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Since the merger,
the Super Bowl has been the NFL Championship Game, played between
the NFC and AFC champions, who emerge from a round of playoffs.
It's meant to be
the climax of the season, but in fact the Superbowl has all
too often been anti-climactic. The average margin of victory
has been about 14 points, well above the average for a regular-season
NFL game, and there have been a lot of blowouts. The conference
championship games have usually been more interesting to watch.
Nevertheless, the
game has become a major national event, probably the nation's
major sporting event. After two weeks of intensive media hype,
it draws millions ot television viewers, many of whom wouldn't
think of watching any other football game, and the number of
Superbowl parties is probably surpassed only by the number of
New Years Eve parties.
The Super Bowl is
the perennial ratings leader among all televised sports events
and, on the list of the fifty top-rated TV broadcasts, the game
appears twenty times.
The first Superbowl,
though, between the NFL's Green Bay Packers and the AFL's Kansas
City Chiefs, wasn't so eagerly anticipated. The main question
seemed to be how large Green Bay's margin of victory would be.
Tickets cost only $12, and the game still wasn't a sellout.
The Packers won
that game, 35-10, and they also won Superbowl II, 33-14 over
the Oakland Raiders. But when Joe Namath guaranteed victory
for the AFL's underdog New York Jets in Super Bowl III and then
delivered a 16-7 win over the Baltimore Colts, interest rose,
especially with the impending merger of the two leagues.
Kansas City's win
in Superbowl IV evened the series between the AFL and NFL. After
the merger, the AFC won nine of the next eleven. That record
was skewed somewhat, though, by the fact that former NFL teams
accounted for five of the victories. Since Superbowl XVI, after
the 1981 season, the NFC had won fifteen of sixteen games, thirteen
in a row, before the Denver Broncos beat the Green Bay Packers
in Super Bowl XXXII.
As a result of the
playoff system and the Superbowl, the NFL season now stretches
from one year into the next, which can be mildly confusing.
The team that wins the 1998 Super Bowl, for example, will be
crowned the 1997 NFL champions.
To minimize the
confusion, the Superbowl is referred to by Roman numerals rather
than by the year in which it's played. Many sportswriters have
criticized that as a pretentious practice. Personally, I don't
worry about the pretense, and in the early years it was fairly
simple. I do worry about future generations who will have to
decipher such monstrosities as Superbowl DCXLVIII.
Since Superbowl
V, in 1971, the trophy presented to the winning team has been
known as the Vince Lombardi Trophy, after the man who coached
the Packers to the first two championships. Lombardi died of
cancer in September of 1970.
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