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<UID>
8801050722
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
880201
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, February 01, 1988
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color and Photo Associated Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1988, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
BRONCS SKINNED - FANS GET WHIPLASH
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
SAN DIEGO --  Let us begin this little Super Bowl story on the sidelines,
second quarter, where we -- oops! Look out! There goes Washington's Ricky
Sanders streaking past for an 80-yard touchdown.  Now we -- oops! Look out!
There goes Washington's Gary Clark for  a 27-yard touchdown. And we -- look
out! Washington's Timmy Smith for a 58-yard touchdown. Maybe we could -- watch
it! Sanders again,  a 50-yard touchdown.

  Well, thanks for joining us.

  Skinned alive. Say good night, Denver. Super Bowl XXII didn't need a
referee;  it needed a traffic cop. Was that really the final score? 42-10?
Did Washington really score 35 points in the second quarter? Five touchdowns?
 That's a month's work for the Lions.
  "Just getting to the Super Bowl is great, but winning it is the ultimate,"
said  an elated Doug Williams, who, as the first black quarterback to start  a
Super Bowl, smashed every stereotype, then smashed everything else. "I feel
great. I didn't come here as a showcase for the black  quarterback. I came as
quarterback of the Washington Redskins."
  And all this time,  Denver thought he was the Grim Reaper.
  It is hard to think of words for what Williams and the Redskins did  to
Denver on this cool afternoon. A slaughter? Not strong enough. Maybe a
slerter. A slooter. A slawwwwter. At one point,  Washington scored when it was
just trying to run out the clock. The Redskins  had to fall on the ball to
keep it from traveling to the end zone on its own.
  "That's the only one we've played like that all year," admitted a smiling
Joe Gibbs, the Redskins coach.
  What  puzzled viewers -- at least until they switched to "Murder, She
Wrote," which was still early in the first bag of potato chips -- was that
this was  supposed to be a good game.
  "Finally," people  had said, "a decent Super Bowl matchup. Maybe it won't
be over by the third quarter."
  They got their wish. It was over by the second.
  Here was Timmy Smith dancing in the end zone. Here was Dave Butz, the
oldest Redskin, doing the old man's shuffle. Here was Williams, marching  off
the field in a crowd of fans, holding his helmet high over his head. "HAIL TO
THE REDSKINS!" sang the largely pro-Washington  crowd. They haven't been this
happy in D.C. since George Bush socked it to Dan Rather.
  "The game plan was exactly what we wanted," Williams said. No kidding. If
it was any more effective, the Pentagon  would grab it. Suddenly, the Redskins
-- who had a knack of barely beating their previous opponents -- were every
NFC champion of the past few years: the New York Giants, the Chicago Bears,
the San Francisco  49ers. Washington did all the damage those teams did to the
AFC, and came up with some of its own.
  Name the record, the Redskins  smashed it. Running back Smith, who was born
about the time "I Wanna  Hold Your Hand" was released in the States, became
the first rookie  to 1) gain more than 100 yards in a Super Bowl; 2) gain more
than 200 yards in a  Super Bowl; 3) score two touchdowns in a Super Bowl  and
4) do an end zone dance that  involved only the hips and elbows.
  "I just want to say thanks for the Redskins giving me a second chance," he
said. Smith didn't even know he was starting (for George  Rogers) until game
time. He spent his junior and senior years in college on the injured list with
knee problems. On Sunday,  he gained 204 yards on 22 carries -- far more than
his total for the entire  regular season.
  So much for college.
  And how about Williams, who is working for a paltry (football-wise)
$475,000, and now owns or co-owns the Super Bowl record for 1) most yards
passing; 2)  longest touchdown pass;  3) most touchdowns thrown and 4) most
times asked how it feels to be a black quarterback.
  "This really hasn't hit me yet," he said, dressed in a wet gray T-shirt in
the Redskin  locker room. "I didn't even realize I was at the Super Bowl until
about 2 o'clock this morning, when I couldn't sleep.
  "We don't have the Three Amigos, but what we have is good enough."
  Especially  what they've got behind the center. Williams, voted the game's
MVP, became a forever star with Sunday's historic performance. They can ask
him new questions now. Like, how does it feel to be the first  black
quarterback to be fitted for a Super Bowl ring at halftime?
  Actually, that's being generous. Halftime was too late. Once Clint Didier
hauled in another Williams touchdown pass -- and by this  point Williams was
giving them to anyone who asked -- the Rocky Mountain fans already were
working on their "wait until next year" excuse.
  Which is what they used last year.
  But OK. You think  you had a lousy time watching? Imagine the  Broncos.
They were massacred in last year's Super Bowl, 39-20, by the Giants. This time
they scored half as many points and gave up three more. More than  73,000
people crammed the seats at San Diego's  Jack Murphy Stadium.
  Denver was a no-show.
  "We couldn't stop them," said Broncos coach Dan Reeves, understating his
case by about the length  of a football field.
  I would like to show pity to the Broncos. Right after I show them how to
tackle. Their defense wasn't bad. It was pathetic. A joke. Coppertone gives
you more protection. 
  The Washington running backs made every hole look like a canyon. The
Washington receivers -- particularly Ricky Sanders, who caught nine passes for
193 yards -- made the Denver secondary look, well,  secondary.
  What about the celebrated Denver offense? What about John Elway, the
Huckleberry Kid with the can't-miss arm? Well, their Super Bowl was a great
first quarter. Did you see that first play  from scrimmage? A 56-yard
touchdown bomb from Elway to Ricky Nattiel? Six points before they even broke
a sweat? It was a glorious moment for the orange and blue. It was also the
only one. Bogart and  Bergman  will always have Paris. Denver fans will
always have those first two minutes.
  And what of Elway? You have to feel for the man, even though the cook at
Denny's has seen more productive scrambling.  Bad day? Whoo. At one stage in
the first and second quarters, Elway threw 11 straight incompletions, ran into
Washington's Alvin Walton twice for sacks, and saw a 10-0 lead turn into a
21-10 deficit.  And Washington was just warming up. Elway's long passes were
off target or in the arms of Redskin defenders (three interceptions). His
celebrated receivers, the Three Amigos, proved to be as bad as the  movie for
which they were named.
  "My philosophy of this game is wait until next year," said Mark Jackson,
who led the Amigos with four catches. Nattiel had two. Vance Johnson, he of
the orange hair,  earrings and plans for major Amigos endorsements, did not
catch a pass, proving once again, you can't count your tacos before they're
fried.
  "When you go into halftime trailing 25 points, people tell you you can
come back but it's hard to believe," said Elway, who completed just 14 of 38
passes. He frowned. The Huckleberry Kid is in danger of becoming a January
Dud, the Fran Tarkenton of the  Rockies. "We know what it takes to get here,
we just have to figure out what it takes to win."
  So there goes Super Bowl XXII, ladies and gentlemen. Yet another blowout.
Yet another halftime with  more drama than what followed. Remember it fondly,
the way you might remember a highway accident: a Redskins rout, a Denver
collapse, a second quarter that will forever be remembered as the greatest
offensive show in Super Bowl history, and the quickest ratings killer since
PBS.
CUTLINE
Washington Redskins quarterback Doug Williams, the Super Bowl MVP, looks
downfield for a receiver during Sunday's  victory over Denver. 
Eddie Manie, right, of New York, and another fan celebrate after they caught a
ball thrown into the stands by Washington's Clint Didier.
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<DISCLAIMER>

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<KEYWORDS>
SPT;SUPER BOWL;FOOTBALL;GAME
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