Sports Illustrated
Before the 1981 Sugar Bowl, when No. 1 Georgia faced Notre Dame in the Superdome, photographer Heinz Kluetmeier had a light bulb go off over his head. His idea: Put light bulbs over his head. Photographers had long hung strobes to illuminate basketball and hockey games, but it was unheard of in a domed football stadium. Not only is the field larger, but also there are few places to hang the lights, which then weighed 40 pounds and had to be connected to the shooter’s camera by cables. But dome lighting was so bad that Kluetmeier decided to try it. If anyone deserved the spotlight in New Orleans, it was Georgia’s Herschel Walker, who had already set the NCAA freshman rushing record. Walker didn’t disappoint. Despite a dislocated shoulder, he rushed for 150 yards and two touchdowns, leading the Dawgs to a 17–10 win and the title. Kluetmeier and his strobes didn’t disappoint, either: Witness this dramatically lit shot of Walker’s second TD. While the result was amazing, the technique remains rare. “It’s such an ordeal to get that stuff set up,” says former SI picture editor Phil Jache. “I don’t know of another football game that was strobed like that.”






