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Super Bowl History |
49ers quarterback Steve Young threw a record 6 touchdown passes en route to the Super
Bowl MVP award. (His four TDs in a half tied Doug Williams from the Washington
Redskins). He also completed 24 out of 36 passes for 325 yards, and was the
top rusher of the game with 49 rushing yards (the first time both top passer
and rusher were the same person). This game is regarded as Young's final leap out
of the shadow of his predecessor, Joe Montana, who had won four Super Bowls
with the 49ers, two with Young as the backup quarterback. Young became the 5th
player to win both the NFL Most Valuable Player Award and Super Bowl MVP during
the same season. He follows Bart Starr in 1966, Terry Bradshaw in 1978, Joe Montana
in 1989, and Emmitt Smith in 1993. |
Super Bowl XXIX |
Super Bowl XXIX was an American football game played on January 29, 1995 at Joe Robbie
Stadium in Miami, Florida (now part of the suburb of Miami Gardens) to decide
the National Football League (NFL) champion following the 1994 regular season
(the 75th season of the NFL). The National Football Conference (NFC) champion San Francisco 49ers (16-3) defeated the American Football Conference (AFC) champion San Diego Chargers (13-6), 49–26. The combined aggregate score of 75 and the 10 total touchdowns both remain Super Bowl records. This is the first time that both teams scored in all 4 quarters of a Super Bowl. The 49ers became the first team to win five Super Bowls while the Chargers were making their first Super Bowl appearance. This marked just the second time that two teams from the same state played in the Super Bowl. |
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The halftime show was titled "Indiana Jones and the Temple of the Forbidden Eye"
and was produced by Disney to promote their Indiana Jones Adventure attraction
at Disneyland that opened later that year. The show featured actors playing Indiana
Jones and his girlfriend Marion who were raiding the Vince Lombardi Trophy
from the Temple of the Forbidden Eye. The show also had performances by singers
Tony Bennett and Patti LaBelle, jazz trumpeter Arturo Sandoval, and the Miami
Sound Machine. The show ended with everybody singing "Can You Feel The Love Tonight",
the song featured in Disney's (which later acquired ABC) 1994 film The
Lion King. |
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Steve Young passed for a record six touchdowns, and the 49ers became the first team
to win five Super Bowls when they routed the Chargers. Young, the game's most valuable player, directed an explosive offense that generated seven touchdowns, 28 first downs, and 455 total yards. He completed 24 of 36 passes for 325 yards, and broke the record of five touchdown passes set by former 49ers quarterback Joe Montana in Super Bowl XXIV. San Francisco wasted little time scoring, taking the lead for good on Young's 44-yard touchdown pass to Jerry Rice only three plays and 1:24 into the game. The next time they had the ball, the 49ers marched 79 yards in four plays, taking a 14-0 lead when Young teamed with running back Ricky Watters on a 51-yard touchdown pass with 10:05 still to play in the opening period. San Diego then put together its most impressive possession of the game, a 13-play, 78-yard drive that consumed more than seven minutes and was capped by Natrone Means' 1-yard touchdown run, to cut its deficit to 14-7 late in the quarter. But San Francisco countered with a 70-yard drive of its own, and Young's 5-yard touchdown pass to fullback William Floyd made it 21-7. Young's fourth touchdown pass of the half, eight yards to Watters 4:44 before halftime, increased the advantage to 28-7, and the Chargers could get no closer than 18 points after that. Watters, who ran nine yards for a touchdown in the third quarter, equaled the Super Bowl record with three touchdowns. Rice also scored three touchdowns (the second time in his career he'd done that in a Super Bowl) while catching 10 passes for 149 yards. He established career records for receptions, yards, and touchdowns in a Super Bowl. Young, who scrambled 21 yards and 15 yards to set up touchdowns in the first half, was the game's leading rusher with 49 yards on five carries. San Diego's Means, who rushed for 1,350 yards during the regular season, was limited to 33 yards on 13 attempts. Chargers quarterback Stan Humphries completed 24 of 49 passes for 275 yards. Rookie Andre Coleman became only the third player in Super Bowl history to return a kickoff for a touchdown, going 98 yards in the third quarter. The 75 points scored by the two teams established another record, breaking the previous mark of 69 set in Dallas's 52-17 victory over Buffalo in XXVII. The 49ers' victory was the eleventh straight for NFC teams over AFC teams in the Super Bowl. |
GAME RECAP |
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San Diego 7 3 8
8 26 San Francisco 14 14 14 7 49 |
BOX SCORE |
1 2 3
4 Total |
Date January 29, 1995 Stadium Joe Robbie Stadium City Miami, Florida MVP Steve Young, Quarterback Favorite 49ers by 18½ National anthem Kathie Lee Gifford Coin toss Otto Graham, Joe Greene, Ray Nitschke, and Gale Sayers Referee Jerry Markbreit Halftime show Tony Bennett, Patti LaBelle, Arturo Sandoval, Miami Sound Machine Attendance 74,107 TV in the United States Network ABC Announcers Al Michaels, Dan Dierdorf, and Frank Gifford Nielsen Ratings 41.3 Market share 63 Cost of 30-second commercial US$1.15 million |
Super Bowl 29 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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