<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9101040990
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
910128
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, January 28, 1991
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1C
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Reuter
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


:
New York's Erik Howard (No. 74) and Leonard Marshall celebrate
after stopping Jim Kelly  in the fourth quarter.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SUPER BOWL  ; SEE ALSO METRO FINAL CHASER EDITION, Page 1C
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1991, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
ONLY A GAME, BUT, OH, WHAT  A GAME IT WAS
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
TAMPA, Fla. --  All week long, they kept saying it's only a game, a war is
going on, football, even a Super Bowl, can't mean much. It's only a game.
Except that Sunday night, with eight seconds left  and a group of New York
Giants on their knees in prayer and Buffalo kicker Scott Norwood out on the
field, sucking air, and every fan in the stadium on his feet and every fan in
his living room on the  edge of his seat -- suddenly, it was more than a game;
it may have been the best Super Bowl ever.

  "The whole time I was saying, 'Miss it, please, miss it, please,' " Giants
cornerback Everson Walls  would say when this one was all over, when Norwood's
kick went just wide, and the Bills sunk to their knees and the New York Giants
won the championship of professional football, 20-19, the closest Super Bowl
in history.  'Please, please, please . . ."

  Please. That was about the margin of victory in this one, wasn't it? A
please, a prayer, a whisper, an inch here or there. Either team could have
won. Either team would have deserved it. This was better than Batimore-Dallas
20 years ago, the previous closest Super Bowl. It may have been better than
San Francisco and Cincinnati a couple years ago,  and it may have been better
than Pittsbugh-Dallas in the '70s, for even that classic rivalry didn't come
down to the final eight seconds, a one-point game, a team asking its kicker to
do something he  had never done before, make a field goal fly at least 47
yards through the uprights.
  Wasn't this magnificent theatre? Jim Kelly, the quarterback who'd waited
his whole career for this chance, standing helplessly on the sideline now like
a caged cat, having done all he could, waiting now for Norwood to determine
his destiny? And Marv Levy, the Bills' coach, who all week long had looked
like a man on  the verge of a nervous breakdown, and now was about to have one
for real? And on the other sideline, guys such as Ottis Anderson, Dave
Meggett, Mark Bavaro and the rest of the low-profile Giants offense,  along
with their coach Bill Parcells, also watching with their hearts pounding,
having stolen most of the clock already but wondering whether they had left
eight seconds too much on the table.
  Only  a game, right?
 
We pounded, we pounded and finally we won," said an elated Jeff Hostetler, the
career backup quarterback who somehow guided this Giants team to the promised
land, and is still undefeated in seven games as a starter. "I can't describe
the feeling . . ."
  Understandable. For finally, here was a Super Sunday that lived up to its
billing, a game that didn't make one team look like Superman  and the other
look like Donald Duck. Both teams did what they were supposed to do. Neither
team fumbled. Neither was intercepted.
  The game was won, ultimately, by the Giants, with the most simple  of
philosophies: you can't be outscored if the other team doesn't have the ball.
So the Giants kept it. Like kids in a school yard. Our ball. You can't have
it. Nyah, nyah. They moved slowly on offense,  and I mean slowly,
methodically, converting a series of big third downs, stringing together
drives that seemed to stretch from one coast of Florida to another. At times
it may have seemed they were moving  the ball by nudging it with their noses.
But it worked, this philosophy. New York had the ball for more than 40 minutes
of this 60- minute war, and that was the difference.
  "Shorten the game," Parcells  likes to call it.
  Which is not to say that Buffalo didn't do its job -- when it had a
chance. Kelly and company managed to move the football; he threw for more than
200 yards and Thurman Thomas gained 135 rushing. In fact, the game really came
down Buffalo's no huddle offense in the best of all possible situations -- the
final two minutes. And the Bills moved downfield in dramatic fashion,
starting on their 10 and, with only one timeout left, charging into Giants'
territory -- a Kelly scramble, another scramble, a Thomas burst, another
Thomas burst.
  Finally, they could risk no more.  The ball was on the 30. One more play
would surely have made them more comfortable, maybe even made the winning
field goal a chip shot. They could not take the chance. So Levy motioned and
out came Norwood, and down went the Giants on the sideline, into that same
little prayer group they used last week against San Francisco, when their own
kicker, Matt Bahr, put them in the Super Bowl with his last-second  boot.
  "My heart was racing; I couldn't watch," said New York's Lawrence Taylor .
. . 
  Only a game, right?
 
A moment here for Norwood. The problem with games that come down to the last
play  is that someone is destined to be the goat. Norwood had never kicked one
on grass as far as 47 yards. He got plenty of leg. But the ball never hooked.
It went on a straight line just right on the goalpost,  and as Giants
cornerback Renya Thompson, just a few feet from Norwood, began to leap up and
down, celebrating the victory, Norwood began the longest walk of his life,
back to the unhappy side of the field.
  "I feel like a let a lot of people down," he said. "You only get one
opportunity to do something like this. Maybe I tried too hard to get the foot
into it. I don't know. I just feel like  I let everyone down."
  In truth, he didn't. He just was the last guy on the stage in what had
been a terrific play. Nobody disappointed anyone. And for once, the Super Bowl
didn't disappoint the  audience. Funny, isn't it. When you realize it's only a
game, you realize how great a game it can be.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
FOOTBALL; SUPER BOWL; NEW YORK GIANTS; BUFFALO BILLS
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
