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Super Bowl History |
The NBC telecast of the game, with play-by-play announcer Dick Enberg and color commentators
Merlin Olsen and Bob Griese, garnered the third highest Nielsen rating
of any Super Bowl to date, a 48.3. To celebrate the 20th Super Bowl game, the Most Valuable Players of the previous Super Bowls were featured during the pregame festivities. After trumpeter Wynton Marsalis performed the national anthem, Bart Starr, Super Bowl MVP of I and II, tossed the coin. |
Super Bowl XX |
Super Bowl XX was an American football game played on January 26, 1986 at the Louisiana
Superdome in New Orleans, Louisiana to decide the National Football League
(NFL) champion following the 1985 regular season. The National Football Conference (NFC) champion Chicago Bears (18-1) defeated the American Football Conference (AFC) champion New England Patriots (14-6), 46–10. The Bears set Super Bowl records for sacks (7) and fewest rushing yards allowed (7). The Bears' 36-point margin over the Patriots was a Super Bowl record until Super Bowl XXIV.(45) The Patriots were held to negative yardage (-19) throughout the entire first half, and just 123 total yards in the entire game, the second lowest total in Super Bowl history. Bears defensive end Richard Dent, who had 1.5 quarterback sacks, forced 2 fumbles, and blocked a pass, was named the game's Most Valuable Player. |
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Super Bowl MVPs |
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The performance event group Up with People performed during the halftime show titled
"Beat of the Future". Up with People dancers portrayed various scenes into
the future. This was the last Super Bowl to feature Up with People as a half-time
show, though they later performed in the Super Bowl XXV pre-game show. The Last Precinct debuted on NBC after the game. |
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The NFC champion Chicago Bears, seeking their first NFL title since 1963, scored
a Super Bowl-record 46 points in downing AFC champion New England 46-10 in Super
Bowl XX. The previous record for most points in a Super Bowl was 38, shared by
San Francisco in XIX and the Los Angeles Raiders in XVIII. The Bears' league-leading defense tied the Super Bowl record for sacks (7) and limited the Patriots to a record-low seven rushing yards. New England took the quickest lead in Super Bowl history when Tony Franklin kicked a 36-yard field goal with 1:19 elapsed in the first period. The score came about because of Larry McGrew's fumble recovery at the Chicago 19-yard line. However, the Bears rebounded for a 23-3 first-half lead, while building a yardage advantage of 236 total yards to New England's minus 19. Running back Matt Suhey rushed eight times for 37 yards, including an 11-yard touchdown run, and caught one pass for 24 yards in the first half. After the Patriot's first drive of the second half ended with a punt to the Bears' 4-yard line, Chicago marched 96 yards in nine plays with quarterback Jim McMahon's 1-yard scoring run capping the drive. McMahon became the first quarterback in Super Bowl history to rush for a pair of touchdowns. The Bears completed their scoring via a 28-yard interception return by reserve cornerback Reggie Phillips, a 1-yard run by defensive tackle/fullback William Perry, and a safety when defensive end Henry Waechter tackled Patriots quarterback Steve Grogan in the end zone. Bears defensive end Richard Dent became the fourth defender to be named the game's most valuable player after contributing 1½ sacks. The Bears' victory margin of 36 points was the largest in Super Bowl history, bettering the previous mark of 29 by the Los Angeles Raiders when they topped Washington 38-9 in Game XVIII. McMahon completed 12 of 20 passes for 256 yards before leaving the game in the fourth period with a wrist injury. The NFL's all-time leading rusher, Bears running back Walter Payton, carried 22 times for 61 yards. Wide receiver Willie Gault caught four passes for 129 yards, the fourth-most receiving yards in a Super Bowl. Chicago coach Mike Ditka became the second man (Tom Flores of Raiders was the other) to win a Super Bowl ring as a player and as a coach. |
GAME RECAP |
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Bears
13 10 21 2 46 Patriots 3 0 0 7 10 |
BOX SCORE |
1 2 3
4 Total |
Date January 26, 1986 Stadium Louisiana Superdome City New Orleans, Louisiana MVP Richard Dent, Defensive end Favorite Bears by 10 National anthem Wynton Marsalis Coin toss Bart Starr representing previous Super Bowl MVPs Referee Red Cashion Halftime show Up with People presents "Beat of the Future" Attendance 73,818 TV in the United States Network NBC Announcers Dick Enberg, Merlin Olsen, and Bob Griese Nielsen Ratings 48.3[1] Market share 70 Cost of 30-second commercial US$550,000 |
Super Bowl 20 Information |
Super Bowl Champs |
Future Super Bowl Locations |
Super Bowl XLII, Glendale, Ariz. Feb. 3, 2008 Super Bowl XLIII, Tampa, Fla. Feb. 1, 2009 Super Bowl XLIV, South Florida TBA, 2010 Super Bowl XLV, North Texas TBA, 2011 |
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