30 best NFL touchdown celebrations of all-time

Dec 1, 2016; Minneapolis, MN, USA; Dallas Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott (21) looks on during a game at U.S. Bank Stadium. The Cowboys defeated the Vikings 17-15. Mandatory Credit: Brace Hemmelgarn-USA TODAY Sports
Dec 1, 2016; Minneapolis, MN, USA; Dallas Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott (21) looks on during a game at U.S. Bank Stadium. The Cowboys defeated the Vikings 17-15. Mandatory Credit: Brace Hemmelgarn-USA TODAY Sports /
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25. The Greatest Show on Turf Bob ‘N Weave

The 1999 St. Louis Rams had to go to work. Not just because it was their job, as they were professional football players, but The Greatest Show on Turf didn’t build itself. The Rams’ 1999 Super Bowl winning season was magical. Quarterback Kurt Warner came out of nowhere to be a superstar after Trent Green went down. Why? Because their motto was “Gotta go to work.”

For a handful of years there, the Rams were the gold standard for the modern, pass-first NFL offense. Head coach Dick Vermeil and his offensive coordinator/eventual successor Mike Martz allowed Warner to let it rip. With weapons like Isaac Bruce, Tory Holt and Marshall Faulk, it’s no surprise how dynamic this Rams offense was.

They also had a signature touchdown dance during that first Super Bowl run: The Bob ‘N Weave. Basically after every time the Rams would score a big touchdown on somebody, which was all the time, at least six guys would join the guy that found pay dirt, form a circle and do The Bob ‘N Weave.

It was an inclusive, yet exclusive touchdown dance. They’d spin the ball and form that cult like circle with a lot of shoulders and hips moving. If you weren’t up to going to work, you couldn’t do The Bob ‘N Weave. That’s because they said “gotta go to work” over and over again while the football spun on its point like that top in Inception, possibly forever.