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Super Bowl III

Super Bowl III
Super Bowl III logo
1 2 3 4 Total
NYJ 0 7 6 3 16
BAL 0 0 0 7 7
Date January 12, 1969
Stadium Miami Orange Bowl, Miami, Florida
MVP Joe Namath, Quarterback
Favorite Colts by 18
Referee Tom Bell
Attendance 75,389
Future Hall of Famers
Jets: Weeb Ewbank (coach), Don Maynard, Joe Namath
Colts: Don Shula (coach), John Mackey, Johnny Unitas
Ceremonies
National anthem Lloyd Geisler of the Washington National Symphony Orchestra
Halftime show "America Thanks" with Florida A&M University band
TV in the United States
Network NBC
Announcers Curt Gowdy, Al DeRogatis and Kyle Rote
Nielsen ratings 36.0
(est. 41.66 million viewers)
Market share 71
Cost of 30-second commercial $55,000

Super Bowl III was the third AFL–NFL Championship Game in professional American football, and the first to officially bear the name "Super Bowl". The game, played on January 12, 1969, at the Orange Bowl in Miami, Florida, is regarded as one of the greatest upsets in American sports history. The heavy underdog American Football League (AFL) champion New York Jets defeated the National Football League (NFL) champion Baltimore Colts by a score of 16–7. This was the first Super Bowl victory for the AFL.

Before the start of Super Bowl III most sports writers and fans believed that AFL teams were less talented than NFL clubs, and expected the Colts to defeat the Jets by a wide margin. Baltimore posted a 13–1 record during the 1968 NFL season before defeating the Cleveland Browns, 34–0, in the 1968 NFL Championship Game. The Jets finished the 1968 AFL season at 11–3, and defeated the Oakland Raiders, 27–23, in the 1968 AFL Championship Game.

Undaunted, Jets quarterback Joe Namath made an appearance three days before the Super Bowl at the Miami Touchdown Club and brashly guaranteed a victory. His team backed up his words by controlling most of the game, and built a 16–0 lead through the fourth quarter off of a touchdown run by Matt Snell and three field goals by Jim Turner. Colts quarterback Earl Morrall threw three interceptions before being replaced by Johnny Unitas, who then led Baltimore to its only touchdown during the last few minutes of the game. Namath, who completed 17 out of 28 passes for 206 yards, was named as the Super Bowl's Most Valuable Player, despite not throwing a touchdown pass in the game or any passes at all in the fourth quarter. The Jets are the only Super Bowl team to score only one touchdown (either offensive, defensive, or special teams) and still win. Since then, the fewest number of touchdowns a Super Bowl winning team has scored is two.


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