DVD Transfer 7 (Super Bowl XXII)
Movies Preview
Share or Embed This Item
movies
DVD Transfer 7 (Super Bowl XXII)
- Publication date
- 1988-01-31
(c)1988 National Football League; ABC Sports-ABC/Disney; WVEC-Tegna
Super Bowl XXII pitting the Washington Redskins against the Denver Broncos at Jack Murphy Stadium in San Diego, CA. The Redskins, following a 35 point 2nd quarter explosion after trailing 10-0 at the end of the 1st quarter, went on to win 42-10. Commercials, halftime show and most of the postgame show are included.
NOTES
1. Copy from an uncle containing the game, entire halftime (my parents' recording had a partial halftime recording); part of the postgame show (my parents' tape had almost the entire postgame show and some pregame segments; though missing parts of the 3rd quarter)
2. Redskins QB Doug Williams (whose career saw him bounced from Tampa Bay by cheapskate founder Hugh Culverhouse and a stint with the USFL's Oklahoma Outlaws and backing up Jay Schroeder) became the first (and until Russell Wilson in Super Bowl XLVIII, only) black quarterback to start a Super Bowl, something which garnered much media attention leading up to the game
3. First of three Super Bowls called by the 1987-97 Monday Night Football team of Al Michaels, Frank Gifford and Dan Dierdorf (Dierdorf in his first season on MNF after leaving CBS); with ABC's legendary college football broadcaster Keith Jackson hosting pregame coverage alongside the coaches of the teams who lost the respective conference championship games: Cleveland Browns head coach Marty Schottenheimer and Minnesota Vikings head coach Jerry Burns while also hosting the Lombardi Trophy presentation; Bob Griese (a pre-recorded piece; as Griese's wife was seriously ill and eventually died not long afterwards); Mike Adamle (who covered the previous Redskins' Super Bowl victory in game XVII when he worked for NBC); Lynn Swann (Broncos locker room); Jack Whitaker and Becky Dixon (not seen) National anthem performance by Herb Alpert (on trumpet; this remains as of 2020 the last non-vocal performance of the Star-Spangled Banner)
4. Halftime entertainment featured the Radio City Rockettes and Chubby Checker
5. With Jack Whitaker's death in 2019 (Whitaker, an essayist doing a piece on Super Bowl rings for this game, was the play-by-play broadcaster for the 2nd half of Super Bowl I on CBS); Michaels is currently the earliest living network television broadcaster to call a Super Bowl (this was his first; as ABC's first Super Bowl, game XIX, had him hosting alongside Jim Lampley – Frank Gifford, who called play-by-play on Monday Night Football from 1971-85, called that game)
6. Coin toss performed by legendary 1930s-1940s Green Bay Packers receiver Don Hutson (the game's date, January 31, 1988, also was Hutson's 75th birthday)
7. Regarding the halftime show; appropriately considering the significance of Doug Williams' start, this marked the debut of the first black member of the Radio City Rockettes in Jennifer Jones
8. The 35-point 2nd quarter remains the most ever scored in any quarter in a Super Bowl; while the 10-point deficit would remain the largest ever overcome in a Super Bowl until game LI; when the Atlanta Falcons infamously blew a 28-3 3rd quarter lead over the New England Patriots en route to the Patriots winning 34-28 in the first Super Bowl ever to go into overtime
9. A significant number of records were set during the game; as Doug Williams won MVP honors after throwing for 340 years (breaking Joe Montana's record of 331 yards 3 years earlier; Montana would break the record by throwing for 357 yards the following year; the record is currently held by Tom Brady, who threw for 505 yards in a losing effort in Super Bowl LII) and a record-tying 4 touchdowns (shared with Terry Bradshaw in Super Bowl XIII; Montana threw 5 2 years later before his 49ers successor Steve Young threw for the standing record of 6 touchdown passes in game XXIX) vs. 1 interception. Additionally; rookie running back Timmy Smith got his lone moment in the sun, running for a still-record 204 yards and 2 touchdowns, while receiver Ricky Sanders finished with 2 touchdowns and broke Lynn Swann's Super Bowl X record of 161 receiving yards, finishing with 193 yards – including a then-record-tying 80 yard touchdown catch early in the 2nd quarter to start Washington's comeback (Jerry Rice broke that record with 215 the following year) as well as most all-purpose yards with 235 (currently held by Jacoby Jones, who finished with 290 total yards in Super Bowl XLVII 25 years later); kicker Ali Haji-Sheikh kicking a record 6 extra-points (three kickers {Mike Cofer; Lin Elliott and Doug Brien} share the record with 7, all except Cofer being perfect for the day) while the Redskins finished with 603 yards, a record that stood until the Patriots finished with 613 yards in Super Bowl LII (that game ending with a combined 1151 total yards for both teams, a record for any game)
- Addeddate
- 2020-06-27 02:31:45
- Closed captioning
- yes
- Color
- color
- Identifier
- dvd-transfer-7-super-bowl-xxii
- Scanner
- Internet Archive HTML5 Uploader 1.6.4
- Sound
- sound
- Year
- 1988
comment
Reviews
Reviewer:
Markasflood89
-
favoritefavoritefavoritefavoritefavorite -
May 5, 2021
Subject: Markasflood89
Subject: Markasflood89
Got any 1991 Footage From WTVZ FOX 33
2,022 Views
10 Favorites
DOWNLOAD OPTIONS
H.264
Uplevel BACK
360.2M
VTS_01_1.mp4 download
361.6M
VTS_01_2.mp4 download
361.3M
VTS_01_3.mp4 download
360.5M
VTS_01_4.mp4 download
117.1M
VTS_01_5.mp4 download
MPEG2
Uplevel BACK
90.0K
VIDEO_TS.VOB download
1,024.0M
VTS_01_1.VOB download
1,024.0M
VTS_01_2.VOB download
1,024.0M
VTS_01_3.VOB download
1,024.0M
VTS_01_4.VOB download
329.1M
VTS_01_5.VOB download
IN COLLECTIONS
Classic TV CommercialsUploaded by Hampton Roads TV Fan on