Super Bowl XV

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Super Bowl XV
Super Bowl XV Logo.svg
1234Total
OAK14010327
PHI030710
DateJanuary 25, 1981 (1981-01-25)
Stadium Louisiana Superdome, New Orleans, Louisiana
MVP Jim Plunkett, quarterback
FavoriteEagles by 3 [1] [2]
Referee Ben Dreith
Attendance76,135 [3]
Hall of Famers
Raiders: Al Davis (owner/general manager), Tom Flores (head coach), Cliff Branch, Ray Guy, Ted Hendricks, Art Shell, Gene Upshaw
Eagles: Dick Vermeil (head coach), Harold Carmichael, Claude Humphrey
Ceremonies
National anthem Helen O'Connell
Coin tossMarie Lombardi, widow of Vince Lombardi
Halftime show Jim Skinner Productions presents "Mardi Gras Festival"
TV in the United States
Network NBC
Announcers Dick Enberg, Merlin Olsen, John Brodie and Len Dawson
Nielsen ratings 44.4
(68.29 million viewers) [4]
Market share63
Cost of 30-second commercial$324,000
Radio in the United States
Network CBS Radio
Announcers Jack Buck and Hank Stram

Super Bowl XV was an American football game between the American Football Conference (AFC) champion Oakland Raiders and the National Football Conference (NFC) champion Philadelphia Eagles to decide the National Football League (NFL) champion for the 1980 season. The Raiders defeated the Eagles by the score of 27–10, becoming the first wild card playoff team to win a Super Bowl.

Contents

The game was played at the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans, Louisiana, on January 25, 1981, five days after the Iran hostage crisis ended. The game was thus held under patriotic fervor, as the pregame ceremonies honored the end of the crisis.

The Raiders were making their third Super Bowl appearance after posting an 11–5 regular season record, but losing a tiebreaker to the AFC West division winner San Diego Chargers. Oakland then advanced to the Super Bowl with playoff victories over the Houston Oilers, Cleveland Browns, and San Diego. The Eagles were making their first Super Bowl appearance after posting a 12–4 regular season record and postseason victories over the Minnesota Vikings and the Dallas Cowboys.

Aided by two touchdown passes from quarterback Jim Plunkett, the Raiders jumped out to a 14–0 lead in the first quarter of Super Bowl XV, from which the Eagles never recovered. Oakland linebacker Rod Martin also intercepted Philadelphia quarterback Ron Jaworski three times for a Super Bowl record. Plunkett was named the Super Bowl MVP after completing 13 of 21 passes for 261 yards and three touchdowns, while also rushing for 9 yards. Plunkett was also the second Heisman Trophy winner to be named Super Bowl MVP after Roger Staubach in Super Bowl VI.

Background

Host selection process

The NFL awarded Super Bowl XV to New Orleans on March 13, 1979, at the owners' meetings in Honolulu. For the first time, three Super Bowl host cities were deliberated and selected at the same meeting (XV, XVI, and XVII). A total of eight cities submitted bids: New Orleans, Detroit (Silverdome), Pasadena (Rose Bowl), Los Angeles (Coliseum), Miami, Seattle (Kingdome), Dallas (Cotton Bowl), and Houston (Rice Stadium). New Orleans was selected for their fifth Super Bowl overall, and second at the Louisiana Superdome, cementing their status in the regular host rotation. Detroit (XVI) and Pasadena (XVII) were other cities chosen at the meeting. [5] [6]

After hosting five previous Super Bowls, Miami was noticeably left out, largely due the aging condition of the Orange Bowl, and for a hotel room mix-up at Super Bowl XIII two months earlier. [7] [8] Dolphins owner Joe Robbie, locked in an ongoing feud with the city of Miami and Dade County over stadium improvements or construction of a new stadium, actually lobbied against Miami hosting the game. Robbie convinced the other owners to vote down Miami, in an effort to gain leverage towards building a new stadium. South Florida would not be selected to host another Super Bowl until Joe Robbie Stadium was built, and it hosted XXIII. [9] [10]

Oakland Raiders

Super Bowl XV was the climax of Jim Plunkett's revival as an NFL starting quarterback. The 1970 Heisman Trophy winner was selected with the first pick of the 1971 NFL draft by the New England Patriots and was later named the 1971 NFL Rookie of the Year. But Plunkett suffered through five losing seasons with the Patriots and two uneven seasons with the San Francisco 49ers before being released as a free agent before the 1978 season.

Plunkett was signed by Oakland to be their backup quarterback, and thus he did not see much playing time, throwing no passes in 1978 and just 15 passes in 1979. Meanwhile, Oakland traded long time starting quarterback Ken Stabler in the 1979 off-season to replace him with Dan Pastorini, a former high school rival of Plunkett who had been selected two spots below him in the 1971 draft. After the Raiders started the 1980 season with a 2–3 record, Pastorini broke his leg and suddenly Plunkett was thrust into the starting role. The 33-year-old Plunkett got off to a bad start, throwing 5 interceptions in a 31–17 loss to the Kansas City Chiefs after relieving Pastorini. However, he recovered and led the Raiders to victory in 9 of their last 11 games in the season, qualifying for the playoffs as a wild card team. Plunkett made 165 out of 320 pass completions for 2,299 yards, 18 touchdown passes and 15 interceptions. He also contributed 141 rushing yards and 2 touchdowns on the ground.

The Raiders' main offensive deep threat was wide receiver Cliff Branch (44 receptions, 858 yards, 7 touchdowns), while wide receiver Bob Chandler contributed 49 receptions for 786 yards and 10 touchdowns. Running back Mark van Eeghen was the team's top rusher with 838 yards and 5 touchdowns, while also catching 29 passes for 259 yards. Six games into the season, the Raiders made a surprise trade, sending future Hall of Fame tight end Dave Casper to the Houston Oilers for one first round and two second round draft picks. Veteran tight end Raymond Chester proved to be a capable starter for the rest of the year, catching 28 passes for 366 yards and 4 touchdowns. Halfback Kenny King rushed for 761 yards and catching 22 passes for 145 yards. The Raiders also had an outstanding offensive line led by two future Hall of Famers, tackle Art Shell and guard Gene Upshaw. Upshaw became the first player to play in three Super Bowls with the same team in three different decades. He also played in Super Bowls II (1967) and XI (1976).

Oakland's defense, anchored by defensive linemen John Matuszak (8 sacks), Cedrick Hardman (9.5 sacks), and Dave Browning (6.5 sacks), led the league in forced turnovers (52) and interceptions (35). Defensive back Lester Hayes led the league in interceptions (13) and interception return yards (273), and was the league's Defensive Player of the Year. Safety Burgess Owens added three interceptions, returning them for 59 yards and a touchdown. The Raiders also had a trio of great linebackers: future Hall of Famer Ted Hendricks (3 interceptions, 4 fumble recoveries, 8.5 sacks) Pro Bowler Rod Martin (3 Interceptions), and standout rookie Matt Millen.

The Raiders were led by head coach Tom Flores, the first Hispanic coach to win a Super Bowl.

Philadelphia Eagles

In 1980, under head coach Dick Vermeil, the Philadelphia Eagles, who had not played in a league championship since their 1960 NFL championship, advanced to their first Super Bowl. Philadelphia's offense ranked 6th in the league in scoring (384 points) and 8th in yards gained (5,519). The Eagles were led by quarterback Ron Jaworski, who completed 257 out of 451 passes for 3,529 yards during the regular season, including 27 touchdowns and only 12 interceptions. Another key player on the Eagles offense was halfback Wilbert Montgomery, who was widely considered one of the top running backs in the NFL after rushing for more than 1,200 yards in each of the previous two seasons. Injuries during the 1980 regular season had limited him to just 778 yards, but he proved he was fully recovered in the postseason by rushing for 194 yards in the NFC title game. Montgomery was also a superb receiver out of the backfield, recording 50 receptions for 407 yards. The other main deep threats on offense, wide receivers Harold Carmichael and Charlie Smith, along with tight end Keith Krepfle, combined for 125 receptions, 2,090 yards, and 16 touchdowns.

The Eagles' defense led the league in fewest points allowed during the regular season (222), while ranking second in fewest yards (4,443). Nose tackle Charlie Johnson anchored the line, and even managed to record 3 interceptions. Defensive end Claude Humphrey led the team in sacks with 14.5, while fellow defensive end Carl Hairston added 9 sacks and defensive tackle Ken Clarke had 7. Linebackers Jerry Robinson (4 fumble recoveries and 2 interceptions) and Bill Bergey excelled at both stopping the run and pass coverage. Philadelphia also had a fine secondary, led by veteran defensive backs Herman Edwards (3 interceptions) and Brenard Wilson (6 interceptions), along with rookie Roynell Young (4 interceptions). The Eagles' defense was a major factor in their hard-fought 10–7 victory over the Raiders in the regular season; they sacked Plunkett 8 times.

Playoffs

The Eagles advanced through the playoffs, defeating the Minnesota Vikings, 31–16, and the Dallas Cowboys, 20–7.

Meanwhile, Plunkett and the Raiders defeated the Houston Oilers 27–7, the Cleveland Browns 14–12 (on a play known as Red Right 88), and the San Diego Chargers 34–27. In doing so, Oakland became the second wild card team to advance to the Super Bowl since the 1970 merger, the first from the AFC, and the first wild card team to win three postseason rounds since the NFL expanded to a 10-team playoff format in 1978. Hayes had a spectacular performance in the playoffs, adding 5 more interceptions to give him a total of 18 picks in 19 games.

Super Bowl pregame news and notes

In the days before the game, most sports writers were speculating over whether, if the Raiders won, NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle would present the Vince Lombardi Trophy to the team's owner Al Davis. Prior to the season, the league declined to approve the Raiders' proposal to move from the Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum in Oakland, California to the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in Los Angeles. In response, Davis sued the NFL for violating antitrust laws. The conflict caused much friction between Rozelle and Davis. (The Raiders would eventually win the lawsuit, allowing the team to move to Los Angeles before the 1982 season.)

Oakland became the first team to avenge a regular-season loss in the Super Bowl. The Eagles defeated the Raiders 10–7 on November 23 at Veterans Stadium.

This game marked the first Super Bowl where both teams used the 3–4 defensive formation as their base defense. The Raiders were the first team to use the 3–4 in the Super Bowl in Super Bowl XI against the Minnesota Vikings, although the Miami Dolphins used a version of the 3–4 ("53 defense") in Super Bowl VI, Super Bowl VII and Super Bowl VIII. The 3–4 would be used by at least one team in every Super Bowl between Super Bowl XV and game XXVIII.

The Raiders became the first team to appear in a Super Bowl in three different decades (1960s, 1970s and 1980s), having previously played in Super Bowls II and XI.

As of Super Bowl LVII, this is the earliest Super Bowl from which both coaches are still living.

Broadcasting

The game was broadcast in the United States by NBC, with Dick Enberg in his first Super Bowl as a play-by-play announcer. There were three color commentators: Merlin Olsen sat next to Enberg, while John Brodie, and Len Dawson worked in a separate broadcast booth. Bryant Gumbel and Mike Adamle of NFL '80 anchored the pregame, halftime, and postgame coverage. Bob Trumpy served as a studio analyst. Pete Axthelm reported on the issue of gambling addiction, via interviews with members of Gamblers Anonymous, in addition to his usual role making picks as to who he felt would win a particular game. NBC News correspondent John Dancy also had a report on the issue of ticket scalping. Also included were video performances from the Broadway production "Ain't Misbehavin'", with the cast performing Fats Waller's "The Joint is Jumpin'" and NBC following members of the New Orleans Police Department's vice squad as they sought to combat prostitution in the city.

Like the game two years before, NBC used the same custom, synthesizer-heavy theme in place of their regular music. This game would also be the first Super Bowl to air with closed captioning for the deaf and hard of hearing. Toward the end of NBC's coverage, a montage of the game, the arrival of the hostages following their release, and the inauguration of Ronald Reagan as the 40th President of the United States aired to the tune of "Celebration" by Kool & the Gang.

A repeat episode of CHiPs , "11-99: Officer Needs Help", served as NBC's Super Bowl lead-out program.

Entertainment

The pregame festivities honored the end of the Iran hostage crisis (which was announced 5 days before the game), and featured a performance by the Southern University band. A large yellow bow 80-foot (24 m) long and 30 feet (9.1 m) wide was attached to the outside of the Superdome, while miniature bows were given to fans and every player wore a yellow stripe on the back of their helmets. (Yellow bows had been used in the US throughout the hostages' time in captivity as a sign of support.)

Singer, actress, and dancer Helen O'Connell later sang the national anthem. The coin toss ceremony featured Marie Lombardi, the widow of Pro Football Hall of Fame Green Bay Packers head coach Vince Lombardi.

The halftime show, featuring singers and dancers, was a "Mardi Gras Festival", with a performance from "Up With People".

Game summary

First quarter

Raiders linebacker Rod Martin intercepted Eagles quarterback Ron Jaworski's first pass of the game and returned it 17 yards to the Philadelphia 30-yard line, setting up quarterback Jim Plunkett's 2-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Cliff Branch eight plays later, giving Oakland an early 7–0 lead. After the teams exchanged punts, Jaworski appeared to complete a 40-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Rodney Parker on 3rd-and-10 that would have tied the game, but the score was nullified by an illegal motion penalty on wide receiver Harold Carmichael, and the Eagles ended up being forced to punt. On the Raiders' next possession, on third down from their own 20, Plunkett threw the ball to running back Kenny King at the 39-yard line as he was scrambling around in the backfield to avoid being sacked. King caught the pass as it carried just over the outstretched arms of cornerback Herman Edwards and took off to the end zone for a Super Bowl record 80-yard touchdown reception, giving the Raiders a 14–0 lead and tying the Miami Dolphins' record (which still stands) for the largest Super Bowl lead (14 points) at the end of the first quarter, set in Super Bowl VIII.

Second quarter

The Eagles got on the board on their next drive, with Jaworski completing passes to tight end John Spagnola and running back Wilbert Montgomery for gains of 22 and 25 yards, respectively, on a 61-yard drive that ended with a 30-yard field goal by kicker Tony Franklin, cutting their deficit to 14–3 five minutes into the second quarter. After another exchange of punts, with just over four minutes left in the half, the Raiders reached the Eagles 27-yard line, which included an 18-yard reception by Branch, only to have kicker Chris Bahr miss a 45-yard field goal. The Eagles then drove 62 yards to Oakland's 11-yard line, aided by two receptions by Carmichael for a total of 43 yards and a 16-yard reception by Montgomery. On third down, Parker got ahead of safety Odis McKinney and was open on a route into the end zone, but Jaworski overthrew him and the pass was incomplete. Then with just 54 seconds left in the half, Franklin attempted a 28-yard field goal, but Raiders linebacker Ted Hendricks extended his 6'7" frame at the line and blocked the kick, maintaining Oakland's 14–3 lead at halftime.

Third quarter

The Raiders then took the opening kickoff of the second half and scored in six plays. Despite a holding penalty on offensive tackle Henry Lawrence, Plunkett completed a 13-yard pass to King and a 32-yard completion to wide receiver Bob Chandler to move the ball to the Eagles 33-yard line. Then after a 4-yard run by running back Mark van Eeghen, Plunkett threw a 29-yard touchdown pass to Branch, increasing Oakland's lead to 21–3. The Eagles responded by driving 56 yards to the Raiders 34, aided by two receptions by Carmichael for a total of 37 yards, but on 3rd-and-3, Jaworski threw his second interception of the game to Martin. The Raiders subsequently drove 40 yards on Plunkett's passes to tight end Raymond Chester and Chandler for gains of 16 and 17 yards, respectively. The drive stalled at the Philadelphia 28, forcing Oakland to settle for Bahr's 46-yard field goal, increasing their lead to 24–3.

Fourth quarter

The Eagles finally managed to score a touchdown that counted early in the fourth quarter to cut their deficit to 24–10. Starting from their own 12-yard line, a 43-yard reception by wide receiver Charlie Smith and a 19-yard catch by Parker sparked an 88-yard, 14-play drive that was capped by Jaworski's 8-yard touchdown pass to tight end Keith Krepfle. But on their ensuing drive, Oakland marched 72 yards in 12 plays, the longest a 23-yard completion from Plunkett to Chandler. The Eagles kept the Raiders out of the end zone, but Bahr kicked a 35-yard field goal, increasing Oakland's lead to 27–10 and capping off the scoring.

The Raiders' defense then dominated the rest the game, forcing two turnovers on the Eagles' last two possessions of the game to prevent any chance of a comeback. On the Eagles' next drive, Jaworski fumbled a snap and defensive end Willie Jones recovered it. Following a Raiders punt, Martin recorded a Super Bowl record third interception, and the Raiders reached the Eagles 19 to run out the clock and win the game.

Cliff Branch's two touchdowns tied a Super Bowl record. Only Max McGee in Super Bowl I and John Stallworth in Super Bowl XIII caught two touchdowns prior to Branch. Jaworski finished the game with more completions (18) and yards (291) than Plunkett but completed just 18 of 38 attempts and was intercepted 3 times. Van Eeghen was the top rusher of the game with 75 yards. King was the top receiver with 93 yards and a touchdown off of just 2 receptions. Eagles running back Wilbert Montgomery led Philadelphia in rushing and receiving with 44 rushing yards and 6 receptions for 91 yards. The Eagles' loss came hours after former head coach Joe Kuharich had died.

After the game, the expected heated confrontation between Rozelle and Davis was actually very civil. As Rozelle presented the Lombardi Trophy to Davis, he praised Plunkett, head coach Tom Flores, the players, and the entire Raiders organization for being the first wild card team to win the Super Bowl. Davis thanked Rozelle, then proceeded to also praise the team.

Oakland became only the second wild card team to make it to the Super Bowl and the first to come away victorious. The Super Bowl IV champion Kansas City Chiefs are often thought of as a "wild-card team," but they were not; during 1969, the season before the 1970 AFL-NFL Merger, the second-place finishers in both divisions of the American Football League qualified for the playoffs. Flores became the first person to be a member of a Super Bowl winning team as a player and head coach. He was a member of the Chiefs in Super Bowl IV but did not play in the game.

Following the March 11, 2023 death of Bud Grant, this is the earliest Super Bowl where both teams' head coaches are still living.

Box score

Super Bowl XV: Oakland Raiders 27, Philadelphia Eagles 10
Period1234Total
Raiders (AFC)14010327
Eagles (NFC)030710

at Louisiana Superdome, New Orleans, Louisiana

  • Date: January 25, 1981
  • Game time: 5:16 p.m. CST
  • Game weather: 70 °F (21 °C), played indoors, domed stadium [11]
Scoring summary
QuarterTime Drive TeamScoring informationScore
Plays Yards TOP OAKPHI
18:567304:16OAK Cliff Branch 2-yard touchdown reception from Jim Plunkett, Chris Bahr kick good70
1:09386:57OAK Kenny King 80-yard touchdown reception from Plunkett, Bahr kick good140
210:288614:41PHI30-yard field goal by Tony Franklin 143
312:245762:36OAKBranch 29-yard touchdown reception from Plunkett, Bahr kick good213
34:357403:45OAK46-yard field goal by Bahr243
413:5912885:36PHI Keith Krepfle 8-yard touchdown reception from Ron Jaworski, Franklin kick good2410
48:2911725:30OAK35-yard field goal by Bahr2710
"TOP" = time of possession. For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football.2710

Final statistics

Sources: NFL.com Super Bowl XV, Super Bowl XV Play Finder Oak, Super Bowl XV Play Finder Phi, Super Bowl XV Play by Play

Statistical comparison

Oakland RaidersPhiladelphia Eagles
First downs1719
First downs rushing63
First downs passing1014
First downs penalty12
Third down efficiency6/125/12
Fourth down efficiency0/01/1
Net yards rushing11769
Rushing attempts3426
Yards per rush3.42.7
Passing – Completions/attempts13/2118/38
Times sacked-total yards1–10–0
Interceptions thrown03
Net yards passing260291
Total net yards377360
Punt returns-total yards2–13–20
Kickoff returns-total yards3–486–87
Interceptions-total return yards3–440–0
Punts-average yardage3–42.03–36.3
Fumbles-lost0–01–1
Penalties-total yards5–376–57
Time of possession29:4930:11
Turnovers04

Individual statistics

Raiders Passing
C/ATT1YdsTDINTRating
Jim Plunkett 13/2126130145.0
Raiders Rushing
Car2YdsTDLG3Yds/Car
Mark Van Eeghen 1875084.17
Kenny King 618063.00
Derrick Jensen 417064.25
Jim Plunkett39053.00
Arthur Whittington 3–200–0.67
Raiders Receiving
Rec4YdsTDLG3Target5
Cliff Branch 5672297
Bob Chandler 4770326
Kenny King2931803
Raymond Chester 2240163
Mark Van Eeghen00001
Arthur Whittington00001
Eagles Passing
C/ATT1YdsTDINTRating
Ron Jaworski 18/382911349.3
Eagles Rushing
Car2YdsTDLG3Yds/Car
Wilbert Montgomery 1644082.75
Leroy Harris 714052.00
Louie Giammona17077.00
Perry Harrington 14044.00
Ron Jaworski10000.00
Eagles Receiving
Rec4YdsTDLG3Target5
Wilbert Montgomery69102510
Harold Carmichael 5830298
Charles A. Smith2590435
Keith Krepfle 216183
John Spagnola 1220223
Rodney Parker1190193
Leroy Harris11011
Billy Campfield 00002

1Completions/attempts 2Carries 3Long gain 4Receptions 5Times targeted

Records set

The following records were set in Super Bowl XV, according to the official NFL.com boxscore [12] and the Pro-Football-Reference.com game summary. [13]

Player Records Set [13]
Longest scoring play80 yards reception Kenny King
(Oakland)
Passing Records
Most attempts, game38 Ron Jaworski
(Philadelphia)
Highest passer rating, game145.0 Jim Plunkett
(Oakland)
Longest pass80 yards (TD)
Receiving Records
Longest Reception80 yards (TD)Kenny King
(Oakland)
Defense
Most interceptions, game3 Rod Martin
(Oakland)
Records Tied
Most touchdowns, game2 Cliff Branch
(Oakland)
Most receiving touchdowns, game2
Most completions, game18Ron Jaworski
(Philadelphia)
Most interceptions, career3Rod Martin
Most kickoff returns, game5 Billy Campfield
(Philadelphia)
Most 40-plus yard field goals, game1 Chris Bahr
(Oakland)
Team Records Set [13]
Defense
Most yards allowed in a win360Raiders
Records Tied
Most points, first quarter14Oakland
Largest lead, end of first quarter14 points
Fewest turnovers, game0
Fewest rushing touchdowns0Raiders
Eagles
Fewest times sacked0Eagles
Records Set, both team totals [13]
TotalRaidersEagles
Passing, Both Teams
Most passing yards (net)551260291
Fewest times sacked110
Punting, Both Teams
Fewest punts, game633
Records tied, both team totals
Most points, first quarter14140
Fewest rushing touchdowns000

Starting lineups

Source: [14]

Hall of Fame‡

OaklandPositionPhiladelphia
Offense
Cliff BranchWR Harold Carmichael
Art ShellLT Stan Walters
Gene UpshawLG Petey Perot
Dave Dalby C Guy Morriss
Mickey Marvin RG Woody Peoples
Henry Lawrence RT Jerry Sisemore
Raymond Chester TE Keith Krepfle
Bob Chandler WR Charlie Smith
Jim Plunkett QB Ron Jaworski
Mark Van Eeghen RB Leroy Harris
Kenny King RB Wilbert Montgomery
Defense
John Matuszak LE Dennis Harrison
Reggie Kinlaw MG Charlie Johnson
Dave Browning RE Carl Hairston
Ted HendricksLLB John Bunting
Matt Millen ILB Bill Bergey
Bob Nelson ILB Frank LeMaster
Rod Martin RLB Jerry Robinson
Lester Hayes LCB Roynell Young
Dwayne O'Steen RCB Herm Edwards
Mike Davis SS Randy Logan
Burgess Owens FS Brenard Wilson

Officials

Dooley, Graf, Kelleher and Veteri wore #7 at their respective officiating positions during 1979-81 (except Dooley was promoted to Referee for 1981, wearing #19), but Kelleher had priority on the number for the Super Bowl, due to his seniority. Kelleher and Veteri became the third and fourth officials to work four Super Bowls, joining Jack Fette and Stan Javie.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">1982–83 NFL playoffs</span> Seasonal NFL playoffs

The National Football League playoffs for the 1982 season began on January 8, 1983. The postseason tournament concluded with the Washington Redskins defeating the Miami Dolphins in Super Bowl XVII, 27–17, on January 30, at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California.

The National Football League playoffs for the 1974 season began on December 21, 1974. The postseason tournament concluded with the Pittsburgh Steelers defeating the Minnesota Vikings in Super Bowl IX, 16–6, on January 12, 1975, at Tulane Stadium in New Orleans, Louisiana.

The National Football League playoffs for the 1975 season began on December 27, 1975. The postseason tournament concluded with the Pittsburgh Steelers defeating the Dallas Cowboys in Super Bowl X, 21–17, on January 18, 1976, at the Orange Bowl in Miami.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1980–81 NFL playoffs</span> NFL seasonal playoff games

The National Football League playoffs for the 1980 season began on December 28, 1980. The postseason tournament concluded with the Oakland Raiders defeating the Philadelphia Eagles in Super Bowl XV, 27–10, on January 25, 1981, at the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans, Louisiana.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1980 Oakland Raiders season</span> NFL team season (won Super Bowl)

The 1980 season was the Oakland Raiders' 21st since they were founded, their 11th in the National Football League (NFL) and their second under head coach Tom Flores.

The 1973 Miami Dolphins season was the franchise's eighth season and fourth season in the National Football League (NFL). The team entered the 1973 season as defending Super Bowl champion following its perfect undefeated 1972 season.

References

Specific

  1. DiNitto, Marcus (January 25, 2015). "Super Bowl Betting History – Underdogs on Recent Roll". The Linemakers. Sporting News. Archived from the original on February 4, 2015. Retrieved February 4, 2015.
  2. "Super Bowl History". Vegas Insider. Retrieved February 4, 2015.
  3. "Super Bowl Winners". NFL.com. Retrieved February 4, 2015.
  4. "Historical Super Bowl Nielsen TV Ratings, 1967–2009 – Ratings". TV by the Numbers. January 18, 2009. Archived from the original on December 22, 2015. Retrieved October 9, 2012.
  5. Martz, Ron (March 14, 1979). "Super Bowl sun warms Snow Belt (Part 1)". The Miami Herald. p. 29. Retrieved February 14, 2023 via Newspapers.com. Open Access logo PLoS transparent.svg
  6. Martz, Ron (March 14, 1979). "Super Bowl sun warms Snow Belt (Part 2)". The Miami Herald. p. 36. Retrieved February 14, 2023 via Newspapers.com. Open Access logo PLoS transparent.svg
  7. Stellino, Vito (March 14, 1979). "Michigan's Super Bowl army reached out a winner (Part 1)". Detroit Free Press. p. 53. Retrieved February 15, 2023 via Newspapers.com. Open Access logo PLoS transparent.svg
  8. Stellino, Vito (March 14, 1979). "Michigan's Super Bowl army reached out a winner (Part 2)". Detroit Free Press. p. 60. Retrieved February 15, 2023 via Newspapers.com. Open Access logo PLoS transparent.svg
  9. Lincicome, Bernie (March 14, 1979). "Joe's Message To South Florida: No New Stadium, No Super Bowl". Fort Lauderdale News. p. 23. Retrieved February 14, 2023 via Newspapers.com. Open Access logo PLoS transparent.svg
  10. "Robbie's 'No' Vote Keeps Super Bowl From Miami". Fort Lauderdale News. March 14, 1979. p. 23. Retrieved February 14, 2023 via Newspapers.com. Open Access logo PLoS transparent.svg
  11. "Super Bowl Game-Time Temperatures". Pro Football Hall of Fame . Retrieved March 10, 2018.
  12. 1 2 "Super Bowl XV box score". SuperBowl.com. NFL Enterprises, LLC. Archived from the original on December 17, 2007. Retrieved March 14, 2023.
  13. 1 2 3 4 "Super Bowl XV statistics". Pro Football reference.com. Retrieved November 6, 2016.
  14. "Super Bowl XV–National Football League Game Summary" (PDF). NFLGSIS.com. National Football League. January 25, 1981. Retrieved March 10, 2018.

General