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Super Bowl XVIII

Super Bowl XVIII was an American football game played on January 22, 1984, at Tampa Stadium between the National Football Conference (NFC) champion and defending Super Bowl XVII champion Washington Redskins and the American Football Conference (AFC) champion Los Angeles Raiders to determine the National Football League (NFL) champion for the 1983 season. The Raiders defeated the Redskins, 38–9. The Raiders' 38 points scored and 29-point margin of victory broke Super Bowl records; it remains the most points scored by an AFC team in a Super Bowl. This is the first time the city of Tampa hosted the Super Bowl and was the AFC's last Super Bowl win until Super Bowl XXXII, won by the Denver Broncos.

Super Bowl XVIII
1234 Total
WAS 0360 9
LA 714143 38
DateJanuary 22, 1984 (1984-01-22)
StadiumTampa Stadium, Tampa, Florida
MVPMarcus Allen, running back
FavoriteRedskins by 3[1][2]
RefereeGene Barth
Attendance72,920[3]
Hall of Famers
Redskins: Bobby Beathard (general manager), Joe Gibbs (head coach), Darrell Green, Russ Grimm, Art Monk, John Riggins
Raiders: Al Davis (owner/general manager), Tom Flores (head coach), Marcus Allen, Cliff Branch, Ray Guy, Mike Haynes, Ted Hendricks, Howie Long
Ceremonies
National anthemBarry Manilow
Coin tossBronko Nagurski
Halftime show"Salute to Superstars of the Silver Screen"
TV in the United States
NetworkCBS
AnnouncersPat Summerall and John Madden
Nielsen ratings46.4
(an estimated 77.62 million viewers)[4]
Market share71
Cost of 30-second commercial$368,000
Radio in the United States
NetworkCBS Radio
AnnouncersJack Buck and Hank Stram

The Redskins entered the game as the defending Super Bowl XVII champions, finished the 1983 regular season with a league-best 14–2 record, led the league in fewest rushing yards allowed, and set a then-NFL record in scoring with 541 points. The Raiders posted a 12–4 regular-season record in 1983, their second in Los Angeles, having moved there from Oakland in May 1982.

The Raiders outgained the Redskins in total yards, 385 to 283. Los Angeles built a 21–3 halftime lead, aided by touchdowns on Derrick Jensen's blocked punt recovery, and Jack Squirek's 5-yard interception return on a screen pass with seven seconds left in the first half. Raiders running back Marcus Allen, who became the third Heisman Trophy winner to be named the Super Bowl MVP, carried the ball 20 times for a then-record total of 191 yards and two touchdowns, including a then-record 74-yard run in the third quarter. He also caught 2 passes for 18 yards.

The telecast of the game on CBS was seen by an estimated 77.62 million viewers.[4] The broadcast was notable for airing the famous "1984" television commercial, introducing the Apple Macintosh. The NFL highlight film of this game is the final voiceover work for famous NFL narrator John Facenda.

As of the 2021 season, this is the Raiders' most recent Super Bowl championship, and it was also the only time that a Los Angeles-based team had won the Super Bowl until their then cross-town rival Los Angeles Rams won Super Bowl LVI at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California.[5]

Background

NFL owners voted to award Super Bowl XVIII to Tampa on June 3, 1981, at a league meeting held in Detroit. This is the first time Tampa hosted the game, making it the first Super Bowl to be played in Florida in a city other than Miami.

Washington Redskins

The Redskins entered the game appearing to be even better than the previous season when they defeated the Miami Dolphins 27–17 in Super Bowl XVII. The Redskins finished the regular season with a 14–2 record, the best in the NFL, and their two losses were only by one point each. In addition, the Redskins set new NFL records with 541 points (since broken by the 1998 Minnesota Vikings, the 2007 and 2012 New England Patriots, 2011 Green Bay Packers, 2011 New Orleans Saints, 2013 Denver Broncos, and 2018 Kansas City Chiefs), and also had a turnover margin of +43 and the top-ranked run defense.

The Redskins had a number of efficient offensive weapons. Quarterback Joe Theismann won the NFL Most Valuable Player Award for being the second rated passer in the league behind Steve Bartkowski, completing 276 out of 459 (60.1 percent) of his passes for 3,714 yards, 29 touchdowns, and only 11 interceptions. He rushed for 234 yards and another touchdown. Washington's main deep threats were wide receivers Charlie Brown (78 receptions, 1,225 yards, and 8 touchdowns) and Art Monk (47 receptions, 746 yards, and 5 touchdowns), with the latter fully healthy after the previous year's injury that caused him to miss the entire postseason. Wide receiver Alvin Garrett, who replaced Monk during that time, emerged as a significant contributor by catching 25 passes for 332 yards. Fullback John Riggins once again was the team's top rusher with 1,347 yards, and set a then-NFL record by scoring the most rushing touchdowns in a season (24). Multi-talented running back Joe Washington recorded 772 rushing yards, while catching 47 passes for 454 yards and 6 touchdowns. Kicker Mark Moseley led the NFL in scoring with 161 points, while Riggins ranked second with 144, making them the first teammates to finish a season as the NFL's top two scorers since 1951. Washington's powerful offensive line, "The Hogs", were led by two Pro Bowlers, guard Russ Grimm and tackle Joe Jacoby.

The Redskins' defense led the league in fewest rushing yards allowed (1,289). Pro Bowl defensive tackle Dave Butz recorded 11.5 sacks and a fumble recovery. On the other side of the line, defensive end Dexter Manley recorded 11 sacks and an interception. Defensive back Mark Murphy led the NFL with 9 interceptions, while the other starters in the secondary, Vernon Dean, Anthony Washington and Ken Coffey, along with rookie cornerback Darrell Green, combined for 13 interceptions. Washington, Coffey and Green filled the void left by the season-long suspension of safety Tony Peters and the season-long holdout by cornerback Jeris White.

Los Angeles Raiders

 
Marcus Allen rushes in Super Bowl XVIII.

The Raiders made it to their fourth Super Bowl in team history after posting a 12–4 regular-season record. Raiders quarterback Jim Plunkett completed 230 out of 379 (60.7 percent) passes resulting in 2,935 yards and 20 touchdowns. His favorite target was tight end Todd Christensen, who led the NFL with 92 receptions for 1,247 yards and 12 touchdowns. Wide receivers Cliff Branch and Malcolm Barnwell combined for 74 receptions, 1,209 yards, and 6 touchdowns. But the largest impact on offense was running back Marcus Allen. In just his second NFL season, Allen led the team in rushing yards (1,014) and total yards from scrimmage (1,604), while ranking second on the team in receptions (68) and touchdowns (11). But Allen was not the only key running back on the team. Kenny King and Frank Hawkins combined for 1,119 total rushing and receiving yards, and 10 touchdowns. Los Angeles also had a powerful special teams attack led by Greg Pruitt, who led the NFL in punt returns (58), and punt return yards, setting a new NFL record with 666. He also added another 604 yards returning kickoffs and rushed for 154 yards and two scores.

On defense, their three-man front was led by Pro Bowl defensive linemen Howie Long (13 sacks, 2 fumble recoveries) and Lyle Alzado, who had 7 sacks, along with rookie Greg Townsend, who recorded 10.5 sacks and a 66-yard fumble return touchdown. The linebacking corps was led by Pro Bowlers Rod Martin and Matt Millen, along with 15-year veteran Ted Hendricks. Martin had six sacks and four interceptions. Cornerbacks Mike Haynes (acquired in a trade from New England) and Lester Hayes were widely considered to be the best cornerback tandem in the NFL.[6] Pro Bowl Safety Vann McElroy recovered 3 fumbles and ranked second in the NFL with 8 interceptions. The Raiders' head coach was Tom Flores.

Playoffs

The Raiders only allowed a combined total of 24 points in their playoff victories over the Pittsburgh Steelers, 38–10, and the Seattle Seahawks (who had beaten the Raiders twice during the regular season), 30–14. Allen had been particularly effective in the playoffs, gaining a total of 375 combined yards and scoring three touchdowns. The Raiders' defense limited Seahawks running back Curt Warner, who had led the AFC in rushing yards (1,449 yards), to just 26 yards on 11 carries.

Meanwhile, the Redskins crushed the Los Angeles Rams 51–7, and then narrowly defeated the San Francisco 49ers 24–21, with Mark Moseley kicking the game-winning field goal with just 40 seconds left. Mirroring the previous postseason, Riggins was a key contributor, rushing for a combined playoff total of 242 yards and five touchdowns in the two games. In doing so, Riggins extended his NFL record of consecutive playoff games with at least 100 rushing yards to six. Brown also was a key contributor in both playoff wins, recording a combined total of 11 receptions for 308 yards and a touchdown. Washington's defense was just as effective at stopping their postseason opponent's rushing attack as they had been during the regular season, limiting running backs Eric Dickerson and Wendell Tyler to a combined total of 60 rushing yards. Dickerson was the NFL's leading rusher with 1,808 yards and 18 touchdowns during the season, but could only gain 16 yards on 10 carries against the Redskins' defense.

Broadcasting

The game was broadcast in the United States by CBS and featured the broadcast team of play-by-play announcer Pat Summerall and color commentator John Madden. Hosting pregame coverage for The Super Bowl Today was Brent Musburger; Irv Cross; Phyllis George (her final assignment for CBS) and Jimmy "The Greek" Snyder. Other contributors to CBS coverage included Jim Hill (who was also sports director of KNXT in Los Angeles which aired the game in that market {KNXT changed its call letters to the current KCBS-TV that April}; WDVM aired the game in Washington, D.C.); Charlsie Cantey; Pat O'Brien; Dick Vermeil; Tom Brookshier; Hank Stram (who also worked the game alongside Jack Buck on CBS Radio); John Tesh and CBS News correspondent Charles Osgood. Dick Stockton would serve as pregame host for CBS Radio coverage; while Musburger would also contribute halftime commentary in addition to hosting CBS television coverage[7] During this game, CBS introduced a new theme and open that would later be used for their college football coverage until it was replaced by the current college football theme introduced on Super Bowl XXI (the next Super Bowl CBS aired at the end of the 1986 season).

In addition to King and Marotta, who called the game over KRLA in Los Angeles, additional local radio coverage of Super Bowl XVIII was provided by WMAL-AM with Frank Herzog, Sam Huff and Sonny Jurgensen announcing. Nationally, Jack Buck and Hank Stram announced for CBS Radio.

It was simulcast in Canada on CTV and in the United Kingdom on Channel 4.

Apple's famous "1984" television commercial, introducing the Macintosh computer and directed by Ridley Scott, ran during a timeout in the third quarter. The advertisement changed how the Super Bowl would be used as a media advertising platform.[original research?]

As previously mentioned, the highlight package to Super Bowl XVIII was voiceover artist John Facenda's final project for NFL Films. Facenda died eight months after the game. An expanded version of Black Sunday (the highlight film's title) has appeared on NFL's Greatest Games and contains an additional hour of game footage plus audio play-by-play from Bill King and Rich Marotta (Raiders), and Frank Herzog and Sonny Jurgensen (Redskins), while retaining Facenda's narration.

Following the game, CBS aired the pilot episode of Airwolf.

Entertainment

The pregame festivities, which paid tribute to George Halas, featured the University of Florida Fightin' Gator Marching Band and the Florida State University Marching Chiefs. After a moment of silence for Halas, singer Barry Manilow performed the national anthem. The coin toss ceremony featured Pro Football Hall of Fame fullback and defensive tackle Bronko Nagurski.

The halftime show was a "Salute to Superstars of Silver Screen."

Game summary

First quarter

During the first half, the Raiders scored on offense, defense, and special teams, becoming the first team to score two non-offensive touchdowns in a Super Bowl. Less than five minutes into the game, Los Angeles's Derrick Jensen blocked Jeff Hayes' punt deep in Washington territory and recovered the ball in the end zone to give the Raiders a 7–0 lead. On their ensuing drive, Washington was forced to punt, but Los Angeles punt returner Ted Watts muffed the catch, and Washington safety Greg Williams recovered the ball at the Raiders 42-yard line. However, the Redskins advanced only to the Raiders 27-yard line and came away with no points after kicker Mark Moseley missed a 44-yard field goal attempt.

Second quarter

Early in the second quarter, Raiders punter Ray Guy prevented a disaster when he leaped to pull in a high snap one-handed, before punting through the endzone for a touchback. After Washington was forced to punt, Raiders quarterback Jim Plunkett completed a 50-yard pass to wide receiver Cliff Branch, advancing the ball to the Redskins' 15-yard line. Branch said that the Raiders took advantage of the tailwind after the teams switched sides.[8] Two plays later, Plunkett threw a 12-yard touchdown pass to Branch, increasing the lead to 14–0. One of the key contributors on the touchdown play was center Dave Dalby. After snapping the ball, Dalby had no one in front of him to block, so he backpedaled into the backfield and spotted linebacker Rich Milot coming at Plunkett from the left side, managing to throw a block against him just in time to prevent a sack and enable Plunkett to throw the ball. Cliff Branch became just the fourth player to catch a touchdown in two different Super Bowls (after Lynn Swann, John Stallworth, and Butch Johnson).

On their next drive, the Redskins moved the ball 73 yards in 12 plays to the Raiders 7-yard line, with Joe Theismann completing a 17-yard pass to receiver Alvin Garrett and three passes to tight end Clint Didier for 50 yards. However, linebacker Rod Martin broke up Theismann's third-down pass attempt, forcing Washington to settle for a 24-yard field goal by Moseley. Los Angeles took the ensuing kickoff and drove 41 yards to the Redskins 39-yard line. The drive stalled when Plunkett's third-down pass fell incomplete, but Ray Guy's 27-yard punt pinned Washington back at their own 12-yard line with 12 seconds left in the half. From there, head coach Joe Gibbs had Theismann run a screen play called "Rocket Screen", but Raiders linebacker Jack Squirek intercepted the pass and returned it for a touchdown to give the Raiders a 21–3 halftime lead. The defense was prepared for the play, as Theismann had successfully completed an identical screen pass to Joe Washington for a 67-yard gain in their 37–35 victory over the Raiders on October 2. In fact, Los Angeles linebackers coach Charlie Sumner had sent Squirek onto the field as a last-second substitution specifically to cover Washington. "I was mad," said linebacker Matt Millen, who had to run off the field to avoid a penalty. "I'd called a blitz, and I was cranked up for it, but he told Jack to play the screen and sent him in. I guess Charlie knows what he's doing, huh?"[9]

Third quarter

 
Allen (center) led the Raiders to a championship in Super Bowl XVIII and earned MVP honors as he rushed for a record of 191 yards, including a memorable 74-yard touchdown run.[10]

The Redskins regrouped in the second half and scored on their opening drive by marching 70 yards in nine plays. First, Garrett returned the opening kickoff 35 yards from 5 yards deep in the end zone to the Washington 30-yard line. Then, Theismann completed a 23-yard pass to receiver Charlie Brown to the Raiders 47-yard line. Eight plays later, fullback John Riggins finished the drive with a 1-yard touchdown run. (Riggins became the second player to run for touchdowns in back-to-back Super Bowls; he had one in Super Bowl XVII en route to winning that game's Super Bowl MVP award.) Moseley's extra point attempt was blocked by reserve tight end Don Hasselbeck, but the Redskins had cut the score to 21–9 and were just two touchdowns away from taking the lead.

However, the Raiders completely took over the rest of the game, preventing any chance of a Washington comeback. On the ensuing drive, Washington defensive back Darrell Green was called for a 38-yard pass interference penalty while trying to cover Raiders receiver Malcolm Barnwell, setting up running back Marcus Allen's 5-yard touchdown run seven plays later to make the score 28–9. Late in the third quarter, the Redskins had an opportunity to score after defensive back Anthony Washington forced and recovered a fumble from Branch at the Raiders 35-yard line. They moved the ball nine yards in their next three plays, and then faced fourth down and one. Washington attempted to convert the fourth down with a run by Riggins, just like their successful fourth-down conversion against the Miami Dolphins in the previous Super Bowl. But this time, Riggins was tackled by Martin for no gain.

On the next play, the last play of the third quarter, Plunkett handed the ball off to Allen, who started to run left as the play was designed. But after taking an unusually wide turn in that direction (he later confessed, "I messed up."[8]), Allen saw a lot of defenders in front of him and cut back to the middle before taking off for a then-Super Bowl record 74-yard touchdown run, increasing L.A.'s lead to 35–9 (Allen's run broke the previous record of 58 yards set by Tom Matte in Super Bowl III). This play would later be immortalized by one of the last great lines from narrator John Facenda, who said, "As Washington's hopes faded into the dying daylight, on came Marcus Allen, running with the night."

Fourth quarter

In the fourth quarter, the Raiders sacked Theismann three times, forcing him to fumble once, and intercepted a pass. Meanwhile, a 39-yard run from Allen set up a 21-yard field goal from kicker Chris Bahr to make the final score of the game 38–9.

Plunkett finished the game with 16 out of 25 pass completions for 172 yards and a touchdown. Theismann threw for more yards than Plunkett (243), but was just 16 out of 35 and was intercepted twice. He was also sacked six times. Branch was the top receiver of the game with six receptions for 94 yards and a touchdown. Guy punted seven times for 299 yards (42.7 average), with 244 net yards (34.8 average) and planted five of his seven punts inside the 20. Martin recorded a sack, a pass deflection, and a fumble recovery. Riggins, who had rushed for over 100 yards in his last six postseason games, was held to 64 yards and a touchdown on 26 carries, with his longest gain being just 8 yards. Brown was their top receiver with three receptions for 93 yards. Tight end Clint Didier caught five passes for 65 yards. Garrett recorded 100 yards on kickoff returns, and one reception for 17 yards. Part of both of Allen's touchdown runs were cutbacks, which, according to New York Daily News writer Larry Fox, burned an overpursuing Redskins defense.[8]

After the game, Redskins general manager Bobby Beathard said that Lester Hayes and Mike Haynes were the difference in the game. Haynes had played out his contract with the Patriots after the 1982 season, and sat out most of the first part of the 1983 season during contract negotiations. He eventually signed with the Raiders, who were forced to give the Patriots draft picks in compensation. He played the final five games of the regular season; his addition gave the Raiders two shutdown corners. According to Beathard, Hayes and Haynes "changed our whole game plan." Hayes had only one tackle, but had the left side of the field covered so effectively that Theismann hardly bothered to throw there. Haynes had two tackles, one interception, and two pass breakups.[6] Although Brown averaged 31 yards on his 3 receptions, Redskin wide receivers combined for only 5 catches, with none in the first half.[8] Another factor was Guy; he punted seven times for an average of 42.7 yards and 34.8 net yards. Five of those punts pinned the Redskins inside their own 20.

This marked the final game in the Hall of Fame career of Raiders linebacker Ted Hendricks, who retired upon earning his fourth Super Bowl ring (three with the Raiders and one with the Baltimore Colts).

The Raiders were the first team to score an offensive, defensive, and special teams touchdown in the same Super Bowl. The Redskins became the second defending champion to lose a Super Bowl (their divisional rivals, the Dallas Cowboys, were the first, losing Super Bowl XIII after winning Super Bowl XII). The Redskins would be joined by the Green Bay Packers in 1998 (won Super Bowl XXXI, lost Super Bowl XXXII), the Seattle Seahawks in 2015 (won Super Bowl XLVIII, lost Super Bowl XLIX), the New England Patriots in 2018 (won Super Bowl LI, lost Super Bowl LII), and the Kansas City Chiefs in 2021 (won Super Bowl LIV, lost Super Bowl LV).

Box score

Super Bowl XVIII: Los Angeles Raiders 38, Washington Redskins 9
Period 1 2 34Total
Redskins (NFC) 0 3 609
Raiders (AFC) 7 14 14338

at Tampa Stadium, Tampa, Florida

  • Date: January 22, 1984
  • Game time: 4:45 p.m. EST
  • Game weather: 68 °F (20 °C), sunny[11]
Scoring summary
Quarter Time Drive Team Scoring information Score
Plays Yards TOP WAS LA
1 10:08 LA Derrick Jensen recovered blocked punt in end zone, Chris Bahr kick good 0 7
2 9:14 3 65 1:34 LA Cliff Branch 12-yard touchdown reception from Jim Plunkett, Bahr kick good 0 14
2 3:05 13 73 6:09 WAS 24-yard field goal by Mark Moseley 3 14
2 0:07 LA Interception returned 5 yards for touchdown by Jack Squirek, Bahr kick good 3 21
3 10:52 9 70 4:08 WAS John Riggins 1-yard touchdown run, Moseley kick no good (blocked) 9 21
3 7:06 8 70 3:46 LA Marcus Allen 5-yard touchdown run, Bahr kick good 9 28
3 0:00 1 74 0:12 LA Allen 74-yard touchdown run, Bahr kick good 9 35
4 2:24 8 55 3:55 LA 21-yard field goal by Bahr 9 38
"TOP" = time of possession. For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football. 9 38

Final statistics

Sources: NFL.com Super Bowl XVIII, Super Bowl XVIII Play Finder LA, Super Bowl XVIII Play Finder Was

Statistical comparison

Washington Redskins Los Angeles Raiders
First downs 19 18
First downs rushing 7 8
First downs passing 10 9
First downs penalty 2 1
Third down efficiency 6/17 5/13
Fourth down efficiency 0/1 0/0
Net yards rushing 90 231
Rushing attempts 32 33
Yards per rush 2.8 7.0
Passing – Completions/attempts 16/35 16/25
Times sacked-total yards 6–50 2–18
Interceptions thrown 2 0
Net yards passing 193 154
Total net yards 283 385
Punt returns-total yards 2–35 2–8
Kickoff returns-total yards 7–132 1–17
Interceptions-total return yards 0–0 2–5
Punts-average yardage 8–32.4 7–42.7
Fumbles-lost 1–1 3–2
Penalties-total yards 4–62 7–56
Time of possession 30:38 29:22
Turnovers 3 2

Individual statistics

Redskins Passing
C/ATT1 Yds TD INT Rating
Joe Theismann 16/35 243 0 2 45.3
Redskins Rushing
Car2 Yds TD LG3 Yds/Car
John Riggins 26 64 1 8 2.46
Joe Theismann 3 18 0 8 6.00
Joe Washington 3 8 0 5 2.67
Redskins Receiving
Rec4 Yds TD LG3 Target5
Clint Didier 5 65 0 20 7
Charlie Brown 3 93 0 60 7
Joe Washington 3 20 0 10 6
Nick Giaquinto 2 21 0 14 3
Art Monk 1 26 0 26 10
Alvin Garrett 1 17 0 17 1
John Riggins 1 1 0 1 1
Raiders Passing
C/ATT1 Yds TD INT Rating
Jim Plunkett 16/25 172 1 0 97.4
Raiders Rushing
Car2 Yds TD LG3 Yds/Car
Marcus Allen 20 191 2 74 9.55
Greg Pruitt 5 17 0 11 3.40
Kenny King 3 12 0 10 4.00
Chester Willis 1 7 0 7 7.00
Frank Hawkins 3 6 0 3 2.00
Jim Plunkett 1 –2 0 –2 –2.00
Raiders Receiving
Rec4 Yds TD LG3 Target5
Cliff Branch 6 94 1 50 7
Todd Christensen 4 32 0 14 9
Frank Hawkins 2 20 0 14 3
Marcus Allen 2 18 0 12 2
Kenny King 2 8 0 7 2
Malcolm Barnwell 0 0 0 0 1

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

Records set

The following records were set in Super Bowl XVIII, according to the official NFL.com boxscore,[12] the 2016 NFL Record & Fact Book[13] and the ProFootball reference.com game summary.[14]
Some records have to meet NFL minimum number of attempts to be recognized.[13] The minimums are shown (in parenthesis).

Player Records Set[14]
Passing Records
Highest passer rating,
career, (40 attempts)
122.8 Jim Plunkett
Highest completion
percentage, career, (40 attempts)
63.0%
(29-46)
Lowest percentage, passes
had intercepted, career, (40 attempts)
0%
(0-46)
Rushing Records
Most yards, game 191 yds Marcus Allen
Longest Touchdown Run 74 yds
Longest run from scrimmage 74 yds
Highest average gain, career (20 attempts) 9.6 yds
(191-20)
Combined yardage records
Most yards gained, game 209 yds Marcus Allen
Special Teams
Longest punt return 34 yds Darrell Green000(Washington)
Records Tied
Most touchdowns, game 2 Marcus Allen
Most rushing touchdowns, game 2
Most receiving touchdowns, career 3 Cliff Branch
Most interceptions returned for td, game 1 Jack Squirek000(Los Angeles)
Most kickoff returns, game 5 Alvin Garrett000(Washington)
Most (one point) extra points, game 5 Chris Bahr000(Los Angeles)
Most (one point) extra points, career 8
Most fair catches, game 3 Greg Pruitt000(Los Angeles)
  • † This category includes rushing, receiving, interception returns, punt returns, kickoff returns, and fumble returns.[15]
Team Records Set[14]
Points
Most points, game 38 pts Raiders
Largest margin of victory 29 pts
Largest lead, end of 3rd quarter 26 pts
Rushing
Highest average gain
per rush attempt
7.0
(231-33)
Raiders
Kickoff returns
Fewest yards gained, game 17 yds Raiders
Records Tied
Most points scored, first half 21 pts Raiders
Most points, third quarter 14 pts
Most touchdowns, game 5
Most (one point) PATs 5
Most touchdowns scored by
interception return
1
Fewest kickoff returns, game 1
Fewest passing touchdowns 0 Redskins
Most kickoff returns, game 7
Records Set, both team totals[14]
Total Raiders Redskins
Points, Both Teams
Most points, third quarter 20 pts 14 6
Punting, Both Teams
Most punts, game 14 7 7

Starting lineups

Source:[16]

Hall of Fame‡

Officials

  • Referee: Gene Barth #14 first Super Bowl
  • Umpire: Gordon Wells #89 first Super Bowl
  • Head Linesman: Jerry Bergman #17 third Super Bowl (XIII, XVI)
  • Line Judge: Bob Beeks #59 third Super Bowl (XIV, XVI)
  • Back Judge: Ben Tompkins #52 second Super Bowl (XIV)
  • Side Judge: Gil Mace #90 first Super Bowl
  • Field Judge: Fritz Graf #34 fourth Super Bowl (V, VIII, XV)
  • Alternate Referee: Jim Tunney #32 worked Super Bowls VI, XI, XII on field
  • Alternate Umpire: Ed Fiffick #57 did not work Super Bowl on field

References

  1. ^ DiNitto, Marcus (January 25, 2015). . The Linemakers. Sporting News. Archived from the original on February 4, 2015. Retrieved February 4, 2015.
  2. ^ "Super Bowl History". Vegas Insider. Retrieved February 4, 2015.
  3. ^ "Super Bowl Winners". NFL.com. Retrieved February 4, 2015.
  4. ^ a b . tvbythenumbers.com. Archived from the original on February 8, 2010. Retrieved February 20, 2010.
  5. ^ "Rams surge late to defeat Cincinnati Bengals in Super Bowl LVI". Los Angeles Times. February 2022. Retrieved February 13, 2022.
  6. ^ a b McGinn, Bob (2009). The Ultimate Super Bowl Book. Minneapolis: MVP Books. ISBN 978-0-7603-3651-9.
  7. ^ "Super Bowl set for super numbers" (PDF). American Radio History. Broadcasting Magazine. pp. 102, 108. Retrieved March 15, 2017.
  8. ^ a b c d Fox, Larry. "A Raiders' runaway! 'Skins hogtied, 38-9". New York Daily News. Retrieved January 4, 2014.
  9. ^ Zimmerman, Paul (January 30, 1984). "A Runaway For The Raiders". sportsillustrated.cnn.com. Retrieved February 20, 2010.
  10. ^ Harvey, Harvey (2002). The Super Bowl's Most Wanted: The Top 10 Book of Big-Game Heroes, Pigskin Zeroes, and Championship Oddities (1st ed.). Brassey's, Inc. p. 123. ISBN 9781612340289.
  11. ^ "Super Bowl Game-Time Temperatures". Pro Football Hall of Fame. Retrieved March 10, 2018.
  12. ^ "Super Bowl XVIII boxscore". NFL.com. Retrieved November 7, 2016.
  13. ^ a b (PDF). NFL. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 6, 2015. Retrieved November 7, 2016.
  14. ^ a b c d "Super Bowl XVIII statistics". Pro Football reference.com. Retrieved November 6, 2016.
  15. ^ . Archived from the original on May 4, 2018. Retrieved December 13, 2016.
  16. ^ "Super Bowl XVIII–National Football League Game Summary" (PDF). NFLGSIS.com. NFL Enterprises, LLC. January 22, 1984. Retrieved March 7, 2017.

External links

super, bowl, xviii, 1984, super, bowl, redirects, here, super, bowl, that, played, completion, 1984, season, super, bowl, american, football, game, played, january, 1984, tampa, stadium, between, national, football, conference, champion, defending, super, bowl. 1984 Super Bowl redirects here For the Super Bowl that was played at the completion of the 1984 season see Super Bowl XIX Super Bowl XVIII was an American football game played on January 22 1984 at Tampa Stadium between the National Football Conference NFC champion and defending Super Bowl XVII champion Washington Redskins and the American Football Conference AFC champion Los Angeles Raiders to determine the National Football League NFL champion for the 1983 season The Raiders defeated the Redskins 38 9 The Raiders 38 points scored and 29 point margin of victory broke Super Bowl records it remains the most points scored by an AFC team in a Super Bowl This is the first time the city of Tampa hosted the Super Bowl and was the AFC s last Super Bowl win until Super Bowl XXXII won by the Denver Broncos Super Bowl XVIIIWashington Redskins 1 NFC 14 2 Los Angeles Raiders 1 AFC 12 4 9 38Head coach Joe Gibbs Head coach Tom Flores1234 TotalWAS 0360 9LA 714143 38DateJanuary 22 1984 1984 01 22 StadiumTampa Stadium Tampa FloridaMVPMarcus Allen running backFavoriteRedskins by 3 1 2 RefereeGene BarthAttendance72 920 3 Hall of FamersRedskins Bobby Beathard general manager Joe Gibbs head coach Darrell Green Russ Grimm Art Monk John RigginsRaiders Al Davis owner general manager Tom Flores head coach Marcus Allen Cliff Branch Ray Guy Mike Haynes Ted Hendricks Howie LongCeremoniesNational anthemBarry ManilowCoin tossBronko NagurskiHalftime show Salute to Superstars of the Silver Screen TV in the United StatesNetworkCBSAnnouncersPat Summerall and John MaddenNielsen ratings46 4 an estimated 77 62 million viewers 4 Market share71Cost of 30 second commercial 368 000Radio in the United StatesNetworkCBS RadioAnnouncersJack Buck and Hank Stram XVIISuper BowlXIX The Redskins entered the game as the defending Super Bowl XVII champions finished the 1983 regular season with a league best 14 2 record led the league in fewest rushing yards allowed and set a then NFL record in scoring with 541 points The Raiders posted a 12 4 regular season record in 1983 their second in Los Angeles having moved there from Oakland in May 1982 The Raiders outgained the Redskins in total yards 385 to 283 Los Angeles built a 21 3 halftime lead aided by touchdowns on Derrick Jensen s blocked punt recovery and Jack Squirek s 5 yard interception return on a screen pass with seven seconds left in the first half Raiders running back Marcus Allen who became the third Heisman Trophy winner to be named the Super Bowl MVP carried the ball 20 times for a then record total of 191 yards and two touchdowns including a then record 74 yard run in the third quarter He also caught 2 passes for 18 yards The telecast of the game on CBS was seen by an estimated 77 62 million viewers 4 The broadcast was notable for airing the famous 1984 television commercial introducing the Apple Macintosh The NFL highlight film of this game is the final voiceover work for famous NFL narrator John Facenda As of the 2021 season this is the Raiders most recent Super Bowl championship and it was also the only time that a Los Angeles based team had won the Super Bowl until their then cross town rival Los Angeles Rams won Super Bowl LVI at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood California 5 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Washington Redskins 1 2 Los Angeles Raiders 1 3 Playoffs 2 Broadcasting 3 Entertainment 4 Game summary 4 1 First quarter 4 2 Second quarter 4 3 Third quarter 4 4 Fourth quarter 4 5 Box score 5 Final statistics 5 1 Statistical comparison 5 2 Individual statistics 5 3 Records set 6 Starting lineups 7 Officials 8 References 9 External linksBackground EditNFL owners voted to award Super Bowl XVIII to Tampa on June 3 1981 at a league meeting held in Detroit This is the first time Tampa hosted the game making it the first Super Bowl to be played in Florida in a city other than Miami Washington Redskins Edit Main article 1983 Washington Redskins season The Redskins entered the game appearing to be even better than the previous season when they defeated the Miami Dolphins 27 17 in Super Bowl XVII The Redskins finished the regular season with a 14 2 record the best in the NFL and their two losses were only by one point each In addition the Redskins set new NFL records with 541 points since broken by the 1998 Minnesota Vikings the 2007 and 2012 New England Patriots 2011 Green Bay Packers 2011 New Orleans Saints 2013 Denver Broncos and 2018 Kansas City Chiefs and also had a turnover margin of 43 and the top ranked run defense The Redskins had a number of efficient offensive weapons Quarterback Joe Theismann won the NFL Most Valuable Player Award for being the second rated passer in the league behind Steve Bartkowski completing 276 out of 459 60 1 percent of his passes for 3 714 yards 29 touchdowns and only 11 interceptions He rushed for 234 yards and another touchdown Washington s main deep threats were wide receivers Charlie Brown 78 receptions 1 225 yards and 8 touchdowns and Art Monk 47 receptions 746 yards and 5 touchdowns with the latter fully healthy after the previous year s injury that caused him to miss the entire postseason Wide receiver Alvin Garrett who replaced Monk during that time emerged as a significant contributor by catching 25 passes for 332 yards Fullback John Riggins once again was the team s top rusher with 1 347 yards and set a then NFL record by scoring the most rushing touchdowns in a season 24 Multi talented running back Joe Washington recorded 772 rushing yards while catching 47 passes for 454 yards and 6 touchdowns Kicker Mark Moseley led the NFL in scoring with 161 points while Riggins ranked second with 144 making them the first teammates to finish a season as the NFL s top two scorers since 1951 Washington s powerful offensive line The Hogs were led by two Pro Bowlers guard Russ Grimm and tackle Joe Jacoby The Redskins defense led the league in fewest rushing yards allowed 1 289 Pro Bowl defensive tackle Dave Butz recorded 11 5 sacks and a fumble recovery On the other side of the line defensive end Dexter Manley recorded 11 sacks and an interception Defensive back Mark Murphy led the NFL with 9 interceptions while the other starters in the secondary Vernon Dean Anthony Washington and Ken Coffey along with rookie cornerback Darrell Green combined for 13 interceptions Washington Coffey and Green filled the void left by the season long suspension of safety Tony Peters and the season long holdout by cornerback Jeris White Los Angeles Raiders Edit Main article 1983 Los Angeles Raiders season Marcus Allen rushes in Super Bowl XVIII The Raiders made it to their fourth Super Bowl in team history after posting a 12 4 regular season record Raiders quarterback Jim Plunkett completed 230 out of 379 60 7 percent passes resulting in 2 935 yards and 20 touchdowns His favorite target was tight end Todd Christensen who led the NFL with 92 receptions for 1 247 yards and 12 touchdowns Wide receivers Cliff Branch and Malcolm Barnwell combined for 74 receptions 1 209 yards and 6 touchdowns But the largest impact on offense was running back Marcus Allen In just his second NFL season Allen led the team in rushing yards 1 014 and total yards from scrimmage 1 604 while ranking second on the team in receptions 68 and touchdowns 11 But Allen was not the only key running back on the team Kenny King and Frank Hawkins combined for 1 119 total rushing and receiving yards and 10 touchdowns Los Angeles also had a powerful special teams attack led by Greg Pruitt who led the NFL in punt returns 58 and punt return yards setting a new NFL record with 666 He also added another 604 yards returning kickoffs and rushed for 154 yards and two scores On defense their three man front was led by Pro Bowl defensive linemen Howie Long 13 sacks 2 fumble recoveries and Lyle Alzado who had 7 sacks along with rookie Greg Townsend who recorded 10 5 sacks and a 66 yard fumble return touchdown The linebacking corps was led by Pro Bowlers Rod Martin and Matt Millen along with 15 year veteran Ted Hendricks Martin had six sacks and four interceptions Cornerbacks Mike Haynes acquired in a trade from New England and Lester Hayes were widely considered to be the best cornerback tandem in the NFL 6 Pro Bowl Safety Vann McElroy recovered 3 fumbles and ranked second in the NFL with 8 interceptions The Raiders head coach was Tom Flores Playoffs Edit Further information 1983 84 NFL playoffs The Raiders only allowed a combined total of 24 points in their playoff victories over the Pittsburgh Steelers 38 10 and the Seattle Seahawks who had beaten the Raiders twice during the regular season 30 14 Allen had been particularly effective in the playoffs gaining a total of 375 combined yards and scoring three touchdowns The Raiders defense limited Seahawks running back Curt Warner who had led the AFC in rushing yards 1 449 yards to just 26 yards on 11 carries Meanwhile the Redskins crushed the Los Angeles Rams 51 7 and then narrowly defeated the San Francisco 49ers 24 21 with Mark Moseley kicking the game winning field goal with just 40 seconds left Mirroring the previous postseason Riggins was a key contributor rushing for a combined playoff total of 242 yards and five touchdowns in the two games In doing so Riggins extended his NFL record of consecutive playoff games with at least 100 rushing yards to six Brown also was a key contributor in both playoff wins recording a combined total of 11 receptions for 308 yards and a touchdown Washington s defense was just as effective at stopping their postseason opponent s rushing attack as they had been during the regular season limiting running backs Eric Dickerson and Wendell Tyler to a combined total of 60 rushing yards Dickerson was the NFL s leading rusher with 1 808 yards and 18 touchdowns during the season but could only gain 16 yards on 10 carries against the Redskins defense Broadcasting EditThe game was broadcast in the United States by CBS and featured the broadcast team of play by play announcer Pat Summerall and color commentator John Madden Hosting pregame coverage for The Super Bowl Today was Brent Musburger Irv Cross Phyllis George her final assignment for CBS and Jimmy The Greek Snyder Other contributors to CBS coverage included Jim Hill who was also sports director of KNXT in Los Angeles which aired the game in that market KNXT changed its call letters to the current KCBS TV that April WDVM aired the game in Washington D C Charlsie Cantey Pat O Brien Dick Vermeil Tom Brookshier Hank Stram who also worked the game alongside Jack Buck on CBS Radio John Tesh and CBS News correspondent Charles Osgood Dick Stockton would serve as pregame host for CBS Radio coverage while Musburger would also contribute halftime commentary in addition to hosting CBS television coverage 7 During this game CBS introduced a new theme and open that would later be used for their college football coverage until it was replaced by the current college football theme introduced on Super Bowl XXI the next Super Bowl CBS aired at the end of the 1986 season In addition to King and Marotta who called the game over KRLA in Los Angeles additional local radio coverage of Super Bowl XVIII was provided by WMAL AM with Frank Herzog Sam Huff and Sonny Jurgensen announcing Nationally Jack Buck and Hank Stram announced for CBS Radio It was simulcast in Canada on CTV and in the United Kingdom on Channel 4 Apple s famous 1984 television commercial introducing the Macintosh computer and directed by Ridley Scott ran during a timeout in the third quarter The advertisement changed how the Super Bowl would be used as a media advertising platform original research As previously mentioned the highlight package to Super Bowl XVIII was voiceover artist John Facenda s final project for NFL Films Facenda died eight months after the game An expanded version of Black Sunday the highlight film s title has appeared on NFL s Greatest Games and contains an additional hour of game footage plus audio play by play from Bill King and Rich Marotta Raiders and Frank Herzog and Sonny Jurgensen Redskins while retaining Facenda s narration Following the game CBS aired the pilot episode of Airwolf Entertainment EditThe pregame festivities which paid tribute to George Halas featured the University of Florida Fightin Gator Marching Band and the Florida State University Marching Chiefs After a moment of silence for Halas singer Barry Manilow performed the national anthem The coin toss ceremony featured Pro Football Hall of Fame fullback and defensive tackle Bronko Nagurski The halftime show was a Salute to Superstars of Silver Screen Game summary EditFirst quarter Edit During the first half the Raiders scored on offense defense and special teams becoming the first team to score two non offensive touchdowns in a Super Bowl Less than five minutes into the game Los Angeles s Derrick Jensen blocked Jeff Hayes punt deep in Washington territory and recovered the ball in the end zone to give the Raiders a 7 0 lead On their ensuing drive Washington was forced to punt but Los Angeles punt returner Ted Watts muffed the catch and Washington safety Greg Williams recovered the ball at the Raiders 42 yard line However the Redskins advanced only to the Raiders 27 yard line and came away with no points after kicker Mark Moseley missed a 44 yard field goal attempt Second quarter Edit Early in the second quarter Raiders punter Ray Guy prevented a disaster when he leaped to pull in a high snap one handed before punting through the endzone for a touchback After Washington was forced to punt Raiders quarterback Jim Plunkett completed a 50 yard pass to wide receiver Cliff Branch advancing the ball to the Redskins 15 yard line Branch said that the Raiders took advantage of the tailwind after the teams switched sides 8 Two plays later Plunkett threw a 12 yard touchdown pass to Branch increasing the lead to 14 0 One of the key contributors on the touchdown play was center Dave Dalby After snapping the ball Dalby had no one in front of him to block so he backpedaled into the backfield and spotted linebacker Rich Milot coming at Plunkett from the left side managing to throw a block against him just in time to prevent a sack and enable Plunkett to throw the ball Cliff Branch became just the fourth player to catch a touchdown in two different Super Bowls after Lynn Swann John Stallworth and Butch Johnson On their next drive the Redskins moved the ball 73 yards in 12 plays to the Raiders 7 yard line with Joe Theismann completing a 17 yard pass to receiver Alvin Garrett and three passes to tight end Clint Didier for 50 yards However linebacker Rod Martin broke up Theismann s third down pass attempt forcing Washington to settle for a 24 yard field goal by Moseley Los Angeles took the ensuing kickoff and drove 41 yards to the Redskins 39 yard line The drive stalled when Plunkett s third down pass fell incomplete but Ray Guy s 27 yard punt pinned Washington back at their own 12 yard line with 12 seconds left in the half From there head coach Joe Gibbs had Theismann run a screen play called Rocket Screen but Raiders linebacker Jack Squirek intercepted the pass and returned it for a touchdown to give the Raiders a 21 3 halftime lead The defense was prepared for the play as Theismann had successfully completed an identical screen pass to Joe Washington for a 67 yard gain in their 37 35 victory over the Raiders on October 2 In fact Los Angeles linebackers coach Charlie Sumner had sent Squirek onto the field as a last second substitution specifically to cover Washington I was mad said linebacker Matt Millen who had to run off the field to avoid a penalty I d called a blitz and I was cranked up for it but he told Jack to play the screen and sent him in I guess Charlie knows what he s doing huh 9 Third quarter Edit Allen center led the Raiders to a championship in Super Bowl XVIII and earned MVP honors as he rushed for a record of 191 yards including a memorable 74 yard touchdown run 10 The Redskins regrouped in the second half and scored on their opening drive by marching 70 yards in nine plays First Garrett returned the opening kickoff 35 yards from 5 yards deep in the end zone to the Washington 30 yard line Then Theismann completed a 23 yard pass to receiver Charlie Brown to the Raiders 47 yard line Eight plays later fullback John Riggins finished the drive with a 1 yard touchdown run Riggins became the second player to run for touchdowns in back to back Super Bowls he had one in Super Bowl XVII en route to winning that game s Super Bowl MVP award Moseley s extra point attempt was blocked by reserve tight end Don Hasselbeck but the Redskins had cut the score to 21 9 and were just two touchdowns away from taking the lead However the Raiders completely took over the rest of the game preventing any chance of a Washington comeback On the ensuing drive Washington defensive back Darrell Green was called for a 38 yard pass interference penalty while trying to cover Raiders receiver Malcolm Barnwell setting up running back Marcus Allen s 5 yard touchdown run seven plays later to make the score 28 9 Late in the third quarter the Redskins had an opportunity to score after defensive back Anthony Washington forced and recovered a fumble from Branch at the Raiders 35 yard line They moved the ball nine yards in their next three plays and then faced fourth down and one Washington attempted to convert the fourth down with a run by Riggins just like their successful fourth down conversion against the Miami Dolphins in the previous Super Bowl But this time Riggins was tackled by Martin for no gain On the next play the last play of the third quarter Plunkett handed the ball off to Allen who started to run left as the play was designed But after taking an unusually wide turn in that direction he later confessed I messed up 8 Allen saw a lot of defenders in front of him and cut back to the middle before taking off for a then Super Bowl record 74 yard touchdown run increasing L A s lead to 35 9 Allen s run broke the previous record of 58 yards set by Tom Matte in Super Bowl III This play would later be immortalized by one of the last great lines from narrator John Facenda who said As Washington s hopes faded into the dying daylight on came Marcus Allen running with the night Fourth quarter Edit In the fourth quarter the Raiders sacked Theismann three times forcing him to fumble once and intercepted a pass Meanwhile a 39 yard run from Allen set up a 21 yard field goal from kicker Chris Bahr to make the final score of the game 38 9 Plunkett finished the game with 16 out of 25 pass completions for 172 yards and a touchdown Theismann threw for more yards than Plunkett 243 but was just 16 out of 35 and was intercepted twice He was also sacked six times Branch was the top receiver of the game with six receptions for 94 yards and a touchdown Guy punted seven times for 299 yards 42 7 average with 244 net yards 34 8 average and planted five of his seven punts inside the 20 Martin recorded a sack a pass deflection and a fumble recovery Riggins who had rushed for over 100 yards in his last six postseason games was held to 64 yards and a touchdown on 26 carries with his longest gain being just 8 yards Brown was their top receiver with three receptions for 93 yards Tight end Clint Didier caught five passes for 65 yards Garrett recorded 100 yards on kickoff returns and one reception for 17 yards Part of both of Allen s touchdown runs were cutbacks which according to New York Daily News writer Larry Fox burned an overpursuing Redskins defense 8 After the game Redskins general manager Bobby Beathard said that Lester Hayes and Mike Haynes were the difference in the game Haynes had played out his contract with the Patriots after the 1982 season and sat out most of the first part of the 1983 season during contract negotiations He eventually signed with the Raiders who were forced to give the Patriots draft picks in compensation He played the final five games of the regular season his addition gave the Raiders two shutdown corners According to Beathard Hayes and Haynes changed our whole game plan Hayes had only one tackle but had the left side of the field covered so effectively that Theismann hardly bothered to throw there Haynes had two tackles one interception and two pass breakups 6 Although Brown averaged 31 yards on his 3 receptions Redskin wide receivers combined for only 5 catches with none in the first half 8 Another factor was Guy he punted seven times for an average of 42 7 yards and 34 8 net yards Five of those punts pinned the Redskins inside their own 20 This marked the final game in the Hall of Fame career of Raiders linebacker Ted Hendricks who retired upon earning his fourth Super Bowl ring three with the Raiders and one with the Baltimore Colts The Raiders were the first team to score an offensive defensive and special teams touchdown in the same Super Bowl The Redskins became the second defending champion to lose a Super Bowl their divisional rivals the Dallas Cowboys were the first losing Super Bowl XIII after winning Super Bowl XII The Redskins would be joined by the Green Bay Packers in 1998 won Super Bowl XXXI lost Super Bowl XXXII the Seattle Seahawks in 2015 won Super Bowl XLVIII lost Super Bowl XLIX the New England Patriots in 2018 won Super Bowl LI lost Super Bowl LII and the Kansas City Chiefs in 2021 won Super Bowl LIV lost Super Bowl LV Box score Edit Super Bowl XVIII Los Angeles Raiders 38 Washington Redskins 9 Period 1 2 34TotalRedskins NFC 0 3 609Raiders AFC 7 14 14338at Tampa Stadium Tampa Florida Date January 22 1984Game time 4 45 p m ESTGame weather 68 F 20 C sunny 11 Scoring summaryQuarter Time Drive Team Scoring information ScorePlays Yards TOP WAS LA1 10 08 LA Derrick Jensen recovered blocked punt in end zone Chris Bahr kick good 0 72 9 14 3 65 1 34 LA Cliff Branch 12 yard touchdown reception from Jim Plunkett Bahr kick good 0 142 3 05 13 73 6 09 WAS 24 yard field goal by Mark Moseley 3 142 0 07 LA Interception returned 5 yards for touchdown by Jack Squirek Bahr kick good 3 213 10 52 9 70 4 08 WAS John Riggins 1 yard touchdown run Moseley kick no good blocked 9 213 7 06 8 70 3 46 LA Marcus Allen 5 yard touchdown run Bahr kick good 9 283 0 00 1 74 0 12 LA Allen 74 yard touchdown run Bahr kick good 9 354 2 24 8 55 3 55 LA 21 yard field goal by Bahr 9 38 TOP time of possession For other American football terms see Glossary of American football 9 38Final statistics EditSources NFL com Super Bowl XVIII Super Bowl XVIII Play Finder LA Super Bowl XVIII Play Finder Was Statistical comparison Edit Washington Redskins Los Angeles RaidersFirst downs 19 18First downs rushing 7 8First downs passing 10 9First downs penalty 2 1Third down efficiency 6 17 5 13Fourth down efficiency 0 1 0 0Net yards rushing 90 231Rushing attempts 32 33Yards per rush 2 8 7 0Passing Completions attempts 16 35 16 25Times sacked total yards 6 50 2 18Interceptions thrown 2 0Net yards passing 193 154Total net yards 283 385Punt returns total yards 2 35 2 8Kickoff returns total yards 7 132 1 17Interceptions total return yards 0 0 2 5Punts average yardage 8 32 4 7 42 7Fumbles lost 1 1 3 2Penalties total yards 4 62 7 56Time of possession 30 38 29 22Turnovers 3 2Individual statistics Edit Redskins PassingC ATT1 Yds TD INT RatingJoe Theismann 16 35 243 0 2 45 3Redskins RushingCar2 Yds TD LG3 Yds CarJohn Riggins 26 64 1 8 2 46Joe Theismann 3 18 0 8 6 00Joe Washington 3 8 0 5 2 67Redskins ReceivingRec4 Yds TD LG3 Target5Clint Didier 5 65 0 20 7Charlie Brown 3 93 0 60 7Joe Washington 3 20 0 10 6Nick Giaquinto 2 21 0 14 3Art Monk 1 26 0 26 10Alvin Garrett 1 17 0 17 1John Riggins 1 1 0 1 1Raiders PassingC ATT1 Yds TD INT RatingJim Plunkett 16 25 172 1 0 97 4Raiders RushingCar2 Yds TD LG3 Yds CarMarcus Allen 20 191 2 74 9 55Greg Pruitt 5 17 0 11 3 40Kenny King 3 12 0 10 4 00Chester Willis 1 7 0 7 7 00Frank Hawkins 3 6 0 3 2 00Jim Plunkett 1 2 0 2 2 00Raiders ReceivingRec4 Yds TD LG3 Target5Cliff Branch 6 94 1 50 7Todd Christensen 4 32 0 14 9Frank Hawkins 2 20 0 14 3Marcus Allen 2 18 0 12 2Kenny King 2 8 0 7 2Malcolm Barnwell 0 0 0 0 1 1Completions attempts 2Carries 3Long gain 4Receptions 5Times targeted Records set Edit The following records were set in Super Bowl XVIII according to the official NFL com boxscore 12 the 2016 NFL Record amp Fact Book 13 and the ProFootball reference com game summary 14 Some records have to meet NFL minimum number of attempts to be recognized 13 The minimums are shown in parenthesis Player Records Set 14 Passing RecordsHighest passer rating career 40 attempts 122 8 Jim PlunkettHighest completion percentage career 40 attempts 63 0 29 46 Lowest percentage passes had intercepted career 40 attempts 0 0 46 Rushing RecordsMost yards game 191 yds Marcus AllenLongest Touchdown Run 74 ydsLongest run from scrimmage 74 ydsHighest average gain career 20 attempts 9 6 yds 191 20 Combined yardage records Most yards gained game 209 yds Marcus AllenSpecial TeamsLongest punt return 34 yds Darrell Green0 0 0 Washington Records TiedMost touchdowns game 2 Marcus AllenMost rushing touchdowns game 2Most receiving touchdowns career 3 Cliff BranchMost interceptions returned for td game 1 Jack Squirek0 0 0 Los Angeles Most kickoff returns game 5 Alvin Garrett0 0 0 Washington Most one point extra points game 5 Chris Bahr0 0 0 Los Angeles Most one point extra points career 8Most fair catches game 3 Greg Pruitt0 0 0 Los Angeles This category includes rushing receiving interception returns punt returns kickoff returns and fumble returns 15 Team Records Set 14 PointsMost points game 38 pts RaidersLargest margin of victory 29 ptsLargest lead end of 3rd quarter 26 ptsRushingHighest average gain per rush attempt 7 0 231 33 RaidersKickoff returnsFewest yards gained game 17 yds RaidersRecords TiedMost points scored first half 21 pts RaidersMost points third quarter 14 ptsMost touchdowns game 5Most one point PATs 5Most touchdowns scored by interception return 1Fewest kickoff returns game 1Fewest passing touchdowns 0 RedskinsMost kickoff returns game 7Records Set both team totals 14 Total Raiders RedskinsPoints Both TeamsMost points third quarter 20 pts 14 6Punting Both TeamsMost punts game 14 7 7Starting lineups EditSource 16 Hall of Fame Washington Position Position Los AngelesOffenseCharlie Brown WR Cliff Branch Joe Jacoby LT Bruce DavisRuss Grimm LG Charley HannahJeff Bostic C Dave DalbyMark May RG Mickey MarvinGeorge Starke RT Henry LawrenceDon Warren TE Todd ChristensenArt Monk WR Malcolm BarnwellJoe Theismann QB Jim PlunkettJohn Riggins RB Kenny KingRick Walker TE RB Marcus Allen DefenseTodd Liebenstein LE Howie Long Dave Butz LT NT Reggie KinlawDarryl Grant RT RE Lyle AlzadoDexter Manley RE LLB Ted Hendricks Mel Kaufman ILB Matt MillenNeal Olkewicz MLB ILB Bob NelsonRich Milot RLB Rod MartinDarrell Green LCB Lester HayesAnthony Washington RCB Mike Haynes Ken Coffey SS Mike DavisMark Murphy FS Vann McElroyOfficials EditReferee Gene Barth 14 first Super Bowl Umpire Gordon Wells 89 first Super Bowl Head Linesman Jerry Bergman 17 third Super Bowl XIII XVI Line Judge Bob Beeks 59 third Super Bowl XIV XVI Back Judge Ben Tompkins 52 second Super Bowl XIV Side Judge Gil Mace 90 first Super Bowl Field Judge Fritz Graf 34 fourth Super Bowl V VIII XV Alternate Referee Jim Tunney 32 worked Super Bowls VI XI XII on field Alternate Umpire Ed Fiffick 57 did not work Super Bowl on fieldReferences Edit DiNitto Marcus January 25 2015 Super Bowl Betting History Underdogs on Recent Roll The Linemakers Sporting News Archived from the original on February 4 2015 Retrieved February 4 2015 Super Bowl History Vegas Insider Retrieved February 4 2015 Super Bowl Winners NFL com Retrieved February 4 2015 a b Super Bowl TV Ratings tvbythenumbers com Archived from the original on February 8 2010 Retrieved February 20 2010 Rams surge late to defeat Cincinnati Bengals in Super Bowl LVI Los Angeles Times February 2022 Retrieved February 13 2022 a b McGinn Bob 2009 The Ultimate Super Bowl Book Minneapolis MVP Books ISBN 978 0 7603 3651 9 Super Bowl set for super numbers PDF American Radio History Broadcasting Magazine pp 102 108 Retrieved March 15 2017 a b c d Fox Larry A Raiders runaway Skins hogtied 38 9 New York Daily News Retrieved January 4 2014 Zimmerman Paul January 30 1984 A Runaway For The Raiders sportsillustrated cnn com Retrieved February 20 2010 Harvey Harvey 2002 The Super Bowl s Most Wanted The Top 10 Book of Big Game Heroes Pigskin Zeroes and Championship Oddities 1st ed Brassey s Inc p 123 ISBN 9781612340289 Super Bowl Game Time Temperatures Pro Football Hall of Fame Retrieved March 10 2018 Super Bowl XVIII boxscore NFL com Retrieved November 7 2016 a b 2016 NFL Factbook PDF NFL Archived from the original PDF on November 6 2015 Retrieved November 7 2016 a b c d Super Bowl XVIII statistics Pro Football reference com Retrieved November 6 2016 Super Bowl definitions Archived from the original on May 4 2018 Retrieved December 13 2016 Super Bowl XVIII National Football League Game Summary PDF NFLGSIS com NFL Enterprises LLC January 22 1984 Retrieved March 7 2017 External links EditSuper Bowl XVIII NFL Full Game on YouTube Super Bowl official website Box Score at PFR 2006 NFL Record and Fact Book Time Inc Home Entertainment July 25 2006 ISBN 1 933405 32 5 Total Football II The Official Encyclopedia of the National Football League Harper Collins July 25 2006 ISBN 1 933405 32 5 The Sporting News Complete Super Bowl Book 1995 ISBN 0 89204 523 X 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 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Super Bowl XVIII amp oldid 1127120536, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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