SuperBowlConcierge.com  > Super Bowls  Super Bowl 42 MVP Eli Manning
Super Bowl History
 
 
 
            Super Bowl XLII MVP    
The first three quarters of Super Bowl XLII were largely a defensive battle, as both teams combined for only 10 points, with the Patriots leading 7–3 entering into the final quarter. New York finally scored their first touchdown with 11:05 left in the game to take a 10–7 lead. New England eventually responded with a touchdown of their own to take a 14–10 lead with 2:42 left. Then came the defining play of the game: faced with third down and five yards to go from their own 44-yard line with 1:15 remaining, Giants quarterback Eli Manning avoided what looked like a sack and completed a 32-yard pass to wide receiver David Tyree, who made a leaping catch by pinning the ball on his helmet which put them at New England's 24-yard-line. Four plays later, New York wide receiver Plaxico Burress caught the winning touchdown with 0:35 left. Manning, who threw both of his touchdown passes in the fourth quarter, was named the Most Valuable Player.
Advertisement
Super Bowl MVPs
Advertisement
For his efforts, Manning was named the Most Valuable Player of Super Bowl XLII.  He and his brother Peyton are the only brother combination to play at quarterback in the Super Bowl and the only set of brothers to win Super Bowl MVP, doing so in successive years.

For winning Super Bowl MVP he was given his choice of any 2008 model Cadillac, and Manning chose an Escalade Hybrid. The Wednesday following the Super Bowl he appeared on the Late Show with David Letterman.
Advertisement
 
After scoring a combined 73 points in their regular season meeting, the teams scored a mere 10 points by the end of the third quarter, with the Patriots leading 7 to 3. The Patriots' record-setting offense gave up five sacks and one lost fumble, while the Giants' offense managed only five first downs in the second and third quarters. Yet in the fourth quarter, quarterback Eli Manning threw two touchdown passes, including the winning drive that culminated with a 17-yard touchdown to Plaxico Burress with 39 seconds remaining. The game marked the first time that a previously undefeated team had lost in a National Football League championship game since the 1942 Chicago Bears as the Patriots fell shy of their bid for a 19–0 campaign.

After calling tails to win the coin toss, the Giants started the game with the longest opening drive in Super Bowl history,[53] a 16-play, 77-yard march that consumed 9 minutes, 59 seconds and featured four third-down conversions, the most ever on a Super Bowl opening drive. But New England halted the drive at their own 14-yard line, forcing the Giants to settle for a 32-yard field goal from Lawrence Tynes that gave New York a 3–0 lead.

New England then responded with its own scoring drive as Laurence Maroney returned the kickoff 43 yards to the Patriots' 44-yard line, after which he rushed twice for 15 yards. Quarterback Tom Brady then completed three passes for 23 yards, but after two incomplete passes, New England was faced with 3rd-and-10 on the Giants' 17. However, on that play, New York linebacker Antonio Pierce committed pass interference by striking the helmet of tight end Benjamin Watson in the end zone, giving New England 1st-and-goal at the 1. This set up a Maroney 1-yard touchdown run two plays later, the first play of the second quarter, for a 7–3 lead. The two teams each only had one drive in the entire opening quarter, a Super Bowl record.

On the Giants first drive of the second quarter, on 3rd-and-7, receiver Amani Toomer caught in a deep pass from Manning along the left sideline while dragging his feet in-bounds for a 38-yard gain, moving the ball to the Patriots' 19. But three plays later, Manning threw a pass that bounced out of the arms of rookie receiver Steve Smith and into the hands of cornerback Ellis Hobbs for an interception.

The Patriots' ensuing drive resulted in a three-and-out as on 3rd-and-1 James Butler and Michael Strahan tackled Maroney for a two-yard loss and New England was forced to punt.

Then on the Giants' next drive, rookie running back Ahmad Bradshaw fumbled a Manning hand-off and it looked as though Patriots' linebacker Pierre Woods had recovered the ball at the Giants' 30. But after the officials picked through the pile, it was determined that Bradshaw had made the recovery. The Giants maintained possession and wound up punting. New England's next drive ended with consecutive Giants' sacks, the first by linebacker Kawika Mitchell, the second by tackle Justin Tuck.

On the Giants' following drive, New York moved the ball to the New England 25, but linebacker Adalius Thomas sacked Manning and forced a fumble. Smith recovered the ball, however Bradshaw was penalized for illegally batting the ball forward before the recovery. The penalty pushed the Giants out of field goal range, and following an incompletion, they were forced to punt.

After the punt, two 18-yard receptions by Moss and Donté Stallworth moved the ball to the Giants' 44. But with 22 seconds left before halftime, Brady fumbled while being sacked by Tuck and defensive end Osi Umenyiora recovered the ball. The game then went to halftime with the Patriots leading 7-3.

On the first drive of the second half, New England had a 4th-and-2 and chose to punt. However, after the play had been run, Patriots' head coach Bill Belichick challenged that New York had too many players on the field and replay confirmed that was the case as Giants linebacker Chase Blackburn was unable to get to the sidelines as the ball was being snapped. Therefore, referee Mike Carey reversed the play, and the Giants were penalized 5 yards for having too many players on the field, giving the Patriots a first down. The Patriots then drove to the Giants' 25, but Strahan sacked Brady for a 6-yard loss on third down. Then on 4th-and-13, with the ball on the Giants' 31, Belichick decided against a long field goal attempt by Stephen Gostkowski and tried to pick up a first down instead. Brady's pass to Jabar Gaffney was incomplete as it went out of the back of the end zone and the Giants took over on downs.


Eli Manning's fourth quarter pass to David Tyree marked the key play in New York's victory.On the Giants' first drive of the fourth quarter, Manning completed a 45-yard pass to rookie tight end Kevin Boss. Following three runs by Bradshaw and a 17-yard reception by Smith on third down, Manning finished the 7-play, 80-yard drive with a 5-yard touchdown pass to David Tyree, giving New York a 10-7 lead with 11:10 left in the game.

After consecutive three-and-outs by the Patriots and Giants, New England got the ball at its own 20 with 7:54 to play. Brady then completed a 5-yard pass to Wes Welker and a 10-yard pass to Moss, followed by a 9-yard run by Maroney to give the Patriots a first down at their own 44. Brady followed with a 13-yard pass to Welker, a four-yard completion to Kevin Faulk, and then a 10-yard pass to Welker for a first down at the Giants' 29. After that, Brady found Moss for an 11-yard completion and Faulk for a 12-yard completion and New England now had 1st-and-goal from the Giants' 6. Following two incomplete passes, New York cornerback Corey Webster slipped while backing into coverage, leaving Moss wide open in the end zone where Brady found him for a touchdown to give New England a 14-10 lead with 2:42 left in the game.

On the ensuing kickoff, Raymond Ventrone tackled Domenik Hixon after a 14-yard return, giving New York the ball on their own 17 with 2:39 left and three timeouts remaining. Following two receptions by Toomer for 20 yards, Brandon Jacobs kept the drive going with a 2-yard run on 4th-and-1. On the next series of downs, Patriots' cornerback Asante Samuel nearly caught a possibly game-ending interception on a ball intended for Tyree, but the ball slipped through his fingertips. On the next play, the Giants faced 3rd-and-5 from their own 44 with 1:15 remaining. Manning spun out of the grasp of lineman Jarvis Green, righted himself, and threw a 32-yard completion to Tyree, who made a leaping catch while covered by Rodney Harrison and maintained possession by pinning the ball against his helmet with one hand as he fell to the ground. Two plays later, on 3rd-and-11, Manning found a wide-open Smith for a 12-yard gain to the New England 13. On the next play, the Giants sent four receivers into the pattern while the Patriots sent six pass rushers after Manning and flipped four pass defenders to the right side of the field—resulting in Patriots' cornerback Ellis Hobbs being isolated on the left side to cover Giants' wide receiver Plaxico Burress one-on-one. Hobbs bit on a fake slant inside (a "slant-and-go" or "SluGo" route) and Manning lofted a pass to the end zone where Burress caught the ball for a touchdown to complete the 12-play, 83-yard drive and give the Giants a 17-14 lead with 35 seconds left.


Plaxico Burress catching the game-winning TD pass.New England began its next possession on its own 26 with 29 seconds remaining and three timeouts, but the Giants' defense didn't allow a single yard—forcing an incompletion on first down, a 10-yard sack by rookie lineman Jay Alford on second down, and then two deep incomplete attempts to Moss, the first that was broken up by Webster, and the second of which, on 4th-and-20, was broken up by Giants' safety Gibril Wilson and caused a turnover on downs with one second remaining. After the incompletion, the game clock briefly read zero (one second was re-added),[54] and coaches, players, reporters, and fans crowded the field as if the game had ended. Belichick hugged Giants' Coach Tom Coughlin at midfield, then an official explained to both coaches that the final second had to be run. The Patriots' defense took the field, and Belichick left for the locker room, not staying for the final play. This early departure was later criticized by some sportswriters.[55][56]

The officials cleared the field, and restarted the clock. Manning took a knee, allowing the clock to expire, and consequently sealed the historic Super Bowl XLII championship for the Giants, while also ending the Patriots' prospects of a 19-0 season.

GAME RECAP
Powered by eeNation.com
Giants   3   0   0   14            17
Patriots 0   7   0    7             14
BOX SCORE
1      2     3      4              Total
Date February 3, 2008
Stadium University of Phoenix Stadium
City Glendale, Arizona
MVP Eli Manning, Quarterback
Favorite Patriots by 12 over/under 54
National anthem Jordin Sparks
Coin toss Ronnie Lott, Jerry Rice, Steve Young, along with Bill Walsh's children, Craig and Elizabeth.
Referee Mike Carey
Halftime show Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
Attendance 71,101
TV in the United States
Network FOX
Announcers Joe Buck and Troy Aikman
Nielsen Ratings 43.3
97.5 Million viewers
Market share 65 (national)
81 (Boston)
67 (New York)
Cost of 30-second commercial US$2.7 million
Super Bowl 42 Information
Home     About      Tickets       Transportation       Hotels/Rooms      Super Bowl Packages      Super Bowl Parties    Online Quote    Resources     Contact
Super Bowl Champs
SB 42 > New York Giants
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
Eli Manning, QB, New York
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
Future Super Bowl Locations
Advertisement
Advertisement
The telecast was the most-watched Super Bowl of all time, with an average of 97.5 million viewers in the United States and 148.3 million total viewers watching some part of the game. The broadcast achieved the highest Nielsen ratings (43.3) for the game since Super Bowl XXXIV. It was also the second most-watched TV program of all time in the United States.
Manning takes the snap, back to throw, under pressure, avoids the rush and he's gonna...fight out of it, still fights out of it and then he throws it deep down field wide open Tyree who...MAKES THE CATCH! AT THE 23 YARD LINE! What a play by Manning!