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<UID>
9001040643
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
900129
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, January 29, 1990
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO EDITION
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo LENNOX MCLENDON/Associated Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


:
Quarterback Joe Montana celebrates a touchdown pass to Jerry
Rice on Sunday. The San Francisco 49ers beat the Denver
Broncos, 55-10, in the  Super Bowl.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SEE ALSO METRO FINAL EDITION page 1A ; SUPER XXIV BOWL
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1990, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
THE BRONCOS' WORST NIGHTMARE - 55-10
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
NEW ORLEANS --  Jerry Rice held the football high, pulled a fist and spun
toward his grinning teammates. Joe Montana slapped him on the helmet and Roger
Craig gave him a bear hug. They had it! Another  Super Bowl! All that remained
was to run out the clock, which read 10:08. 

  In the first quarter.

  Good-bye, competition. This was so lopsided, I'm surprised the stadium
didn't tip over. It  was the Philistines against the Boy Scouts, Popeye
beating up on Sweet Pea. It was like watching a 49ers practice. No. Check
that. I think the 49ers practices are harder than this. Tell me. Was this
Super Bowl ever supposed to be a game, or were we just here to sell Diet Coke?
That's not a score. 55-10? That's a championship? The Bud Bowl was closer.
  And to think, people said the Denver Broncos  weren't good enough to beat
San Francisco. What a foolish statement. They weren't good enough to beat
Ferris State. Obviously, after losing the 1987 Super Bowl by 19 points, and
the 1988 version by 32  points, the Broncos got together and said "Come on,
guys! We can do better than that," And they did. Sunday, they lost by 45. 
  Let's tally up this Super Bowl XXIV, shall we? On the 49ers' side  we
had: points (the most ever in a Super Bowl), yardage, first downs, third
downs, tackles, interceptions, and time of possession. And on the Broncos'
side we had: the coin flip.
  So much for statistics.  Before the first bowl of pretzels was gone, the
only competition left in this Super Bowl was the jockeying for Most Valuable
Player. There were the usual suspects: Montana, the terrifyingly accurate
quarterback; Rice, so superior to other NFL receivers that he seems to only
bother with long touchdowns these days; Craig, high-stepping and body-slamming
his way for yards and yards.
  Montana, who  threw five touchdowns, got it, becoming the first-ever
three-time MVP winner.  No argument there. And no argument for this one --
Most Overwhelmed Player: John Elway. Was he bad? Well. I don't know.  He
completed some nice passes. Mostly to the 49ers, unfortunately.
  Poor John. This wasn't his worst nightmare. This was his worst nightmare
times 100. He must have wished he had a big orange sheet  to hide under. His
rifle arm was suddenly wet gunowder. His poise was left somewhere in the Rocky
Mountains. When the Broncos needed his leadership most -- on the first
offensive plays of each half --  he threw two incompletions and an
interception, respectively. All afternoon his passes hit the turf, went over
the heads. He fumbled near his goal line. He was sacked repeatedly. 
  Listen. I'm sure  life has its checks and balances. But in his three Super
Bowls, Elway is now trailing, 136-20.
  That's a lot of catching up.
Fourth in eight years  Now, let's remember, Broncos. It is a great
accomplishment just to make a Super Bowl, right? Right? Hello? Well. Never
mind. It takes a while for that shell shock to pass.
  Let us focus, instead, on the 49ers, who are going to have to form  their
own league pretty soon, because nobody wants to play them.  Can you believe
these guys? They actually made sports writers look clever. We predicted a
blowout. They delivered. This was their fourth  Super Bowl win in eight years,
and the most amazing thing is, only a handful of players remain from the first
squad. Take your hat off to a remarkable system, an owner who isn't afraid to
spend money,  and an eye for talent by coaches and scouts that constructed  a
starting offense and defense Sunday with only three first-round picks.
  What's that? A synopsis of the game?
  OK. Here we go: Denver  took the opening kickoff, then quickly left the
stage the way a piano tuner might have left when Mr. Horowitz said, "I'm ready
to play."
  Out came the Maestros, a.k.a. Killer  Joe and his Band Of Renown.
Figuring that their first drive was important, because it was the only one the
TV audience would watch before becoming totally bored and switching to the
"Wonderful World Of Disney," the 49ers  did all the right things. Short
passes. Quick runs. Montana found Rice over the middle, Rice bounced off
perhaps Denver's best tackler, Steve Atwater, and loped into the end zone.
  From then on,  even though the game had just started, it was like the end
of a play, where everybody gets to take a bow. Here was Brent Jones, a
youthful tight end who says, "I idolized Joe Montana and the 49ers growing
up," now catching a touchdown pass from Joe to close the first quarter. Here
was Craig and Tom Rathman, the old Nebraska connection, carrying the ball on
13 of 14 plays during the Niners' third touchdown drive. Here was Rice,
waiting for his moment like a master thespian, streaking down the middle in
the final minute of the second half, pulling in the Montana pass and dashing
to the end zone untouched  for touchdown No. 4. 
  And what about Montana? What more can be said? He surveyed the field
Sunday like a cowboy surveys the prairie. I swear he's up there on his horse,
chewing on a weed, saying  to himself, "Welp, I could go there, throw it to
him. Then again, I could go there, and throw it to him." Inevitably, he picks
the right target. And those who criticize his short passing game got a healthy
 lesson in football priorities. What good is a howitzer arm -- like John
Elway's -- if the defense is all over you?
  Last year, after the 49ers beat Cincinnati to win Super Bowl XXIII,
Montana was  the first to say to his team: "Let's repeat."
  On Sunday, the new word was "Three-peat."
  They were saying it at halftime.
Bring on Charlie Brown  Good-bye, competition. What San Fran did  to
Denver, you wouldn't do to an ant. Hey, Commissioner Tagliabue. Take a hint.
Maybe the NFL should realign the conferences. This was the sixth straight
Super Bowl win for the NFC, and five of those  were blowouts. 
  It can't be good for the game. Was anybody watching at the end? Even the
Denver fans were calling for the Broncos' most effective play: "AIRPORT! GO TO
THE AIRPORT!"
  It would  have been comical had it not been so sad. There's not a lot of
fun in games like this. And the buildup that accompanies it only makes it seem
more foolish. Either spot the AFC team four touchdowns, or  make a no-repeat
law. That may be the only way to stop San Fran, who, remember, was winning
this thing with a rookie coach, George Seifert.
  Good-bye,  competition. The halftime featured a salute  to the Peanuts
cartoon gang. How fitting. The Broncos must have felt like Charlie Brown when
he goes running toward that football, only to have it yanked away by Lucy at
the last minute. Hey! Where did  the game go?
  That's what we'd like to know.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
FOOTBALL; SUPER BOWL
</KEYWORDS>
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