|
AMERICA'S BEST-SELLING
Click here for more info. KUBIAK UPDATE
|
» Printable version
Guest Column: Was Super Bowl XXXVIII the Greatest of All Time?Guest Column by Vincent Verhei
— Peter King, SI.com, Feb. 2, 2004. So there’s one man’s opinion as to the best Super Bowl ever. Others will cite the Patriots’ other win over the Rams in SB XXXVI. Personally, I’ll always remember The Rams’ victory over the Titans in SB XXXIV, and Mike Jones tackling Kevin Dyson one… yard… short. We could argue about which Super Bowl was the most exciting all day long, but we’d never reach a satisfying conclusion. After all, you can’t come up with a way to measure the excitement of a football game… can you? Well, as a firm believer that anything can be quantified, I set out to attempt to measure the excitement level of a football game. While some fans may love high scoring games, or lots of passing, others (like me) love to watch solid defense and running. So I didn’t want to look at styles of play. I decided there were three elements to any exciting football game: • A close finish. Obviously, a game that comes down to the final play is more exciting than one that’s over by halftime. • A big comeback. Is there anything better than watching a team struggle against its opponents and the clock, and pulling it out? • A close game throughout. This may seem somewhat contrary to a big comeback, but a game in which neither team can build a big lead is a game that never gives fans a chance to catch a break. Before I explain my methods, I’d like to give any non-math types a chance to skip four paragraphs down and get to the results. Now, how to measure these factors? The close finish was easy: I simply used the game’s final margin. In case of overtime, I set the “final margin” to 0. (Obviously, there has never been an overtime Super Bowl, but I wanted my system to work for any football game, Super Bowl or otherwise.) The closest margin in any Super Bowl was in SB XXV, when the Giants beat the Bills by a single point, 20-19. The widest margin came in the 49er’s 55-10 blowout of the Broncos the year before in SB XXIV, a 45-point margin. The comeback factor is slightly trickier. Suppose a team falls behind by 10 in the first quarter, then roars back and wins by 32, as Washington did against Denver in SB XXII. Technically Washington came back from a 10-point deficit, but that comeback was overwhelmed by the offensive onslaught later in the game. I decided to measure comebacks by taking the largest lead in the game, at any point, and subtracting the final margin. The biggest “comeback score” for any Super Bowl came in SB XVI, when the Bengals fell behind the 49ers 20-0, then came flying back, only to lose 26-21. To measure whether a game was close throughout or not, I use a metric I call “average margin.” I weight each score of the game by the amount of time that score was in effect. I total these products, and divide by 60 (or the total time of the game in the case of overtime games). For example, suppose a game is scoreless for 30 minutes, then the home team kicks a field goal as the final gun of the first half sounds, and there is no scoring in the second half. This game was scoreless for 30 minutes (30 X 0 = 0) and there was a 3-point lead for 30 minutes (30 X 3 = 90). Totaling those two figures (0 + 90 = 90) and then dividing by 60 gives us an average margin of 1.5, which I then round up to 2. That’s a very low figure, which demonstrates that neither team was ever more than one play out of the game. The highest average margin in Super Bowl history came, again, in SBXXIV, when the 49ers jumped ahead early and never looked back. The record for lowest average margin in Super Bowl history was actually broken this year; the average margin of SB XXXVIII was a mere 2 points. Now it’s time to put it all together. I give each game a base score of 100. I subtract the average margin. Then I subtract the final margin. Finally, I add the game’s “comeback factor.” I call this total, for lack of a better term, the excitement factor. I’ll list the top five games with brief comments, then list the rest: MOST EXCITING SUPER BOWL EVER: SB XIII, Pittsburgh 35, Dallas 31 — Excitement factor: 105. Often overlooked in the great games discussion, possibly because it occurred before the Super Bowl was the international event it is today. Terry Bradshaw passed for 318 yards and 4 touchdowns, but it was nearly all for naught as Roger Staubach threw 2 touchdowns in the final three minutes before running out of time. 2. SB XXV, New York Giants 20, Buffalo 19 — Excitement factor: 104. This game had two things going for it that go unaccounted for in my ratings. At the time, it appeared to be a huge upset. Given the benefit of hindsight, I’m not so sure it was. More importantly, the game took place at the peak of the first Gulf War, and patriotic fervor was running wild. I’m sure we all remember Scott Norwood’s 47-yard field goal falling just to the right. 3. SB XXXVIII, New England 32, Carolina 29 — Excitement factor: 103. The system says Peter King was wrong. Now, if Vinatieri had missed that kick… 4. SB XXXVI, New England 20, St. Louis 17 — Excitement factor: 102. I’d imagine the average hair color in the Boston area has gotten a lot grayer in the past three years. 5. SB XVI, San Francisco 26, Cincinnati 21 — Excitement factor: 101. This was the first one, with Ken Anderson vs. Joe Montana. As noted above, the 49ers were ahead 20-0 at halftime (including two field goals in the last fifteen seconds) then holding the Bengals off to win. And the rest:
Obviously, the system isn’t perfect, but I think it does a great job of putting the good games on top and the bad games on bottom. I am pleased. No Comments »No comments yet. RSS feed for comments on this post. Leave a commentYour names and email address are required --- it's part of an effort to reduce comment spam -- but your email address won't be displayed. If you create a comment, but it doesn't display, that's probably because it didn't pass through our spam filter (make any references to erectile dysfunction medication?), and is living in Comment Limbo Land. Please don't try to post it 14 more times -- try again once, and if it doesn't go through, then send an email to webmaster-at-footballoutsiders.com and let us know. Mentions of ED drugs, poker games, and anything you get email spam about will likely cause your comment to be held for moderation. Please respect our discussion threads by refraining from the following:
Such comments may be deleted. If you want to reference a link, put it in the URI field (go Rams!). Please don't put the 'less than' sign in the comment text -- it's seen as the beginning of an HTML tag, and that just messes everything up. Line and paragraph breaks are automatic, HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong> |
| ©2003-2008 Football Outsiders, Inc. All rights reserved. || Site enriched by B:COMPLEX Creative and Built for the Future || A Penvelope Kravitz Production. |






