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Super Bowl History
The game was broadcast in the United States by CBS and featured the broadcast team of play-by-play announcer Pat Summerall and color commentator John Madden.

The pregame festivities featured the University of Florida Fightin' Gator Band and the Florida State University Marching Chiefs. Singer Barry Manilow performed the national anthem. The coin toss ceremony featured Pro Football Hall of Fame fullback and defensive tackle Bronko Nagurski.

The halftime show was a "Salute to Superstars of Silver Screen" featuring the University of Florida and Florida State University Bands.
 
 
 
            Super Bowl MVP XVIII
As Washington's John Riggins had the year before, running back Marcus Allen made a spectacular run the signature play of the game. While the Raiders set a Super Bowl record for points and victory margin in their 38-9 win over Washington, it was Allen's 74-yard touchdown run on the final play of the third quarter that was the highlight of the team's impressive victory.

After taking a handoff from quarterback Jim Plunkett, Allen headed around left end. Bottled up there, he reversed field, turned the right corner and evaded several Redskins' tacklers on the way to the end zone. The run broke a record of 58 yards set by Tom Matte in Super Bowl III

Allen scored his first Super Bowl touchdown midway through the third quarter. His 5-yard run finished off a 70-yard Los Angeles drive. Allen, the Most Valuable Player, broke Riggins' Super Bowl rushing record with 191 yards on 20 carries.
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Apple's famous "1984" television commercial, introducing the Apple Macintosh computer and directed by Ridley Scott, ran during a timeout in the third quarter. The advertisement changed how the Super Bowl would be used as a media platform.

Voice-over work for the highlight package to Super Bowl XVIII was John Facenda's final project for NFL Films. Facenda died a little more than eight months after the game.

Following the game, CBS aired the pilot episode of Airwolf.
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The Los Angeles Raiders dominated the Washington Redskins from the beginning in Super Bowl XVIII and achieved the most lopsided victory in Super Bowl history, surpassing Green Bay's 35-10 win over Kansas City in Super Bowl I.

The Raiders took a 7-0 lead 4:52 into the game when Derrick Jensen blocked Jeff Hayes's punt and recovered it in the end zone for a touchdown.

With 9:14 remaining in the first half, Raiders quarterback Jim Plunkett fired a 12-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Cliff Branch to complete a three-play, 65-yard drive.

Washington cut the Raiders' lead to 14-3 on a 24-yard field goal by Mark Moseley. With seven seconds left in the first half, Raiders linebacker Jack Squirek intercepted Joe Theismann's pass at the Redskins' 5-yard line and ran it in for a touchdown to give Los Angeles a 21-3 halftime lead.

In the third period, running back Marcus Allen, who rushed for a Super Bowl-record 191 yards on 20 carries, increased the Raiders' lead to 35-9 on touchdown runs of five and 74 yards, the latter erasing the Super Bowl record of 58 yards set by Baltimore's Tom Matte in Game III. Allen was named the game's most valuable player.

The victory over Washington raised Raiders coach Tom Flores' playoff record to 8-1, including a 27-10 win against Philadelphia in Super Bowl XV.

The 38 points scored by the Raiders were the highest total by a Super Bowl team. The previous high was 35 points by Green Bay in Game I.
GAME RECAP
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Redskins         0    3   6    0        9
Raiders            7   14 14   3       38
BOX SCORE
1      2     3      4         Total
Date January 22, 1984
Stadium Tampa Stadium
City Tampa, Florida
MVP Marcus Allen, Running back
Favorite Redskins by 2 1/2
National anthem Barry Manilow
Coin toss Bronko Nagurski
Referee Gene Barth
Halftime show "Salute to Superstars of the Silver Screen" with the University of Florida and Florida State University Bands
Attendance 72,920
TV in the United States
Network CBS
Announcers Pat Summerall and John Madden
Nielsen Ratings 46.4
Market share 71
Cost of 30-second commercial US$368,000
Super Bowl 18 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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