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Super Bowl History
In 2004, the Colts had one of the most spectacular offensive seasons in NFL history, scoring 522 points and gaining 6,582 yards, while Manning set NFL records for most touchdown passes and highest passer rating. But again the Patriots defense (and snowy conditions) proved too formidable, as they lost 20-3 in the divisional round of the playoffs.

In 2005, the Colts defense improved, making the team the clear favorites in the NFL. They won the first 13 games of the season and finished with a 14-2 record, while ranking second in the NFL in both points scored and fewest points allowed.
 
 
 
SB 41 Champion Indianapolis Colts   
The Colts's first trip to the Super Bowl in 36 years was the culmination of a 9 year long building process. In 1998, they drafted quarterback Peyton Manning to lead the team. Over the next four seasons, Manning, along with other stars such as receiver Marvin Harrison and running back Edgerrin James, turned the Colts into one of the best offensive teams in the NFL, but the team struggled to find consistency on defense and always ended up with either a losing season or elimination from the playoffs in the first round. In 2002, Indianapolis fired head coach Jim Mora and replaced him with Tony Dungy. Dungy had developed one of the best defenses in the NFL while coaching the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and it was hoped he could solve the Colts' defensive problems as well.

Over the next four seasons, the Colts won 48 of 64 games, but still could not find much success in the postseason. In 2002, they were blown out 41-0 in the wildcard round by the New York Jets. In 2003, they won their first two playoff games behind impressive offensive performances, and reached the AFC title game. There they lost to the eventual champion New England Patriots 24-14, with Manning throwing four interceptions.
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But once again they lost in the divisional round of the playoffs, this time to the #6 seeded Pittsburgh Steelers, 21-18. After another disappointing loss, Manning had developed a reputation of being unable to make it to a championship, a reputation that followed him from college after he was unable to win an NCAA title with the Tennessee Volunteers (who won a title the year after he graduated). The Colts lost some key players after the 2005 season, including James, who departed the Colts for the Arizona Cardinals, and kicker Mike Vanderjagt, the NFL's all-time leader in field goal percentage, who left for the Dallas Cowboys.
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MIAMI (Feb. 4, 2007) -- Tony Dungy, beaming and sporting an NFL champions cap, waded through the mob on the soggy field until he found his quarterback, Peyton Manning.

And there they stood in the rain, the winning Super Bowl coach and the MVP, finally savoring a moment that was a long time coming.
A wet and wild night of Super Bowl firsts brought Dungy, Manning and the Indianapolis Colts to the top of the NFL with a 29-17 victory against the Chicago Bears.
A team built for indoors found its footing on a rain-soaked track. The Colts were far less sloppy, particularly their star quarterback, who proved he can indeed win the big game -- the biggest game.
"Peyton is a tremendous player, a great leader," Dungy said. "He prepares, he works, does everything you can do to win games and lead your team. If people think he needed to win a Super Bowl, that is just wrong. This guy is a Hall of Fame player and one of the greatest ever to play."

And now he is a champion. So is his coach.

"It's hard to put into words," said Manning, who completed 25 of 38 passes for 247 yards with one touchdown and one interception. "I'm proud to be part of this team. We stuck together, won this game for our leader, Tony Dungy."
Dungy became the first black coach to win the championship, beating good friend and protege Lovie Smith in a game that featured the first two black coaches in the Super Bowl.
"It feels great. I thought about that as I was on the podium," Dungy said. "Being the first African-American coach to win it. I have to dedicate to some guys before me -- great coaches I know could have done this if they had gotten the opportunity. Lovie and I were able to take advantage of it. We certainly weren't the most qualified."
Dungy's ring wasn't the only first. It also was the first rainy Super Bowl and the first time an opening kickoff was run back for a touchdown, when sensational Bears rookie Devin Hester sped downfield for 92 yards.

And not since the Buffalo Bills self-destructed with nine turnovers in losing to Dallas 14 years ago had there been so much messiness. The first half was marred by six turnovers, three for each team. Even football's most clutch kicker, Adam Vinatieri, missed a chip-shot field goal for the Colts, who botched an extra point attempt, too.

When much-maligned Bears quarterback Rex Grossman's wobbly pass was picked off and returned 56 yards for a touchdown by Kelvin Hayden with 11:44 remaining in the fourth quarter, it was over.

"I'm so proud of our guys," Dungy said. "We took the hit early with Devin Hester. We talked about it; it's going to be a storm. Sometimes you have to work for it. Our guys played so hard and I can't tell you how proud I am of our group, our organization and our city."

Chicago (15-4), which led the league in takeaways this season, finished with five turnovers, including two interceptions by Grossman.
"A frustrating loss," Grossman said. "There were definitely opportunities for us to take that game, and we didn't do it."

The Colts (16-4) will take it. It's their first title since the 1970 season, when they played in Baltimore.
It was confirmation of Manning's brilliance, even if he didn't need to be dynamic. The son of a quarterback who never got to the playoffs, Manning has been a star throughout his college career at Tennessee and his nine pro seasons with the Colts.
It also was a validation of Dungy's leadership. He helped build Tampa Bay, one of the NFL's worst franchises, into a contender before being fired after the 2001 season. The next year, the Bucs won the Super Bowl under Jon Gruden.
Now it was finally was Dungy's turn. As his players hoisted their coach on their shoulders, he switched his blue Colts cap for a white one that read "NFL champions." Dungy was carried from the sideline, then was lowered so he could share a long embrace and a handshake with Smith.
"I just told Lovie how proud I was of the moment," Dungy said
The Colts reached the pinnacle by winning four postseason games with a defense that made a complete turnaround in the playoffs.
And with a running game that perfectly complemented Manning, thanks to Dominic Rhodes and Joseph Addai, who combined for 190 yards -- 113 on 21 carries by Rhodes and 77 on 19 carries by Addai, who also caught 10 passes for 66 yards.
Chicago was denied its first Super Bowl title since its powerhouse 1985 team. These Bears could have used Da Coach, Sweetness and their buddies.
It rained from start to finish; there was even Purple Rain during halftime when Prince sang some of his signature songs. And though Vinatieri twice was a victim of the slop, he kicked three field goals.

"We knew handling the ball would be tough," Dungy said. "We showed we could win many ways."

Hester's spectacular return provided a stunning beginning -- and a severe jolt to the Colts. The local product and only rookie All-Pro this season pumped his arms to excite the crowd before the kickoff, then lifted the fans from their seats with an electrifying run on which he never was touched.
He barely touched the ball again as Indy went to squibbing kickoffs.
Peyton Manning had only one touchdown pass, but consistently moved his team into field-goal range.
Peyton Manning had  only one touchdown pass,    but consistently moved his team into field-goal range.
Leading 16-14 at halftime, the Colts spent half the third quarter with a march to Vinatieri's 24-yard field goal. Twice on the drive, Manning fell to the ground while throwing. But he completed them.
Grossman had it even worse on Chicago's initial possession of the second half, slipping and getting sacked on back-to-back plays. Maybe he would have done better on icy turf.

Thomas Jones, forced to carry the Bears' entire rushing load when Cedric Benson was hurt in the first half, was Chicago's best player. But with Grossman ineffective, even inept, all the Bears managed in the second half was Robbie Gould's 44-yard field goal late in the third period.

After Hester's opening dagger, Manning tried to force a pass to Marvin Harrison in double coverage and was picked off by Chris Harris to spoil Indy's first possession, but the Colts struck back on their next series, converting a trio of third downs. The final one was the most important -- Manning got everything on a long pass to the uncovered Reggie Wayne even though Tank Johnson had his hands on the quarterback. Wayne trotted into the end zone for a 47-yard score.

Then the rain ruined three plays in a row.
Holder Hunter Smith dropped the snap on the extra point and Vinatieri couldn't get off a kick. Then Vinatieri, well aware of who was lurking deep, squibbed the kickoff to tight end Gabe Reid, who fumbled at his 35, with Tyjuan Hagler recovering for the Colts.
But Manning and Addai botched the handoff on the next snap and Chicago's Mark Anderson recovered, the third turnover in the first 8½ minutes.
Couldn't anybody play this game?
Jones certainly could. He used a sharp cutback to break a 52-yard run, the longest of his career, to the Colts 5, and Grossman found Muhammad in the front of the end zone for a 14-6 lead.

Jones finished with 112 yards rushing.
A fourth giveaway in the opening quarter, by Benson on his first carry before injuring his knee, didn't damage Chicago.
Vinatieri, who made two Super Bowl-winning kicks for New England, nailed a 29-yard field goal early in the second period, but was wide left from 32 yards at the end of the half.

Vinatieri still set a record with 49 postseason points.
GAME RECAP
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Colts     6   10   6   7            29
Bears   14    0   3   0            17
BOX SCORE
1      2     3      4              Total
Date February 4, 2007
Stadium Dolphin Stadium
City Miami Gardens, Florida
MVP Peyton Manning, Quarterback, Colts
Favorite Colts by 6.5, over/under line 49.5
National anthem Billy Joel, ASL performed by Marlee Matlin
Coin toss Dan Marino and Norma Hunt
Referee Tony Corrente
Halftime show Prince and the Florida A&M University Marching 100
Attendance 74,512
TV in the United States
Network CBS
Announcers Jim Nantz and Phil Simms
Nielsen Ratings 42.6 (national)
(est. 93.2 million viewers)
50.2 (Chicago)
55.5 (Indianapolis)
Market share 64 (national)
77 (Chicago)
83 (Indianapolis)
Cost of 30-second commercial US$2.6 million
Super Bowl 41 Information
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Super Bowl Champs
SB 41 > Indianapolis Colts
SB 40 > Pittsburgh Steelers
SB 39 > New England Patriots
SB 38 > New England Patriots
SB 37 > Tampa Bay Bucs
SB 36 > New England Patriots
SB 35 > Baltimore Ravens
SB 34 > St. Louis Rams
SB 33 > Denver Broncos
SB 32 > Denver Broncos
SB 31 > Green Bay Packers
SB 30 > Dallas Cowboys
SB 29 > San Francisco 49ers
SB 28 > Dallas Cowboys
SB 27 > Dallas Cowboys
SB 26 > Washington Redskins
SB 25 > New York Giants
SB 24 > San Francisco 49ers
SB 23 > San Francisco 49ers
SB 22 > Washington Redskins
SB 21 > New York Giants
SB 20 > Chicago Bears
SB 19 > San Francisco 49ers
SB 18 > Los Angeles Raiders
SB 17 > Washington Redskins
SB 16 > San Francisco 49ers
SB 15 > Oakland Raiders
SB 14 > Pittsburgh Steelers
SB 13 > Pittsburgh Steelers
SB 12 > Dallas Cowboys
SB 11 > Oakland Raiders
SB 10 > Pittsburgh Steelers
SB 9 > Pittsburgh Steelers
SB 8 > Miami Dolphins
SB 7 > Miami Dolphins
SB 6 > Dallas Cowboys
SB 5 > Baltimore Colts
SB 4 > Kansas City Chiefs
SB 3 > New York Jets
SB 2 > Green Bay Packers
SB 1 > Green Bay Packers
Peyton Manning, QB, Indianapolis
Hines Ward, WR, Pittsburgh
Deion Branch, WR, New England
Tom Brady, QB, New England
Dexter Jackson, FS, Tampa Bay
Tom Brady, QB, New England
Ray Lewis, LB, Baltimore
Kurt Warner, QB, St. Louis
John Elway, QB, Denver
Terrell Davis, RB, Denver
Desmond Howard, KR, Green Bay
Larry Brown, CB, Dallas
Steve Young, QB, San Francisco
Emmitt Smith, RB, Dallas
Troy Aikman, QB, Dallas
Mark Rypien, QB, Washington
Ottis Anderson, RB, New York
Joe Montana, QB, San Francisco
Jerry Rice, WR, San Francisco
Doug Williams, QB, Washington
Phil Simms, QB, New York
Richard Dent, DE, Chicago
Joe Montana, QB, San Francisco
Marcus Allen, RB, Los Angeles
John Riggins, RB, Washington
Joe Montana, QB, San Francisco
Jim Plunkett, QB, Oakland
Terry Bradshaw, QB, Pittsburgh
Terry Bradshaw, QB, Pittsburgh
Randy White, DT, Dallas
Fred Biletnikoff, WR, Oakland
Lynn Swann, WR, Pittsburgh
Franco Harris, RB, Pittsburgh
Larry Csonka, RB, Miami
Jake Scott, S, Miami
Roger Staubach, QB, Dallas
Chuck Howley, LB, Dallas
Len Dawson, QB, Kansas City
Joe Namath, QB, New York
Bart Starr, QB, Green Bay
Bart Starr, QB, Green Bay
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Still, the Colts remained one of the AFC's top teams in the 2006 NFL season. Manning made the Pro Bowl for the 7th time in his career, completing 362 of 555 passes for 4,397 yards and an NFL best 31 touchdowns, with an additional 4 rushing touchdowns and with only 9 interceptions and 15 sacks. His favorite target was Harrison, who caught 95 passes for 1,366 yards and 12 touchdowns. Receiver Reggie Wayne was also a major deep threat with 86 receptions for 1,310 yards and 9 touchdowns. Tight ends Ben Utecht and Dallas Clark were also reliable targets, each recording over 30 receptions for over 300 yards. On the ground, rookie running back Joseph Addai led the team with 1,081 yards and 4.8 yards per carry average. He also caught 40 receptions for 325 yards and scored 8 touchdowns. Running back Dominic Rhodes was also a major contributor, rushing for 641 yards and catching 36 passes for 251 yards. The offensive line was led by Pro Bowlers Jeff Saturday and Tarik Glenn. On special teams, the Colts signed kicker Adam Vinatieri to replace Vanderjagt. While Vinatieri's career field goal percentage was lower, the Colts considered him to be an improvement because of his reputation for making "clutch" kicks, a reputation aided by his game winning field goals in Super Bowl XXXVI and Super Bowl XXXVIII.

Indianapolis' defense ranked second in the NFL in fewest passing yards allowed. Dwight Freeney and Robert Mathis (who recorded 9.5 sacks and forced 4 fumbles) were widely considered to be among the best pass-rushing defensive ends in the NFL. Behind them, linebacker Cato June led the team in tackles (92) and interceptions (3). The Colts run defense, however, was a major problem, giving up 2,768 yards on the ground, an average of 173 per game and last in the NFL. Another major issue for the Colts was their coverage teams, as they ranked #30 out of 32 teams in average kickoff return yardage allowed and #31 in average punt return yardage allowed.

Indianapolis started out the season winning their first 9 games, but ended up losing four of their next seven and finished with a 12-4 record, giving them the #3 playoff seed. Thus, they would have to win three games to make it to the Super Bowl.