The Philadelphia Eagles won their first-ever Super Bowl in their 85-year franchise history on Sunday in dramatic fashion. Years from now, Eagles fans will likely look back at the terrific trick play which saw quarterback Nick Foles score a receiving touchdown at the end of the first half as the defining play of that inaugural Super Bowl win.

As Josh Alper of ProFootballTalk notes, that play is called the “Philly Special,” a perfect name for such a spectacular moment.

Eagles coach Doug Pederson decided to run the play on fourth-and one from the Patriots’ one-yard line with 38 seconds left in the first half. Running back Corey Clement took a direct snap under center, then flipped it over to tight end Trey Burton. Burton then threw a perfect pass to Foles to give the Eagles a 10-point halftime lead.

Burton, who played quarterback during high school, said that play was in the Eagles’ back pocket all throughout the playoffs and that they practiced it regularly. Pederson came up with quite a time to finally unleash it, and they ran it perfectly.

“Coach has some guts. Big ones. It shows the confidence he has in the team,” Burton said.

While Zach Ertz's touchdown and Brandon Graham's strip-sack of Tom Brady also deserve praise as outstanding plays, the “Philly Special” is a play that will likely be remembered by Philly fans and football fans alike for generations to come, and deservedly so. The timing and the execution of the play perfectly encapsulated what was an absolutely special night for Philadelphia.