watching a lot of CFL lately, which generally moves a lot faster on special teams.
Holy crap, a decent article by Skip Bayless!
Featuring more than one sentence per paragraph! I know. I did a double-take when I actually looked at the byline after reading the piece.