Super Bowl XL was an
American football game pitting the
American Football
Conference (AFC) champion
Pittsburgh Steelers against the
National Football Conference
(NFC) champion
Seattle Seahawks to
decide the
National Football
League (NFL) champion for the
2005
season.
Played on February 5, 2006 at Ford Field
in Detroit
, the
Steelers defeated the Seahawks, 21–10, to join the San Francisco 49ers and the Dallas Cowboys as the only franchises to have
won five Super Bowls. Pittsburgh
after finishing the regular season with a 11-5 record, became the
fourth
wild card team, and third
in nine years, to win the Super Bowl and also became the first #6
seed in the
NFL playoffs to win a Super
Bowl (after becoming the first #6 seed to win a conference
title).
Although Seattle won the
turnover battle in Super Bowl XL, 2–1,
Pittsburgh won on the strength of three big plays converted into
touchdowns. The Seahawks, on the other hand, were plagued by missed
scoring opportunities, dropped balls, and penalties. The
officiating
was
also met with harsh criticism from some fans and media soon
after the game regarding several controversial calls. Seattle
scored first late in the first quarter on
Josh Brown's 47-yard field
goal, a few plays after an offensive "pushing off" pass
interference call against wide receiver
Darrell Jackson nullified his 16-yard
touchdown reception. Then with less than two minutes left in the
first half, Steelers quarterback
Ben
Roethlisberger ran for 1-yard
sneak. The touchdown was reviewed
automatically and upheld when replays were unable to provide visual
evidence that the ball had not crossed the plane of the end zone
line as ruled on the field.
Pittsburgh took a 14–3 lead on their first drive in the second half
with running back
Willie Parker's
Super Bowl record 75-yard touchdown run. The Seahawks then scored
on tight end
Jerramy Stevens's
16-yard touchdown reception, and later threatened to take the lead
early in the fourth quarter, but a holding call against
right tackle Sean
Locklear nullified an 18-yard gain to the Pittsburgh 1-yard
line. Three plays later, Steelers cornerback
Ike Taylor intercepted a Hasselbeck pass; Adding
insult to injury, during the return
Matt
Hasselbeck was penalized for a low block call (crashing into an
opponents legs), which NFL officials would acknowledge was
incorrect during a May 2006 meeting between officials and Seahawks
coaching staff. The NFL, however, supported the officiating
decisions made on other Seahawks disputed calls.
Antwaan Randle El capped off the
game with a 43-yard touchdown pass to
wide
receiver Hines Ward on a fake reverse
to give the Steelers a 21–10 edge. Ward, who had five receptions
for 123 yards and one touchdown and rushed for 18 yards, was named
the Super Bowl's
Most Valuable
Player, joining
Fred
Biletnikoff,
Jerry Rice,
Deion Branch and fellow Steelers
Lynn Swann and
Santonio Holmes as the only wide receivers
to win the award. The Steelers franchise has had as many Wide
Receivers named Super Bowl MVP as the rest of the NFL combined.
Meanwhile, Steelers running back
Jerome
Bettis, nicknamed "The Bus" and playing in his hometown of
Detroit, announced his retirement after the game, saying "I think
the Bus' last stop is here in Detroit."
Background
Ford Field
was selected to host Super Bowl XL on November 1,
2000, two years before the stadium opened in 2002; the only
previous Super Bowl held in the Detroit area, Super Bowl XVI, had been played at the
Pontiac
Silverdome
in 1982.
The NFL promoted the game under the slogan "The Road to Forty". The
slogan not only honored the 40-year history of the game, but was a
nod to Detroit's traditional role as the center of the U.S.
automotive industry. In a
related note,
Roger Penske, owner of
car dealerships,
racing teams, and
other related companies, headed the Super Bowl XL host
committee.
This was the first Super Bowl to be played on the
FieldTurf surface; each of the previous Super
Bowls had been played either on natural grass or on
AstroTurf.
The Seahawks became the first team to have their city/state
location painted in their end zone for a
Super Bowl, as their end zone read
Seattle Seahawks. In
Super Bowl XLIII, the
Arizona Cardinals became the second team
to have this, as their end zone read
Arizona Cardinals. For all other
Super Bowl teams, end zones have just featured
the team nickname.
Pittsburgh Steelers
After stumbling to a 7-5 start, the Steelers rebounded and entered
Super Bowl XL finishing the regular season with an 11-5 record.
(Although the team finished tied with the
Cincinnati Bengals for the division lead,
the Bengals won the tiebreaker for the
AFC
North championship based on better divisional record.) They
also became the first team ever to defeat the top three
seeded teams on the
road in the playoffs (#3 Cincinnati, #1 Indianapolis and #2
Denver). In addition, the team became the first sixth-seeded team
to reach both a conference championship game and the Super Bowl
since the NFL expanded to a 12-team playoff format in
1990.
Under
Bill Cowher's reign as head coach
since 1992, the Steelers had been one of the top teams in the NFL,
making the playoffs in 10 out of his 14 seasons, advancing to the
AFC Championship Game six
times, and making an appearance in
Super
Bowl XXX, losing to the
Dallas
Cowboys 27-17. After having finished the
2003 season with a 6-10 record and after
splitting its first two games to open
2004, Pittsburgh lost starting
quarterback Tommy
Maddox to injury. Maddox was replaced by rookie quarterback
Ben Roethlisberger, who was
drafted with the 11th pick in the
2004
NFL Draft but was not expected to play during his rookie
season. Nevertheless, Roethlisberger led the Steelers to victory in
all of the team's 14 remaining regular season games, giving
Pittsburgh a 15-1 record and making the Steelers the first AFC team
ever to win 15 games. However, the Steelers lost to eventual Super
Bowl champion
New England
Patriots in the AFC Championship Game.
Pittsburgh began the 2005 season by winning seven of its first nine
games, but suffered a major setback when both Roethlisberger and
his backup,
Charlie Batch, went down
with injuries. With Maddox back as the starter, the team was upset
by
Baltimore and dropped two more
games after Roethlisberger's return, falling to then-undefeated
Indianapolis, and division rival
Cincinnati. The postseason hopes of the
Steelers were in peril, but the team recovered to win its final
four regular season games and to claim the sixth—and final—seed in
the AFC playoffs.
Roethlisberger was efficient in his 12 regular season games,
throwing for 2,385 yards and seventeen touchdowns with nine
interceptions, while adding three rushing touchdowns. The Steelers'
main receiving threat was
wide
receiver Hines Ward, who led the team with 69 receptions for
975 yards and eleven touchdowns.
His 69 catches gave him a career total of
574, surpassing a franchise record for receptions previously held
by Hall of
Famer
John
Stallworth. On the other side of the field, speedy wide
receiver
Antwaan Randle El was a
constant breakaway threat, catching 35 passes for 558 yards, while
gaining 448 yards and two touchdowns on punt returns. Rookie
tight end Heath
Miller also recorded 39 receptions for 459 yards and six
touchdowns.
Pittsburgh's main strength on offense, however, was its running
game.
Running back Willie Parker was the team's leading rusher
with 1,202 yards, while also recording 18 catches for 218 yards and
scoring five touchdowns. In short-yardage situations, the team
relied on 255-pound running back
Jerome
Bettis, who rushed for 368 yards and scored nine touchdowns.
The 33-year-old Bettis finished his 13th NFL season as the league's
fifth all-time leading rusher (13,662 yards and 91 touchdowns), but
until this point he had never played in a Super Bowl. The Steelers
rushing attack was powered by an offensive line led by
Pro Bowl guard Alan
Faneca and Pro Bowl reserve
center Jeff Hartings.
The Steelers defense ranked fourth in the NFL, giving up 284.0
total yards per game. The Pittsburgh defense was led by its
linebacking corps:
Joey Porter,
James
Farrior,
Clark Haggans, and
Larry Foote. Porter led all NFL
linebackers with 10.5
quarterback
sacks and also recorded two interceptions and a fumble
recovery. Haggans tallied nine sacks and 40 tackles, while Farrior
added a team-high 119 tackles to go with his two sacks and one
fumble recovery. In the secondary,
free
safety Chris Hope led the team with
three interceptions, while Pro Bowl safety
Troy Polamalu, the team's top threat in the
defensive backfield, notched 91 tackles, three sacks, two fumble
recoveries, and two interceptions.
The Steelers became just the third team to win the Super Bowl
despite not playing a single home game in the playoffs. The
Green Bay Packers, who won
Super Bowl I (against the Kansas City
Chiefs), and the
Kansas City
Chiefs, who won
Super Bowl IV
(against the Minnesota Vikings), also accomplished the feat. The
Steelers, however, had to win four games to accomplish the feat,
while the Chiefs won three and Packers won only two games.
Of a "bridging the eras" moment, Steelers
cornerback Willie Williams was the last
remaining player to have been on the Steelers last Super Bowl team,
their
Super Bowl XXX loss to the
Dallas Cowboys following the
1995 season. (Defensive backs coach
Darren Perry was also a player on the Super
Bowl XXX team. Both were starters in that game.) Ironically,
Williams, who was in his second stint with the Steelers at the
time, played with Seattle from 1997-2003. He would be inactive for
Super Bowl XL, which like Bettis would turn out to be his final NFL
game before retiring that offseason.
Seattle Seahawks
The Seahawks entered Super Bowl XL after finishing the regular
season with an NFC-best 13-3 record. After a rocky 2-2 start, they
won 11 consecutive games before losing to the
Green Bay Packers to finish the season.
The 13-3 record and 11-game winning streak set new team
records.
This was Seattle's first Super Bowl appearance in the team's
30-year history. The Seahawks had been mediocre for much of the
1990s, recording eight consecutive non-winning seasons from 1991
through 1998.
The team hit a low point in 1996, when
then-owner Ken Behring announced his
intention to move the team to the Los Angeles
area. The team's fortunes began to turn in 1997,
when Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen bought the team and brokered a deal to
build a new football stadium, Qwest Field
, to replace the aging Kingdome
.
Mike Holmgren, who had led the
Green Bay Packers to Super Bowls
XXXI and
XXXII, became head coach in
1999. He became the fifth coach to take two
different teams to the Super Bowl.
Joe
Jurevicius became the sixth player to play in a Super Bowl with
three different teams.
Behind
Shaun Alexander, Seattle
finished the 2005 season as the league's top offense, scoring 452
points. Quarterback Matt Hasselbeck meanwhile completed 65.5% of
his passes for 3,455 yards and 24 touchdowns (against just nine
interceptions) and added 124 yards and one touchdown on the ground.
Shaun Alexander, who had scored at
least sixteen touchdowns in each of the previous four seasons, had
the best campaign of his career, leading the league with 1,880
rushing yards and scoring an NFL-record 28 touchdowns, for which he
was rewarded with the
NFL
Most Valuable Player Award. Although the Seahawks suffered
injuries to starting wide receivers
Darrell Jackson and
Bobby Engram throughout the season, the passing
game nevertheless proved potent, as Engram managed 67 receptions
for 778 yards.
Joe Jurevicius, a
backup when the season began, started eleven games and made 55
catches for 694 yards and ten touchdowns; tight end
Jerramy Stevens also emerged as a Hasselbeck
target, catching 45 passes for 554 yards and scoring five
touchdowns. Hasselbeck was protected and Alexander was given time
to run by a stout offensive line, led by Pro Bowl offensive tackle
Walter Jones, guard
Steve
Hutchinson, and center
Robbie
Tobeck, and by bruising Pro Bowl fullback
Mack Strong.
Though unheralded—rookie middle linebacker
Lofa Tatupu was the Seahawks' only defensive Pro
Bowler—the Seahawks defense recorded 50 quarterback sacks, leading
the NFL in that category;
defensive
end Bryce Fisher led the Seahawks
with nine sacks, while
defensive
tackle Rocky Bernard added 8.5 and
veteran defensive end
Grant Wistrom
recorded four. Despite starting two rookies at linebacker for most
of the year, the Seattle linebacking corp played well, led by
Tatupu, who topped the team with 104 tackles and added four sacks,
three interceptions, and one fumble recovery. From his strong
safety position,
Michael Boulware
led the team with four interceptions and also tallied two sacks and
one fumble recovery. The Seattle secondary suffered injuries
throughout the year, notably to free safety
Ken Hamlin; second-year
cornerback Jordan
Babineaux played well as he appeared in all sixteen games for
Seattle, intercepting three passes and making 61 tackles. For the
year, the defense surrendered just 271 points, 181 fewer than the
Seahawks offense scored.
Statistical comparison
The chart below provides a comparison of regular season statistics
in key categories (overall rank amongst 32 teams in
parentheses).
| Statistic |
Pittsburgh Steelers |
Seattle Seahawks |
| Points scored per game |
24.3 (9th) |
28.2 (1st) |
| Points allowed per game |
16.1 (3rd, tied) |
16.9 (7th) |
| Rushing yards gained per game |
138.9 (5th) |
153.6 (3rd) |
| Rushing yards allowed per game |
86.0 (3rd) |
94.4 (5th) |
| Passing yards gained per game |
182.9 (24th) |
216.1 (13th) |
| Passing yards allowed per game |
198.0 (16th) |
222.4 (25th) |
| Yards gained per play |
5.4 (10th) |
5.8 (2nd) |
| Yards allowed per play |
4.6 (3rd) |
4.9 (10th) |
| Time of possession per game |
31:16 (8th) |
29:17 (21st) |
| Third-down conversion percentage |
35.4 (23rd) |
39.6 (13th, tied) |
| Third-down conversion percentage allowed |
39.7 (20th) |
38.0 (16th) |
| Fourth-down conversion percentage |
41.7 (20th) |
87.5 (1st) |
| Fourth-down conversion percentage allowed |
35.3 (8th) |
63.2 (26th) |
| Red zone touchdown conversion percentage |
60.7 (4th, tied) |
71.7 (1st) |
| Red zone touchdown conversion percentage allowed |
40.4 (2nd) |
47.9 (10th, tied) |
| Total turnover differential |
+7 (9th, tied) |
+10 (7th) |
Playoffs
The Steelers became the second team after the
1985 New
England Patriots to win three road playoff games to reach the
Super Bowl. Pittsburgh defeated the third-seeded
Bengals, 31-17; the top-seeded
Colts, 21-18 in the
Immaculate Redemption/Tackle
II game; and the second-seeded
Denver Broncos, 34-17, in the
AFC Championship Game. The Steelers
also became the ninth
wild-card
team to go to the Super Bowl and the fourth in nine seasons. The
Steelers' catchphrase for the playoffs was "One for the
Thumb".
Meanwhile, the Seahawks became the first team to advance to the
Super Bowl without playing a
division champion in the playoffs. Off a
first-round
bye, Seattle defeated the
sixth-seeded
Washington
Redskins, 20-10, before eliminating the fifth-seeded
Carolina Panthers, 34-14, in the
NFC Championship Game. These were
Seattle's first playoff victories since the
1984 season when they defeated the Los
Angeles Raiders 13-6.
Broadcasting
Television
ABC Sports
The game
was televised in the United States by ABC with play-by-play announcer Al Michaels, color
commentator John Madden,
who was named the day before to the Class of 2006 by the Pro Football
Hall of Fame
, and sideline reporters Michele Tafoya (Steelers sideline) and
Suzy Kolber (Seahawks sideline).
This was the sixth Super Bowl telecast for Michaels, and the tenth
for Madden (whose first was
Super Bowl
XVI, also played in Michigan). The opening theme was sung by
Hank Williams Jr., who was later
spotted in the stands wearing Steelers regalia.
Although the Super Bowl had largely been presented in
high definition since
Super Bowl XXXIV, Super Bowl XL would be
the first Super Bowl where all aspects of the game itself were
aired in HD.
With the expiration of the current television contracts among ABC,
CBS,
ESPN and
FOX following the
2005 season, this game served as the final
telecast for ABC after 36 seasons with the NFL, at least for the
foreseeable future. It was the second (after
Super Bowl XXXVII) Super Bowl telecast,
and final ABC telecast, for the broadcast team of Michaels and
Madden, who would call Sunday night NFL games on
NBC beginning with the
2006
season.
With the Steelers win, they became the fourth team to win Super
Bowls on three different networks (NBC-
IX and
XIII,
CBS-
X and
XIV, and ABC).
Studio Show
Chris Berman, from
Disney-owned corporate sibling ESPN,
returned to host ABC's pregame show, as he had done for the
network's coverage of Super Bowls
XXXIV and
XXXVII. Berman was joined by his fellow
analysts from ESPN's
Sunday NFL Countdown pregame show:
Michael Irvin,
Tom Jackson, and
Steve Young, along with
co-host
Mike Tirico and
New England Patriots head coach (and
three-time Super Bowl winner)
Bill
Belichick. Also contributing to the pre-game show were
Michele Tafoya,
Suzy
Kolber,
Sam Ryan,
Andrea Kremer,
Kenny
Mayne and
Chris Mortensen.
International
Since the
game was being played close to the U.S.-Canada border, Canadian
television rights holders Global broadcast portions of an
NFL-sponsored "Passport To The Super Bowl" event in nearby Windsor,
Ontario
, featuring a performance by the newly-revived 1980s
rock group INXS with Canadian native lead
singer J.D. Fortune, though the network limited coverage of
the Windsor event to short segments immediately prior to commercial
breaks.
The game
was also televised in Australia (SBS), Austria
(ORF and TW1), Brazil
(ESPN
International), Denmark
(TV 2), Finland
(MTV3), France (France 2),
Germany (ARD),
Hungary
(Sport 1), Iceland
(SÝN), Ireland (Sky
Sports), Italy (Sky Sports 3 and
Italia 1), Japan (NHK
BS-1,
NTV
), Mexico
(TV Azteca), the Netherlands
(SBS6), New Zealand (ESPN
International/SKY TV),
Portugal
(SportTV), Slovenia
(Prva TV), Spain (Canal +), Sweden
(ZTV), and UK (ITV/Sky Sports). According to the NFL, the
game was available worldwide in 32 languages.
The main NFL international feed of the game featured
FOX broadcasters
Dick Stockton and
Daryl Johnston providing commentary tailored
to those largely unfamiliar with the rules of American
football.
Radio
Westwood One/
CBS
Radio provided radio coverage in the United States, with the
broadcasting team of
Marv Albert and
Boomer Esiason.
Sirius Satellite Radio and NFL.com
carried international local-language broadcasts from the United
Kingdom (BBC Radio Five Live),
Spain (Canal Plus Spain), Russia (NTV), Belgium
(BeTV, in French), China (SMG), and Japan (NTV
), in addition to the press box intercom and the
public address announcer feeds.
Entertainment
Pre-game ceremonies
During the pre-game ceremonies,
Stevie
Wonder, along with
Joss Stone,
India.Arie, and
John Legend, performed a medley of Wonder's
hits.
The Four Tops also performed
during the pregame ceremonies, though the performance was not
televised.In honor of the fortieth Super Bowl, the pre-game
ceremony featured the on-field introduction of 30 of the previous
34
Super Bowl Most Valuable Players
(with the exception of
Joe Montana,
Terry Bradshaw,
Jake Scott, and the late
Harvey Martin). The absences of
Montana and Bradshaw were originally reported to have been due to
disagreements over appearance funds to be paid by the NFL, but each
later rebutted such reports, suggesting that they had prior family
commitments; Scott was reported to have been traveling through
Australia.
A
moment of silence was observed
in memory of the two civil rights activists who had died during the
months prior to the game:
Coretta
Scott King (
six days earlier) and
Rosa Parks (on October 24, 2005), the
latter a long-time Detroit resident.
Singers
Aretha Franklin and Aaron Neville, along with pianist Dr. John and a 150-member choir, performed the
national anthem as part of a pre-game tribute to New
Orleans
, a nine-time Super Bowl host city then in the midst
of efforts to rebuild in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. The national
anthem was performed in
American
Sign Language by Angela LaGuardia, a teacher at Michigan School
for the Deaf.
Tom Brady, MVP of Super Bowls
XXXVI and
XXXVIII, became the first active player
to participate in a Super Bowl coin toss, the result of which toss
was tails, as selected by Seattle. Brady was booed by the
Pittsburgh fans in the stadium during the coin toss.
The Steelers became only the third franchise to wear white jerseys
despite being the "home" team; the Cowboys (
Super Bowls XIII and
XXVII) and the Redskins (
Super Bowl XVII), both of whom traditionally
wear white at home, are the other two.
Bill Cowher stated
that the Steelers were playing in Detroit, not Pittsburgh, and
therefore it wasn't a "home" game (although 10 years earlier
Cowher's Steelers did wear their black home jerseys as the "home"
team in Super Bowl XXX at Tempe,
Arizona
away from Pittsburgh
, where they had won both their playoff games to
reach that Super Bowl). The Steelers became the first AFC
club to don their white jerseys as "home" team.
Although the participating teams each entered "as a team" for their
introduction, the Steelers insisted on sending
Jerome Bettis out ahead of the rest of the
team in front of his hometown crowd.
Halftime show
The Rolling Stones performed
during the
halftime show, which was
sponsored by the American telecommunications company
Sprint. The group performed three
songs: "
Start Me Up", "
Rough Justice", and
"
Satisfaction". In
the wake of the
Super Bowl XXXVIII
halftime show controversy with
Janet
Jackson, ABC and the NFL imposed a five-second delay and
censored lyrics considered too sexually explicit in the first two
songs by briefly turning off
Mick
Jagger's microphone; the group had previously agreed to the
censoring.
However, the choice of The Rolling Stones sparked controversy in
the Detroit community because the band did not represent the
music of Detroit and no other
artist from the area was included.
Post-game ceremonies
The post-game presentation saw
Bart
Starr, the MVP of Super Bowls
I and
II, take the
Vince Lombardi Trophy to the podium,
whence it was presented to Steelers owner
Dan
Rooney.
Game summary
After the first four possessions of the game ended with punts,
Seahawks punt returner
Peter Warrick
gave his team good field position by returning
Chris Gardocki's 37-yard punt 12 yards to
Seattle's 49-yard line. Quarterback
Matt
Hasselbeck then started off the drive with a pair of
completions to receivers
Darrell
Jackson and
Joe Jurevicius for
gains of 20 and 11 yards, respectively. On the third play of the
drive, Jackson caught a pass in the end-zone, apparently for a
touchdown, but the play was nullified on a pass interference
penalty on Jackson for pushing off his defender. Running back
Shaun Alexander ran the ball the
next two plays, but gained only three yards. Hasselbeck's
third-down pass attempt fell incomplete, and the Seahawks were
forced to settle for a 47-yard field goal by kicker
Josh Brown.
By the end of the first quarter, the Steelers had failed to gain a
first down, and quarterback
Ben
Roethlisberger had completed one of five pass attempts for one
yard. On their first second-quarter possession, Pittsburgh once
more was forced to punt after three plays, but benefited from
another Seahawks penalty, a holding call that nullified Warrick's
34-yard punt return. The Steelers forced a Seattle punt, but
Seattle safety
Michael Boulware
intercepted a Roethlisberger pass at the Seattle 17-yard line on
the ensuing drive. The Seahawks, though, were once more forced to
punt after three plays, and Pittsburgh drove into Seattle territory
on the following drive.
An offensive pass interference call against tight end
Heath Miller and a sack for an eight-yard loss
by Seahawks defensive end
Grant
Wistrom, though, backed the Steelers to the 40-yard line, and
left the team facing a third-down-and-28. However, Roethlisberger
hit receiver
Hines Ward out of a scramble
and extremely unorthodox, against the grain pass for a 37-yard gain
to keep the drive going.
Jerome Bettis
carried the ball on the next two plays, taking his team to the
one-yard line but not into the end-zone. On the third-down play,
after the
two-minute warning,
Roethlisberger faked a handoff and dove into the end-zone
himself.
On the strength of a 19-yard Jurevicius reception, Seattle advanced
the ball to the Pittsburgh 36-yard line, but, after the drive
stalled, Brown missed a 54-yard field goal attempt to the right and
the Steelers ran out the clock to end the first half.
The Steelers took the ball to begin the second half, and just two
plays in, running back
Willie Parker
broke through for a 75-yard touchdown run, giving his team a 14-3
lead and setting a record for the longest run in Super Bowl
history, beating
Marcus Allen's
Super Bowl XVIII mark by one
yard.
The Seahawks drove into Pittsburgh territory on the next drive,
sparked by a 21-yard run by Alexander, but Brown again missed a
field-goal attempt, this one from 50 yards, as Seattle was unable
to close the 11-point deficit.
Pittsburgh drove 54 yards to the Seattle six-yard line to put
themselves in position to take a large lead, but Seahawks defensive
back
Kelly Herndon intercepted a pass
from Roethlisberger and returned it a Super Bowl record 76 yards to
the Steelers 20-yard line. From there, the Seahawks required just
two plays to score on Hasselbeck's 16-yard touchdown pass to tight
end
Jerramy Stevens, cutting their
deficit to 14-10.
The teams exchanged punts (two from Pittsburgh, one from Seattle)
to fill out most of the third quarter, but the Seahawks ended the
quarter having driven from their own two-yard line to near
midfield. The drive continued in the fourth quarter, as the
Seahawks reached the Pittsburgh 19-yard line. An 18-yard pass to
Stevens, though, was negated on a controversial penalty call
against Seattle tackle
Sean Locklear
for holding, denying the Seahawks an opportunity for a
first-down-and-goal from the 1-yard-line. Three plays later,
Pittsburgh defensive back
Ike Taylor
intercepted a Hasselbeck pass at the 5-yard line and returned it 24
yards. While tackling Taylor, Hasselbeck dove low and was flagged
for blocking below the waist. The penalty added 15 yards to the
return and gave the Steelers the ball on their own 44-yard
line.
Four plays later, Pittsburgh ran a wide receiver reverse, but the
play turned out to be a pass play by wide receiver
Antwaan Randle El, who played quarterback
while in college. Parker took a pitch from Roethlisberger and
handed off to Randle El, who was running in the opposite direction.
Randle El then pulled up and threw a 43-yard touchdown pass to a
wide-open Ward, giving the Steelers a 21-10 lead and also marking
the first time a wide receiver threw a touchdown pass in a Super
Bowl.
On the ensuing possession, Hasselbeck ran the ball for eighteen
yards and was briefly touched by Steelers linebacker
Larry Foote as the former fell to the ground.
Though the play was initially ruled a fumble, with the ball
recovered by the Steelers, a Seahawks challenge proved successful,
as officials ruled Hasselbeck to have been down prior to his having
lost the ball; Seattle, aided by a 13-yard Jurevicius reception,
drove to the Pittsburgh 48-yard line but could go no further; a
Tom Rouen punt entered the end zone,
giving the Steelers possession on their own 20-yard line.
Pittsburgh possessed the ball on for nearly four-and-one-half
minutes on the ensuing drive, as Bettis carried seven times;
Seattle was forced to use all of its three timeouts to stop the
clock, but nevertheless had only 1:51 left when it took the ball
from its own 20-yard line following a Gardocki punt. A 35-yard
reception by Jurevicius took the Seahawks into Pittsburgh
territory, and a 13-yard
Bobby Engram
reception took the team to within field-goal range, but dubious
clock-management and play-calling left the team with just 35
seconds remaining; an incompletion and a three-yard pass to Stevens
over the middle over the field consumed 26 seconds, and Hasselbeck
threw incomplete near Stevens on fourth down, giving the Steelers
the ball on downs with just three seconds left, after which a
Roethlisberger kneel-down ended the game.
Scoring summary
- 1st Quarter
- SEA — FG: Josh Brown 47 yards 3-0 SEA
Drive: Seven Plays, 22 yds, 3:31
- 2nd Quarter
- PIT — TD: Ben Roethlisberger 1 yard run (Jeff Reed kick),
7-3 PIT
Drive: 11 Plays, 59 yds, 6:20
- 3rd Quarter
- PIT — TD: Willie Parker 75 yard run (Jeff Reed kick),
14-3 PIT
Drive: Two plays, 75 yds, 22 seconds
- SEA — TD: Jerramy Stevens 16 yard pass from Matt Hasselbeck
(Josh Brown kick), 14-10 PIT
Drive: Three plays, 20 yds, 53
seconds
- 4th Quarter
- PIT — TD: Hines Ward 43 yard pass from Antwaan Randle El (Jeff
Reed kick), 21-10 PIT
Drive: Four plays, 56 yards, 1:50
Final statistics
Overview
The Steelers became just the third team to win the Super Bowl
despite not playing a single home game in the playoffs. The
Green Bay Packers, who won
Super Bowl I, and the
Kansas City Chiefs, who won
Super Bowl IV, also accomplished the feat. The
Steelers, however, had to win four games to accomplish the feat,
while the Chiefs won three and Packers won only two games.
Roethlisberger finished the game having completed just 9 of 21
passes for 123 yards and having also thrown two interceptions; his
22.6
quarterback rating was the
lowest ever of any by a Super Bowl winning quarterback. He also
rushed for 25 yards and a touchdown. He became the second youngest
quarterback to start in a Super Bowl and
the youngest quarterback ever to win a Super Bowl at 23 years, 11
months.
The Pittsburgh rushing game was paced by Willie Parker, who gained
93 yards and one touchdown on just ten carries; Bettis rushed 14
times for 43 yards, converted a key first down, and allowing his
team to run time off the clock late in the fourth quarter. Ward
caught five passes for 123 yards and a touchdown. In addition to
his 43-yard touchdown pass, Randle El caught three passes for 22
yards and returned two punts for 32 yards. In defeat for the
Seahawks, Hasselbeck completed 26 of 49 pass attempts for 273 yards
and a touchdown, with one interception. Jurevicius caught 5 passes
for 93 yards. Engram and Jackson also played roles, combining to
gain 120 yards on eleven receptions. Alexander led all rushers in
the game, accumulating 95 yards on 20 carries while also catching
two passes for two yards. The Steelers were the third team to lose
the turnover battle and win the game, after the
Baltimore Colts in
Super Bowl V and the Steelers in
Super Bowl XIV.
Defensively, Taylor led the Steelers, making seven tackles,
defensing two passes, and intercepting Hasselbeck; for the
Seahawks, linebacker Lofa Tatupu recorded nine tackles.
Statistical comparison
|
Seattle Seahawks |
Pittsburgh Steelers |
| Score |
10 |
21 |
| First downs |
20 |
14 |
| Third down efficiency |
5-17 |
8-15 |
| Fourth down efficiency |
1-2 |
0-0 |
| Total yards |
396 |
339 |
| Passing yards |
259 |
158 |
| Passing – Completions-attempts |
26-49 |
10-22 |
| Passing – Yards per pass |
5.0 |
6.9 |
| Rushing yards |
137 |
181 |
| Rushing attempts |
25 |
33 |
| Yards per rush |
5.5 |
5.5 |
| Penalties-yards |
7-70 |
3-20 |
| Sacks against |
3-14 |
1-8 |
| Turnovers |
1 |
2 |
| Fumbles-lost |
0-0 |
0-0 |
| Interceptions thrown |
1 |
2 |
| Time of possession |
33:02 |
26:58 |
Individual leaders
*Completions/AttemptsaCarriesbLong
playcReceptions
Starting lineups
Officials
- Referee: Bill
Leavy
- Umpire: Garth DeFelice
- Head Linesman: Mark
Hittner
- Line Judge: Mark
Perlman
- Field Judge: Steve Zimmer
- Side Judge: Tom Hill
- Back Judge: Bob Waggoner
- Alternate Referee: Tony Corrente
- Alternate Umpire: Undrey Walsh
- Alternate Head Linesman: Tom Stabile
Reaction to officiating
Some calls made during Super Bowl XL were met with criticism from
Seahawks Coaches and fans, members of the media, and many others,
as critics suggested that referee
Bill
Leavy's crew had wrongly nullified some key plays made by the
Seattle offense.
Following the game, Coach Bill Cowher was shown on TV seeking
Holmgren for a traditional post-game handshake that never came,
while cameras then panned to Holmgren heading for the locker room.
This led many to believe Holmgren had snubbed Cowher, although it
was later revealed that the handshake is to take place on the 25
yard line and both coaches went to opposite 25 yard line. Both
coaches, it was reported, caught up with one another and chatted
briefly in the Seahawks' locker room after the trophy
ceremony.
However, most observers were not aware of this and at the post game
interview Holmgren let it be known he didn't agree with many of the
calls that went against his team. The next day Holmgren elevated
his criticism during a welcome home rally for Seattle fans.
Holmgren said he knew the Steelers would be a difficult team to
play, adding "I didn't know we were going to have to play the guys
in the striped shirts as well."
In response to the criticisms leveled at the officials, the NFL,
just two days after the game, released a statement defending the
officials' performance. "The game was properly officiated,
including, as in most NFL games, some tight plays that produced
disagreement about the calls made by the officials," NFL spokesman
Greg Aiello said in a statement.
The game ended a playoff season that was plagued by complaints
about officiating, most notably during the
divisional playoff games between the
Steelers and Colts, and the Broncos and Patriots.
Commercials
As usual, the American television broadcast of the Super Bowl
showcased top commercials and commanded high prices, estimated at
$2.6 million (
US) for a
30-second spot.
According to Advertising Age, Anheuser-Busch
was the top advertiser during the game, having
purchased 10 30-second spots. The magazine reported that
other companies having purchased multiple commercial segments
included
Ameriquest (two),
CareerBuilder.com (two),
Pepsi-Cola (four),
Pizza
Hut (ten, though most ran prior to kickoff),
Sprint (three),
Procter & Gamble (four, three for
Gillette's new
Fusion razor),
Warner Bros. (three), Disney (two) and GoDaddy.com
(two). Three companies aired 60-second
advertisements:
General
Motors (for the
Cadillac brand),
Burger King, and
Mobile ESPN (the
Sports
Heaven ad). Agency
BBDO was the biggest
single producer of commercials, creating 19.
ABC also aired several
60-second commercials for some of its shows, including
Lost,
Desperate Housewives, and
Grey's Anatomy. Notably,
this was the first Super Bowl during which commercials, in addition
to the game itself, were broadcast in
HDTV; on
typical
HDTV broadcasts, the commercials
themselves are broadcast in standard definition.
Google Video and
America Online each catalogued ads for later
viewing. The
USA Today
Super Bowl Ad Meter, which measures viewer online reaction
to all Super Bowl ads, found the
Bud Light
"Magic Refrigerator" spot ranked as the top spot.
Gambling
- According to Las
Vegas oddsmakers, the Steelers opened betting as a four-point
favorite. As the Steelers won by
eleven points, they covered this spread.
- The over-under, or expected points
total, for the game, opened at 47. As the total combined score of
this game was only 31 points, the under bet won.
- The money line was set at roughly
+160 for the Seahawks and -180 for the Steelers.
This was just the fifth time in Super Bowl history when a
lower-seeded team opened as the favorite to win; the previous
occurrences were Super Bowls
XXXIX
(AFC second-seeded
New England
Patriots were favored by seven points over NFC top-seed
Philadelphia Eagles),
XXXV (AFC fourth-seeded
Baltimore Ravens were favored by three
points over NFC top-seed
New York
Giants),
XXIII (NFC
second-seeded
San Francisco
49ers were favored by seven points over AFC first-seed
Cincinnati Bengals), and
XVII (AFC second-seeded
Miami Dolphins were favored by three points
over
Washington Redskins). In
each but the last iteration, the lower-seeded and favored team
won.
This was also the second time in Super Bowl history when the
favorite was a wild card team; the first was before
Super Bowl XXXV, when the Ravens were
favored. It also marked the first time since that game the favorite
won against the spread.
Members of the winning team each received a payment of $73,000 for
playing in the game, while players on the losing team were paid
$38,000. The Green Bay Packers received $15,000 each for winning
Super Bowl I in 1967;
adjusted for inflation in 2006 dollars,
that sum is roughly $86,000.
After having held constant at $600 for three years, the face value
of the costliest Super Bowl ticket rose to $700 for the game. On
eBay, the least-desirable seats—those behind
each end zone in the upper level—fetched more than $2000 each,
while top seats around the 50-yard line sold for more than
$6000.
Ring

The Steelers Super Bowl XL ring
The ring for the Pittsburgh Steelers was designed by Steelers owner
Dan Rooney with Jerome Bettis and Ben Roethlisberger. It is crowned
by five Vince Lombardi trophies, all topped with football-shaped
diamond settings to represent their five
Super Bowl victories. The base of each trophy has the Roman numeral
for their victories, with Super Bowl XL front and center. In front
of the trophies is the Steelers logo set with colored jewels to
mimic the colors of the logo. On the top of the crown is
"PITTSBURGH", and on the bottom is "WORLD CHAMPIONS". One side of
the ring has the Super Bowl XL logo and the score of the
game.
Game time and weather conditions
See also
References
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game"; Feb. 6, 2006, Seattle Post-Intelligencer; URL
accessed July 3, 2006.
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http://play.rbn.com/?url=nfl/nfl/open/nflfilms/demand/s2005/nfln-ta/off/official_review_300k.rm
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- Sylvester, Curt. The Bus earns his ring on final stop; Feb. 5,
2006, SuperBowl.com; URL accessed July 3, 2006.
- Unknown. "Ford Field"; Date unknown,
DetroitLions.com; URL accessed July 3, 2006.
- Unknown; Date unknown,easyturf.com; URL accessed July
14, 2006.
- Unknown. "NFL announces new prime-time TV packages";
April 18, 2006, NFL.com; URL accessed July 3, 2006.
- Unknown. "NBC acquires Michaels for cartoon bunny, golf"; Feb.
13, 2006, Associated Press; URL accessed July 3,
2006.
- Unknown. "International programming"; 2006, NFL.com;
URL accessed July 3, 2006.
- Unknown. "Montana, Bradshaw deny missing ceremony over
$"; Feb. 6, 2006, ESPN.com; URL accessed July 3,
2006.
- Cowher's Gambit: The Steelers Will Wear White - New
York Times.
- Unknown. "Rolling Stones agreed to censor Super Bowl show:
NFL"; Feb. 6, 2006, Agence France-Presse; URL accessed
July 3, 2006.
- McGraw, Bill. "JOURNAL: No R-E-S-P-E-C-T for Motown
halftime"; Dec. 1, 2005, Detroit Free Press; URL
accessed July 3, 2006.
- Unknown. "NFL Notebook: Game 'properly officiated'"; Feb. 8,
2006, Associated Press; URL accessed July 3, 2006.
- Hench, Kevin. "Bad
officiating was story of weekend"; February 2006, FOX
Sports; URL accessed July 3, 2006.
- Wolk, Martin. "Super Bowl advertisers take to the Web"; Jan.
23, 2006, MSNBC.com; URL accessed July 3, 2006.
- Unknown. "Who's Buying What Ads At The Super Bowl"; Feb.
4, 2006, Advertising Age; URL accessed July 3, 2006.
- Suzanne Gordon. "Confirmation of ABC commercials".
- Unknown. "Super Bowl XL Commercials"; February 2006,
Google Video; URL accessed July 3, 2006.
- Unknown. "Best Super Bowl Commercials 2006"; February,
2006, American Online (AOL.com); URL accessed July 3,
2006.
- Youmans, Matt. "Steelers-Seahawks: Let the betting begin";
Jan. 23, 2006, Las Vegas Review-Journal; URL accessed July
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- Unknown. "A Super Bowl share not so super paying"; Feb. 5,
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- Bouchette, Ed. "The One for the Thumb"; Jun 5, 2006; Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette
External links