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Sunday, May 12
The Indiana Daily Student

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Giant Upset: New York ends New England's hopes for a perfect season

APTOPIX Super Bowl Football

Oh well, nobody’s perfect. Except maybe Eli Manning.\nA masterful magician when the stakes were highest, Manning engineered one of the best drives in Super Bowl history Sunday to help the New York Giants squash the New England Patriots’ run at history-making perfection with a 17-14 victory.\nIn a game, and a finish, that showed precisely how the Super Bowl has become America’s favorite spectacle, Manning led the Giants 83 yards in just more than two minutes. He capped it with a 13-yard touchdown pass to Plaxico Burress with 35 seconds left, to win what easily could go down as the best Super Bowl ever.\n“The greatest victory in the history of this franchise, without a question,” said owner John Mara.\nIt was a scintillating closing chapter to a crazy week that seemed to have everything: the perfect team; the upstart underdogs; the cover boy quarterback; the kid brother in Manning.\nAmerica loves an underdog, and the Giants, with their stirring victory, etched themselves as one of the best this game– or any sport – has ever seen.\nThe star was Manning, the scruffy younger brother of Peyton, who won his own Super Bowl last year, and sat in the corner of a skybox for this one, squirming and agonizing over every play.\nNow both Mannings have a championship and Tom Brady — well, he’s still got the looks, the supermodel girlfriend, Gisele Bundchen, and three Super Bowl titles of his own, even though he didn’t come out on top this time.\nIt means New England finishes 18-1 and the 1972 Miami Dolphins remain the only team to go undefeated from the start of the season through the Super Bowl.\nFormer Dolphins coach, Don Shula, was on hand, ready to congratulate the Patriots had they finished 19-0. Instead, he figured to be sipping champagne, continuing a tradition the Dolphins have enjoyed every year when the last undefeated team finally gets its first loss.\nThey remain alone thanks to Manning, whose 13-yard game-winner came four plays after he somehow escaped a cadre of Patriots engulfing him, threw the ball up for grabs and watched receiver David Tyree somehow pin it between his hands and his helmet for the 32-yard reception.\nThat kept the drive going, and it will be Manning’s mastery that everyone remembers – not the coolly efficient 80-yard touchdown drive that Brady had completed only moments earlier.\nThis game was such a back-and-forth stomach-turner that it seems a sure bet to break the record for Super Bowl viewership (94.08 million) and give the advertisers their money’s worth on the $2.7 million they spent for each 30-second spot.\nIt might even force the watercooler conversation Monday to be about football, not commercials or halftime shows.\nIt was a tight, taut defensive battle for three-plus quarters – yet anything but boring.\nThen it was taken over by two quarterbacks – one already a star, the other yearning to escape the shadow his big brother has cast over the family, and the sport, for many years now.\nEli said it was flattering being compared to his older brother Peyton because “he’s at the top of his game, and I’m still trying to get my game up to his level.”\nHe’s there now, capping a four-week stretch of nearly flawless playoff football during which the Giants were underdogs in every game they played, but won them all.

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