Super Bowl XXXV











































































Super Bowl XXXV

Super Bowl XXXV.svgb









































1 2 3 4 Total
BAL 7 3 14 10 34
NYG 0 0 7 0 7

Date
January 28, 2001 (2001-01-28)
Stadium
Raymond James Stadium, Tampa, Florida
MVP
Ray Lewis, linebacker
Favorite
Ravens by 3[1][2]
Referee
Gerald Austin
Attendance
71,921[3]
Future Hall of Famers

Ravens: Ray Lewis, Jonathan Ogden, Shannon Sharpe, Rod Woodson
Giants: Wellington Mara (owner/administrator), Michael Strahan
Ceremonies
National anthem
Backstreet Boys, American Sign Language (ASL) translation by Tom Cooney
Coin toss
Marcus Allen, Ottis Anderson, Tom Flores, Bill Parcells
Halftime show
Aerosmith, Britney Spears, Nelly, Mary J. Blige, and *NSYNC
TV in the United States
Network
CBS
Announcers
Greg Gumbel, Phil Simms, Armen Keteyian and Bonnie Bernstein
Nielsen ratings
40.3
(est. 84.3 million viewers)[4]
Market share
60
Cost of 30-second commercial
$2.1 million


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Super Bowl XXXV was an American football game between the American Football Conference (AFC) champion Baltimore Ravens and the National Football Conference (NFC) champion New York Giants to decide the National Football League (NFL) champion for the 2000 season. The Ravens defeated the Giants by the score of 34–7, tied for the seventh largest Super Bowl margin of victory with Super Bowl XXXVII.[5] The game was played on January 28, 2001 at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida.


The Ravens, who posted a 12–4 regular season record, became the third wild card team to win the Super Bowl and the second in four years. Also, the city of Baltimore had its first Super Bowl title since the Baltimore Colts' triumph thirty years prior and became the first city to win major professional football championships with four franchises, the others being the Colts, the 1985 Baltimore Stars of the United States Football League and the 1995 Baltimore Stallions of the Canadian Football League. The Giants entered the game seeking to go 3–0 in Super Bowls after also finishing the regular season with a 12–4 record. The game was the first (and, so far, only) Super Bowl contested by teams representing cities that had contested a previous Super Bowl with two franchises (specifically, Super Bowl III between the Baltimore Colts and the New York Jets).


Baltimore allowed only 152 yards of offense by New York (the third-lowest total ever in a Super Bowl), recorded 4 sacks, and forced 5 turnovers. All 16 of the Giants' possessions ended with punts or interceptions, with the exception of the last one, which ended when time expired in the game. New York's lone touchdown, a 97-yard kickoff return, was quickly answered by Baltimore on an 84-yard touchdown return on the ensuing kickoff. The Giants became the first team since the Cincinnati Bengals in Super Bowl XXIII to not score an offensive touchdown and the fifth overall (joining the Bengals as well as the Minnesota Vikings in Super Bowl IX, the Washington Redskins in Super Bowl VII, and the Miami Dolphins in Super Bowl VI.) Baltimore linebacker Ray Lewis, who made 3 solo tackles, 2 assists, and blocked 4 passes, was named Super Bowl MVP.




Contents






  • 1 Background


    • 1.1 Baltimore Ravens


    • 1.2 New York Giants


    • 1.3 Playoffs


    • 1.4 Pre-game news




  • 2 Broadcasting


  • 3 Entertainment


    • 3.1 Pregame ceremonies


    • 3.2 Halftime show


    • 3.3 Community Events




  • 4 Game summary


    • 4.1 First Quarter


    • 4.2 Second Quarter


    • 4.3 Third Quarter


    • 4.4 Fourth Quarter


    • 4.5 Box score


    • 4.6 Statistical overview




  • 5 Final statistics


    • 5.1 Statistical comparison


    • 5.2 Individual leaders


    • 5.3 Records set




  • 6 Starting lineups


  • 7 Officials


  • 8 Surveillance


  • 9 Notes and references





Background


NFL owners awarded Super Bowl XXXV to Tampa during their October 31, 1996 meeting in New Orleans. Tampa became the fourth metropolitan area to host the game at least three times, joining New Orleans, Miami, and Los Angeles. Other cities under consideration at the meeting were Miami, Atlanta, and Los Angeles. Owners initially planned on selecting only two hosts (XXXIII and XXXIV), but decided to name three after strong showings by the respective delegations.[6][7] Tampa was essentially promised a Super Bowl after committing to the construction of a new stadium.[6] Miami, Atlanta, and Tampa were selected to host XXXIII, XXXIV, and XXXV, respectively.



Baltimore Ravens



The Ravens entered the game with the second-best defense in allowing yards in the league, with the fewest points allowed (165) and the fewest rushing yards allowed (970) during the regular season. At the time, they were the only team to hold the opposition to under 1,000 yards rushing in a season since the NFL adopted a 16-game schedule in 1978. Baltimore's 165 points allowed broke the record set by the 1986 Chicago Bears, who had given up 187 points. The Ravens' defense had held their opponents to 10 or fewer points in 11 games, including four shutouts.


The defense was led by a trio of outstanding linebackers: Peter Boulware, Jamie Sharper, and Ray Lewis. During the regular season, Boulware recorded 7 sacks, while Sharper forced 5 fumbles and made one interception. Lewis was named the NFL Defensive Player of the Year by recording 3 sacks, making 138 tackles, and intercepting 2 passes. Pro Bowl defensive tackle Sam Adams and veteran Tony Siragusa anchored the defensive line, along with defensive ends Rob Burnett (10.5 sacks, 3 forced fumbles, and 5 fumble recoveries) and Pro Bowler Michael McCrary (6.5 sacks, 3 fumble recoveries). Baltimore also had an outstanding corps of defensive backs led by Pro Bowl veteran safety Rod Woodson, who along with Kim Herring, Duane Starks, and Chris McAlister combined for 17 interceptions.


On offense, the Ravens' main strength was rushing, led by rookie Jamal Lewis (1,364 yards, 6 rushing touchdowns, 27 receptions, 298 yards) and Priest Holmes (588 yards, 32 receptions, 221 yards). Also, tight end Shannon Sharpe recorded 67 receptions for 810 yards and 5 touchdowns. Receiver Qadry Ismail added 49 receptions for 655 yards and four touchdowns. The offensive line was anchored by tackle Jonathan Ogden, who was named to the Pro Bowl for the 4th consecutive season. On special teams, Jermaine Lewis ranked second in the NFL with 36 punt returns for 578 yards and two touchdowns, while also catching 19 passes for 161 yards and another score. Kicker Matt Stover led the NFL in field goals made (35) and attempted (39), while ranking 7th in field goal percentage (89.7) and second in scoring (135 points).


However, the Baltimore offense was mediocre, ranking only 13th in the league in scoring (333 points), 16th in total yards (5,301), and 23rd in passing yards (3,102). The team had a lot of trouble scoring, and at one point they went through five games without scoring an offensive touchdown (although they managed to win two of those games). But they managed to regroup, as head coach Brian Billick forbade anyone to use the "P-word" (presumably "postseason" or "playoffs") until the team actually played in it. The Ravens' outspoken defensive lineman, Tony Siragusa, did utter the word "playoffs" on two separate occasions and was fined, albeit a measly sum of $500. Since the fine (and Billick's ban) were clearly symbolic and playful, Billick explained himself by saying, "He got a $400 fine for doing it on national television and $100 for doing it on his radio show. The reason being because no one listens to his show anyway." In place of the "P-word", the word "Festivus" was used, the December 23 secular holiday featured in an episode of the popular American television sitcom Seinfeld (the Ravens organization played along with this theme for that year's playoffs by showing a clip of Cosmo Kramer saying "A Festivus miracle!" on the stadium screen during the team's only home playoff game that year). The Super Bowl was thereafter referred to as "Festivus Maximus."


Midway through the season, with the team at 5–3, Billick benched starting quarterback Tony Banks and replaced him with Trent Dilfer. Although his statistics were hardly distinguished (12 touchdowns, 11 interceptions, 76.6 passer rating), and the team lost in his first game as a starter, Dilfer led them to victory in their last seven regular season games to finish in second place in the AFC Central with a 12–4 record and entered the playoffs as a wild-card team.



New York Giants



The Giants advanced to Super Bowl XXXV after posting a 7–9 record in the previous year. Their big draft acquisition during the offseason was running back Ron Dayne, the 1999 Heisman Trophy winner. The plan was to have his power running style complement running back Tiki Barber's speed and pass-catching ability. The two would be called the Giants' "Thunder and Lightning" backfield. Although Dayne had a solid rookie year by rushing for 770 yards, the breakout star during the regular season was Barber. Barber had 1,006 rushing yards in 213 attempts, caught 70 passes for 719 yards, and scored 10 touchdowns. He also returned 44 punts for 506 yards and gained 266 yards returning kickoffs, giving him 2,495 total yards.


Kerry Collins entered the season as the Giants' unquestioned starting quarterback. Although he helped lead the Carolina Panthers to the 1996 NFC Championship Game, he endured a mediocre season in 1997. In 1998, he quit part way through the season after the team opened the campaign with a four-game losing streak. After spending the remainder of the 1998 season with the New Orleans Saints, Collins was signed in 1999 as the Giants' second-string quarterback, but soon claimed the starting job. In leading the Giants to Super Bowl XXXV, Collins completed 311 out of 529 passes for 3,610 yards and 22 touchdowns during the regular season. His favorite targets, in addition to Barber, were wide receivers Amani Toomer (78 receptions, 1,094 yards, 7 touchdowns), and Ike Hilliard (55 receptions, 787 yards, 8 touchdowns).


The Giants also had a powerful defense, led by Pro Bowl defensive end Michael Strahan, who recorded 9.5 sacks, and defensive tackle Keith Hamilton who recorded 10. Defensive backs Jason Sehorn, Emmanuel McDaniel, Reggie Stephens, and Shaun Williams combined for 14 interceptions.


But the Giants fell to a 7–4 record midway through the season, and their playoff prospects seemed dim at best. In what would be his defining moment, head coach Jim Fassel, at a press conference following the Giants' loss to the Detroit Lions, guaranteed that his team would make the playoffs. The Giants responded by winning their last five regular season games to reach 12–4 and win the NFC East.



Playoffs



With an explosive defense and a "play-it-safe" offense, the Ravens became the seventh wild-card team to reach the Super Bowl, and third in four seasons, after allowing only a combined one touchdown and three field goals in their playoff wins over the Denver Broncos, the Tennessee Titans, and the Oakland Raiders. Meanwhile, the Giants defeated the Philadelphia Eagles, 20–10, and shut out the Minnesota Vikings, 41–0, the most lopsided game in NFC Championship game history.



Pre-game news


Before the game, there was a lot of resentment from Cleveland Browns fans, as the Ravens were playing in the Super Bowl only five years removed from the 1995 Cleveland Browns relocation controversy, in which following legal action, the Browns' existing player and staff contracts became the new Ravens franchise; and the Browns' name, history, and archives would stay in Cleveland, and a new Browns team would begin play in 1999 after a three-year period of "deactivation". As the Browns finished with a 3–13 record in 2000, many Browns fans were upset that the Ravens were in the Super Bowl, although Matt Stover, Rob Burnett, and Larry Webster were the only players from the Cleveland days remaining with the Ravens when they won the Super Bowl.[8][9] Officially, the win made the Ravens the quickest expansion team in NFL history to win a Super Bowl, although much like the 1950 Browns winning the NFL Championship in their first season in the NFL after coming over from the All-America Football Conference, the Ravens were not an expansion team in the traditional sense of the term that started out as a completely brand new organization, coaching staff and players from scratch.



Broadcasting




The broadcasting compound at Super Bowl XXXV


The game was broadcast in the United States by CBS (their first since Super Bowl XXVI in January 1992). Play-by-play announcer Greg Gumbel became the first African-American announcer to call a major sports championship on network television. He was joined in the broadcast booth by color commentator Phil Simms. Armen Keteyian and Bonnie Bernstein served as sideline reporters. Jim Nantz hosted all the events with help from his then-fellow cast members from The NFL Today: Mike Ditka, Craig James, Randy Cross, and Jerry Glanville. The desk reporting was done aboard the famous Buccaneer Cove pirate ship at the end zone of Raymond James Stadium.


The broadcast featured the brand-new EyeVision instant-replay system, which provided rapid-fire sequential shots from a series of cameras positioned around the top of the stadium. It allowed for bullet time effects, similar to those used in the movie The Matrix. It was extremely unusual for CBS to debut a major new technology system at an event the size of the Super Bowl.[10] The EyeVision system proved its mettle when it helped to uphold a replay challenge on a Jamal Lewis 4th-quarter touchdown. EyeVision was also used during the broadcast of the Super Bowl XXXV halftime show, which was directed by Saturday Night Live director Beth McCarthy-Miller.[10] EyeVision would mostly fall out of use after Super Bowl XXXV, not being used in an NFL game until an upgraded version was announced for Super Bowl 50.[11]


CBS also produced a separate HDTV broadcast of the game in the 1080i format,[12] with Kevin Harlan and Daryl Johnston announcing. It was the second year that the game was televised in both standard-definition TV (NTSC) and HDTV.[10]


As previously mentioned, this was the first Super Bowl to be aired on CBS in nine years (after XXVI). Following the 1993 season, Fox bought the rights to air the NFC package, leaving CBS without the NFL for the next four years until 1998, when they began broadcasting the AFC package, bringing an end to NBC's 33-year stint. (NBC would later outbid ABC for the primetime NFL package in 2006, which resulted in these matchups moving from Monday to Sunday.)


Along with being the first African-American to be the play-by-play announcer for a Super Bowl, Gumbel also became the third person to both host a Super Bowl pregame show and call the game, joining Dick Enberg and Al Michaels. Gumbel was the host during his first stint with CBS for Super Bowl XXVI, and he was the pregame host for Super Bowls XXX and XXXII when he was with NBC.



Entertainment



Pregame ceremonies


Before the game, a pregame show titled "Life's Super in Central Florida" was held, featuring Sting, Styx, and PYT. The show was directed and choreographed by Lesslee Fitzmorris from Covington, Louisiana.


To honor the 225th anniversary of the birth of the United States, singer Ray Charles performed "America the Beautiful". The song was signed (ASL) by Tom Cooney. To honor the 10th anniversary of the Persian Gulf War, 10 military veterans from the conflict including former general Norman Schwarzkopf were introduced on the field. The pop group (and Florida natives) The Backstreet Boys then sang the national anthem becoming the only boyband to sing the national anthem at the Super Bowl.


The coin toss ceremony honored the two previous Super Bowls that were played in Tampa. Representing the New York Giants' win in Super Bowl XXV was the game's MVP, Ottis Anderson, and former head coach Bill Parcells. Representing the Los Angeles Raiders' win in Super Bowl XVIII was that game's MVP, Marcus Allen, and former head coach Tom Flores.


This was the last Super Bowl to have individual player introductions for both teams (both the Ravens' and Giants' defenses were announced). In Super Bowl XXXVI, the New England Patriots bucked this trend and were introduced all at once as a team; the Rams, however, still used individual player introductions in that game. Starting with Super Bowl XXXVII, the league decided to have the both participating teams introduced collectively as a team, instead of introducing them individually by player.



Halftime show


The halftime show was produced by MTV, then a sister network of CBS, and featured Aerosmith, 'N Sync, Britney Spears, Nelly, Mary J. Blige, and Tremors featuring The Earthquake Horns. The show featured a back-and-forth medley between Aerosmith and 'N Sync, featuring the songs "Jaded" and "I Don't Want to Miss a Thing" by Aerosmith (the former song was from their then-upcoming album Just Push Play) and "Bye Bye Bye" and "It's Gonna Be Me" by 'N Sync. The show ended with all of the performers singing Aerosmith's "Walk This Way".



Community Events


The city of Tampa moved its annual Gasparilla Pirate Festival from its usual date in early February to the Saturday before the game. It was the largest Gasparilla in history, with over 750,000 attending.[13]



Game summary




A view of the endzone from the press box.



First Quarter


Both defenses dominated early in the first quarter as the first five possessions of the game ended in punts. On the fifth punt, Ravens kickoff/punt returner Jermaine Lewis returned the ball 33 yards to the New York 31-yard line. Although a holding penalty on the return moved the ball back to the 41-yard line, Baltimore took only two plays to score on quarterback Trent Dilfer's 38-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Brandon Stokley.



Second Quarter


Early in the second quarter, a holding penalty against the Giants nullified linebacker Jessie Armstead's 43-yard interception return for a touchdown that would have tied the game. Later in the period, Dilfer completed a 44-yard pass to receiver Qadry Ismail to set up a 47-yard field goal by Ravens kicker Matt Stover to extend Baltimore's lead, 10–0. With the aid of a 27-yard run from running back Tiki Barber, the Giants advanced all the way to the Ravens' 29-yard line on their ensuing drive, but Baltimore defensive back Chris McAlister intercepted a pass from quarterback Kerry Collins to keep New York scoreless at halftime.



Third Quarter


The Giants forced the Ravens to punt on the opening drive of the second half. Five plays later, Ravens safety Kim Herring intercepted Collins at the New York 41-yard line. The Ravens then advanced to the 24-yard line, but the drive stalled and Stover missed a 41-yard field goal attempt.


After an exchange of punts, Ravens defensive back Duane Starks intercepted a pass from Collins and returned it 49 yards for a touchdown, setting off a chain of events unseen before in Super Bowl history: three touchdowns on three consecutive plays in 36 seconds. On the ensuing kickoff, Ron Dixon returned the ball 97 yards for the Giants' first and only score of the game. But Jermaine Lewis returned the next kickoff 84 yards for a touchdown, making the score 24–7 for the Ravens. It was the first time in history two kickoffs were returned for touchdowns in the same Super Bowl game, and on back-to-back kickoffs.



Fourth Quarter


The Giants gained only one first down on their final four possessions, and were never able to move the ball into Baltimore territory. Meanwhile, the Ravens added 10 more points to their lead, making the final score 34–7. A few possessions after Jermaine Lewis' touchdown, Giants punter Brad Maynard's 34-yard punt from his own 4 to the 38-yard line and tight end Ben Coates' 17-yard reception set up a 3-yard touchdown run by running back Jamal Lewis early in the fourth quarter. Dixon fumbled the ensuing kickoff to Ravens defender Robert Bailey, setting up Stover's 34-yard field goal with 5:27 left in the game.



Box score




Super Bowl XXXV: Baltimore Ravens 34, New York Giants 7


























1 2 3 4 Total
Ravens (AFC) 7 3 14 10 34
Giants (NFC) 0 0 7 0 7

at Raymond James Stadium, Tampa, Florida




  • Date: January 28, 2001


  • Game time: 6:28 p.m. EST


  • Game weather: 65 °F (18 °C), clear[14]








Scoring summary



































































































Quarter
Time

Drive
Team
Scoring information
Score

Plays
Yards

TOP
BAL
NYG
1
6:50
2
41
0:45
BAL

Brandon Stokley 38-yard touchdown reception from Trent Dilfer, Matt Stover kick good
7
0
2
1:41
7
59
2:28
BAL
47-yard field goal by Stover
10
0
3
3:49



BAL
Interception returned 49 yards for touchdown by Duane Starks, Stover kick good
17
0
3
3:31



NYG

Ron Dixon 97-yard kickoff return for a touchdown, Brad Daluiso kick good
17
7
3
3:13



BAL

Jermaine Lewis 84-yard kickoff return for a touchdown, Stover kick good
24
7
4
8:45
6
38
4:17
BAL

Jamal Lewis 3-yard touchdown run, Stover kick good
31
7
4
5:27
5
18
3:02
BAL
34-yard field goal by Stover
34
7

"TOP" = time of possession. For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football.
34
7



Statistical overview


Dilfer threw for 153 yards and a touchdown, with no interceptions. Jamal Lewis rushed for 102 yards and a touchdown (only the second rookie to rush for 100 yards in the Super Bowl, joining Timmy Smith in Super Bowl XXII, while also being the first rookie to score a rushing touchdown in a Super Bowl since Smith in 1988), and caught a pass for 4 yards. Stokley was the top receiver of the game with 3 receptions for 52 yards and a touchdown. Jermaine Lewis recorded 152 total all-purpose yards (111 kickoff return yards, 34 punt return yards, 7 receiving yards, 1 rushing yard) and a touchdown.


Collins had a passer rating for the game of only 7.1, the second worst in Super Bowl history,[15] threw four interceptions (tying a Super Bowl record that has since been surpassed by Oakland quarterback Rich Gannon's five INTs in Super Bowl XXXVII) and completed only 15 of 39 passes for 112 yards. Barber was the Giants' leading rusher with 49 yards, also catching 6 passes for 26 yards and returning 2 punts for 13 yards, while Dixon tallied 6 kickoffs for 154 yards and a touchdown with a 16-yard pass catch. While Giants punter Brad Maynard set an undesirable Super Bowl record with 11 punts, Baltimore punter Kyle Richardson had 10 punts, which would have set the record.


Overall, both teams combined for only 396 total yards, the lowest in Super Bowl history. The Ravens joined Super Bowl XVIII's Los Angeles Raiders in the record books as the only teams to score offensive, defensive and special teams touchdowns in the same Super Bowl. The third team to do the same were the Seattle Seahawks in Super Bowl XLVIII. Super Bowl XXXV was the second Super Bowl since 1975 in which the losing team failed to score at least 10 points, after Super Bowl XVIII.


All the main contributors for the Ravens on offense, defense, and special teams were named Lewis. Linebacker Ray Lewis, a native of Lakeland, Florida, less than an hour from Super Bowl host city Tampa, who made 3 solo tackles, 2 assists, and blocked 4 passes, became the second linebacker to be named Super Bowl MVP after Chuck Howley in Super Bowl V. Lewis also became the first defensive player to be honored since Larry Brown in Super Bowl XXX, and at the time the seventh defensive player to be Super Bowl MVP, joining Howley, Jake Scott, Harvey Martin, Randy White, Richard Dent, and Brown (since Lewis, only three additional defensive players have been named Super Bowl MVP: Tampa Bay Buccaneers safety Dexter Jackson in Super Bowl XXXVII, Seattle Seahawks linebacker Malcolm Smith in Super Bowl XLVIII, and Denver Broncos linebacker Von Miller in Super Bowl 50).


Jamal Lewis was the top rusher of the game, Jermaine Lewis notched 145 yards and a touchdown on special teams. In addition, the Ravens defense was coached by Marvin Lewis. The Ravens defense has since been considered among the greatest of all time.[16] The Ravens defense became the third to shut-out their opponent in Super Bowl history; the Giants' only points came on a kickoff return. Washington in Super Bowl VII scored against Miami only after the late fumble by Garo Yepremian, which was returned for a touchdown. The only points Pittsburgh allowed to Minnesota in Super Bowl IX came on the return of a blocked punt.


The New York Giants started a trend of seven different NFC Champions in seven years. The Giants would return to the Super Bowl in 2007 and again in 2011 defeating the New England Patriots on both occasions, ending the current trend at the time, but starting a new one. Beginning with the 2001 St. Louis Rams, who played in Super Bowl XXXVI, there were ten different NFC Champions in ten years. Once again, the Giants ended the trend and started another one. Beginning with the 2008 Super Bowl XLIII participant Arizona Cardinals, there were 6 different NFC Champions in 6 years. This streak was finally ended by the Seattle Seahawks, who advanced to the Super Bowl in both 2013 and 2014.


The Baltimore Ravens would later win Super Bowl XLVII in 2013 against the San Francisco 49ers (which was also aired on CBS). Ray Lewis was a member of both Ravens' Super Bowl wins. In between the Ravens' victories, the Indianapolis Colts, the Pittsburgh Steelers, and the Patriots would have a Super Bowl appearance more than once, with New England and Pittsburgh winning more than once. The only other AFC team to make the Super Bowl in that stretch were the Oakland Raiders, in Super Bowl XXXVII.


Had the Giants won, it would have marked the first year since 1989 that a Super Bowl and World Series champion came from the same metropolitan area. The New York Yankees won the World Series during the Giants' season. Including the New Jersey Devils' win in the Stanley Cup Finals and the New York Mets' runner-up finish to the rival Yankees, there were four teams from the New York metropolitan area that made the championship round of their respective leagues in the same year.



Final statistics


Sources: NFL.com Super Bowl XXXV, Super Bowl XXXV Play Finder Bal, Super Bowl XXXV Play Finder NYG



Statistical comparison
























































































































Baltimore Ravens

New York Giants
First downs 13 11
First downs rushing 6 2
First downs passing 6 6
First downs penalty 1 3
Third down efficiency 3/16 2/14
Fourth down efficiency 0/0 1/1
Net yards rushing 111 66
Rushing attempts 33 16
Yards per rush 3.4 4.1
Passing – Completions-attempts 12/26 15/39
Times sacked-total yards 3–20 4–26
Interceptions thrown 0 4
Net yards passing 133 86
Total net yards 244 152
Punt returns-total yards 3–34 5–46
Kickoff returns-total yards 2–111 7–170
Interceptions-total return yards 4–59 0–0
Punts-average yardage 10–43.0 11–38.4
Fumbles-lost 2–0 2–1
Penalties-total yards 9–70 6–27
Time of possession 34:06 25:54
Turnovers 0 5


Individual leaders















































































































































Ravens Passing

C/ATT1
Yds
TD
INT
Rating
Trent Dilfer 12/25 153 1 0 80.9
Tony Banks 0/1 0 0 0 39.6
Ravens Rushing

Car2
Yds
TD
LG3
Yds/Car
Jamal Lewis 27 102 1 19 3.78
Priest Holmes 4 8 0 6 2.00
Jermaine Lewis 1 1 0 1 1.00
Trent Dilfer 1 0 0 0 0.00
Ravens Receiving

Rec4
Yds
TD
LG3
Target5
Brandon Stokley 3 52 1 38t 6
Ben Coates 3 30 0 17 3
Qadry Ismail 1 44 0 44 3
Patrick Johnson 1 8 0 8 5
Jermaine Lewis 1 6 0 6 1
Shannon Sharpe 1 5 0 5 5
Jamal Lewis 1 4 0 4 2
Priest Holmes 1 4 0 4 1































































































































Giants Passing

C/ATT1
Yds
TD
INT
Rating
Kerry Collins 15/39 112 0 4 7.1
Giants Rushing

Car2
Yds
TD
LG3
Yds/Car
Tiki Barber 11 49 0 27 4.45
Kerry Collins 3 12 0 5 4.00
Joe Montgomery 2 5 0 4 2.50
Giants Receiving

Rec4
Yds
TD
LG3
Target5
Tiki Barber 6 26 0 7 10
Ike Hilliard 3 30 0 13 11
Amani Toomer 2 24 0 19 5
Ron Dixon 1 16 0 16 3
Howard Cross 1 7 0 7 1
Pete Mitchell 1 7 0 7 4
Greg Comella 1 2 0 2 1
Joe Jurevicius 0 0 0 0 4



1Completions/attempts
2Carries
3Long gain
4Receptions
5Times targeted



Records set


The following records were set in Super Bowl XXXV, according to the official NFL.com boxscore,[17] the 2016 NFL Record & Fact Book[18] and the ProFootball reference.com game summary.[19]






























Player Records Set [19]
Most fair catches, game 4
Jermaine Lewis000(Bal)
Most punts, game 11
Brad Maynard000(NYG)
Records Tied
Most interceptions thrown, game 4 Kerry Collins
Most interceptions returned for td, game 1
Duane Starks000(Bal)
Most kickoff returns for touchdowns, game 1
Ron Dixon000(NYG)
Jermaine Lewis









































Team Records Set [19]
Most punts, game 11 Giants
Records Tied
Most Interceptions by 4 Ravens
Most touchdowns scored by
interception return
1
Fewest turnovers, game 0
Most kickoff returns for touchdowns 1 Ravens
Giants
Fewest points, first half 0 pts Giants
Fewest rushing touchdowns 0
Fewest passing touchdowns 0

Turnovers are defined as the number of times losing the ball on interceptions and fumbles.











































Records Set, both team totals [19]

00Total00
Ravens Giants
Fewest net yards,
rushing and passing
396 yds 244 152
Most punts, game 21 10 11
Records tied, both team totals
Fewest rushing attempts 49 33 16
Fewest first downs 24 13 11
Fewest first downs rushing 8 6 2




Starting lineups


Source:[20]


Hall of Fame‡




































































































































Baltimore Position Position New York Giants

Offense
Qadry Ismail WR
Amani Toomer

Jonathan Ogden‡
LT
Lomas Brown
Edwin Mulitalo LG
Glenn Parker
Jeff Mitchell C
Dusty Zeigler
Mike Flynn RG
Ron Stone
Harry Swayne RT
Luke Petitgout

Shannon Sharpe‡
TE WR
Ike Hilliard
Brandon Stokley WR
Ron Dixon
Trent Dilfer QB
Kerry Collins
Sam Gash FB
Greg Comella
Priest Holmes RB
Tiki Barber

Defense
Rob Burnett LDE
Michael Strahan‡
Sam Adams LDT
Christian Peter
Tony Siragusa RDT
Keith Hamilton
Michael McCrary RDE
Cedric Jones
Peter Boulware OLB
Micheal Barrow

Ray Lewis‡
MLB
Jessie Armstead
Jamie Sharper RLB
Ryan Phillips
Duane Starks LCB
Dave Thomas
Chris McAlister RCB
Jason Sehorn
Kim Herring SS
Sam Garnes

Rod Woodson‡
FS
Shaun Williams

Special Teams
Matt Stover K
Brad Daluiso
Kyle Richardson P
Brad Maynard


Officials




  • Referee: Gerald Austin #34 third Super Bowl (XXIV as side judge, XXXI as referee)


  • Umpire: Chad Brown #31 first Super Bowl


  • Head Linesman: Tony Veteri, Jr. #36 first Super Bowl


  • Line Judge: Walt Anderson #66 first Super Bowl


  • Field Judge: Bill Lovett #98 first Super Bowl


  • Side Judge: Doug Toole #4 second Super Bowl (XXXII)


  • Back Judge: Bill Schmitz #122 first Super Bowl


  • Alternate Referee: Larry Nemmers #20 (side judge for XXV)


  • Alternate Umpire: Jeff Rice #44



Surveillance


The American Civil Liberties Union criticized a test of a system used at the event to monitor the people in attendance. A group of four companies installed a face recognition system to scan the faces of fans entering the stadium and compare them with a database of criminals. Attendees were not told that they were subject to this surveillance.[21] Tampa police reported that the system identified nineteen criminals, but due to complaints and trouble with false positive results, it was not re-used the next year.[22]Super Bowl XXXVI and all subsequent Super Bowls have been designated as a National Special Security Event, qualifying for extra security detail from the Secret Service.



Notes and references









  1. ^ DiNitto, Marcus (January 25, 2015). "Super Bowl Betting History – Underdogs on Recent Roll". Sporting News. Retrieved February 4, 2015..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ "Super Bowl History". Vegas Insider. Retrieved February 4, 2015.


  3. ^ "Super Bowl XXXV: Baltimore 34, N.Y. Giants 7". NFL.com. National Football League. January 29, 2001. Retrieved March 10, 2018.


  4. ^ "TV By The Numbers by zap2it.com". TV By The Numbers by zap2it.com.


  5. ^ "mcubed.net : NFL : Super bowl scores sorted by margin of victory". mcubed.net. Retrieved 2016-02-03.


  6. ^ ab "Florida's Super Bowls: Miami '99, Tampa '01 (part 1)". The Orlando Sentinel. November 1, 1996. p. 27. Retrieved January 17, 2017 – via Newspapers.com.
    open access publication – free to read



  7. ^ "Florida's Super Bowls: Miami '99, Tampa '01 (part 2)". The Orlando Sentinel. November 1, 1996. p. 31. Retrieved January 17, 2017 – via Newspapers.com.
    open access publication – free to read



  8. ^ "Superbowl2001: In Cleveland, anger remains". April 17, 2016. Archived from the original on April 17, 2016.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link)


  9. ^ "Still Stinging Over Losing The Browns To Baltimore, Cleveland Finds The Ravens' Super Bowl Season Hard To Swallow".


  10. ^ abc Shortal, Helen (February 7, 2001). "Game Show: Life, Death, and Super Bowl XXXV Through the TV Eye". Baltimore City Paper. Archived from the original on November 3, 2013. Retrieved January 26, 2016.


  11. ^ "Here's CBS Sports' Super Bowl 50 broadcast team and all-new offerings". CBSSports.com. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 13 January 2016.


  12. ^ http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/cbs-and-rca-join-forces-to-present-super-bowl-xxxv-and-afc-playoffs-in-hdtv-72901732.html CBS and RCA Join Forces To Present Super Bowl XXXV and AFC Playoffs in HDTV


  13. ^ "Superbowl2001: Gasparilla Supersized". www.sptimes.com.


  14. ^ "Super Bowl Game-Time Temperatures". Pro Football Hall of Fame. Retrieved March 10, 2018.


  15. ^ "Canzano blog: Who had a worse Super Bowl than Peyton Manning?".


  16. ^ The List: Best NFL defense of all-time ESPN. July 7, 2007. Accessed on January 21, 2009.


  17. ^ "Super Bowl XXXV boxscore". NFL.com. Retrieved 7 November 2016.


  18. ^ "2016 NFL Factbook" (PDF). NFL. pp. 654–666. Retrieved 7 November 2016.


  19. ^ abcd "Super Bowl XXXV statistics". Pro Football reference.com. Retrieved 6 November 2016.


  20. ^ "Super Bowl XXXV–National Football League Game Summary" (PDF). National Football League. January 28, 2001. Retrieved July 24, 2016.


  21. ^ "Call It Super Bowl Face Scan I". Wired. February 2, 2001.


  22. ^ "Biometrics Benched for Super Bowl". Wired. December 31, 2002.








  • Super Bowl official website


  • 2006 NFL Record and Fact Book. Time Inc. Home Entertainment. ISBN 1-933405-32-5.


  • Total Football II: The Official Encyclopedia of the National Football League. Harper Collins. ISBN 1-933405-32-5.


  • The Sporting News: History of the Super Bowl (Last accessed December 4, 2005)


  • https://www.pro-football-reference.com – Large online database of NFL data and statistics


  • Super Bowl play-by-plays from USA Today (Last accessed September 28, 2005)


  • All-Time Super Bowl Odds[permanent dead link] from The Sports Network (Last accessed October 16, 2005)















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