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Meanwhile, the Cowboys could not overcome turnovers, drops, and a controversial penalty during the second half. The Cowboys were the first defending champion to lose in the Super Bowl. They were also the first to lose two Super Bowls to the same team (they lost 21-17 to the Steelers in Super Bowl X).

After the NFL increased its exposure by extending its schedule from 14 regular season games to 16, and increasing the playoffs from an 8-team tournament to 10, the league could not have been happier to see its two then-most popular teams meet in the Super Bowl again.
 
 
 
            Super Bowl MVP XIII
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The pregame festivities featured the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders and several military bands. The Colgate Thirteen performed the national anthem. The coin toss ceremony featured Pro Football Hall of Famer and longtime Chicago Bears owner/head coach George Halas.

The halftime show was a "Carnival Salute to Caribbean" with various Caribbean bands. When the NFL Network re-aired this game, the last minute of the first half (including the Rocky Bleier touchdown reception) was curiously missing from the footage.
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Terry Bradshaw passed for a record four touchdowns to lead the Steelers to victory. The Steelers became the first team to win three Super Bowls, mostly because of Bradshaw's accurate arm.

Bradshaw, voted the game's most valuable player, completed 17 of 30 passes for 318 yards, a personal high. Four of those passes went for touchdowns – two to John Stallworth and the third, with 26 seconds remaining in the second period, to Rocky Bleier for a 21-14 halftime lead.

The Cowboys scored twice before intermission on Roger Staubach's 39-yard pass to Tony Hill and a 37-yard fumble return by linebacker Mike Hegman, who stole the ball from Bradshaw.

The Steelers broke open the contest with two touchdowns in a span of 19 seconds midway through the final period.

Franco Harris rambled 22 yards up the middle to give the Steelers a 28-17 lead with 7:10 left. Pittsburgh got the ball right back when Randy White fumbled the kickoff and Dennis Winston recovered for the Steelers. On first down, Bradshaw fired his fourth touchdown pass, an 18-yard pass to Lynn Swann to boost the Steelers' lead to 35-17 with 6:51 to play.

The Cowboys refused to let the Steelers run away with the contest. Staubach connected with Billy Joe DuPree on a 7-yard scoring pass with 2:23 left.

Then the Cowboys recovered an onside kick and Staubach took them in for another score, passing four yards to Butch Johnson with 22 seconds remaining.

Bleier recovered another onside kick with 17 seconds left to seal the victory for the Steelers.
GAME RECAP
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Steelers           7   14  0   14      35
Cowboys         7    7   3   14      31
BOX SCORE
1      2     3      4         Total
Date January 21, 1979
Stadium Miami Orange Bowl
City Miami, Florida
MVP Terry Bradshaw, Quarterback
Favorite Steelers by 3 1/2
National anthem The Colgate Thirteen
Coin toss George Halas
Referee Pat Haggerty
Halftime show Bob Jani Productions present "Carnival Salute to Caribbean" with various Caribbean bands
Attendance 79,484
TV in the United States
Network NBC
Announcers Curt Gowdy, Merlin Olsen and John Brodie
Nielsen Ratings 47.1
Market share 74
Cost of 30-second commercial US$185,000
Super Bowl 13 Information
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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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Throwing a Super Bowl record four touchdown passes, quarterback Terry Bradshaw was named the Most Valuable Player of the Steelers' 35-31 win over Dallas. Setting a personal best with 318 passing yards, Bradshaw led Pittsburgh to its third Super Bowl championship in five seasons.

His first two scoring passes went to John Stallworth, for 28 and 75 yards. With only 26 seconds left in the first half, he hit Rocky Bleier with a 7-yard pass for a 21-14 Pittsbugh lead. Then, on the first play following a Pittsburgh fumble recovery in the fourth quarter, Bradshaw hit Lynn Swann with an 18-yard touchdown pass to seal the victory. With 17 completions in 30 attempts, nearly 25 percent of Bradshaw's passes went for scores.