Pack Rat wrote: Mon Feb 09, 2026 10:03 am
[b[iThe first half was boring. Probably the worst played game in Super Bowl history.
Half time theatrics were the worse I seen ever! Sort of like reading posts by juswalkingwithastickupmy@ss.[/i][/b]
so you walk around a with a STICK UP YOUR ASS? I don't, pack rat. Did you get that stick IN or ON your Dung Heap?
Worst Play? As usual, pack rat is TOTALLY CLUELESS; must be that STICK UP his BUTT that is affecting his ability to get his puny brain working correctly.
Mention a small blowout, only #20 on this list:
20) Super Bowl XII: Dallas 27, Denver 10. Get used to seeing the Denver for the next few minutes, because the Broncos are the patron saint of Super Bowl blowout victims. This time Dallas jumped out to leads of 13-0 and 20-3, and just when the Broncos had cut it to a 10-point deficit in the fourth quarter and had gotten the ball back, they turned it over and immediately gave up the game's final touchdown on a halfback pass. Down 17 with less than half of the fourth quarter left to play, the Broncos were all out of comebacks and went down quietly the rest of the way.
NOW, let's get to pack rat level of STINKERS:
1) Super Bowl XXIV: San Francisco 55, Denver 10. The late 1980s were not kind to John Elway and Co.
This beating still stands as the worst in Super Bowl history and can accurately be described as noncompetitive from moment one. Joe Montana threw a then-record five touchdown passes, Jerry Rice caught three of them and the 49ers were never threatened. Fortunately for Denver fans, John Elway's next appearance in the Super Bowl would go a little better.
2) Super Bowl XX: Chicago 46, New England 10. New England scored the game's first points on a field goal to take a 3-0 lead. That was the extent of anything positive for the Pats, as they proceeded to surrender 44 unanswered points on the way to what was, at the time, the most lopsided Super Bowl loss in history.
3) Super Bowl XXVII: Dallas 52, Buffalo 17. Participating in their third straight Super Bowl, the Bills delivered their worst performance, falling in humiliating fashion at the Rose Bowl.
4) Super Bowl XXII: Washington 42, Denver 10. The Broncos jumped out to a 10-0 lead after one quarter. Everything was going great! And then the second quarter happened. When the dust settled at halftime, Washington was up 35-10, having scored a single-quarter, Super Bowl-record 35 points. Washington rookie Timmy Smith, in an all-time, out-of-nowhere performance, tore up Denver's defense for 204 yards on 22 carries, and Doug Williams threw four second-quarter touchdown passes to win the MVP Award and become the first African-American starting quarterback to win a Super Bowl.
5) Super Bowl XXIX: San Francisco 49, San Diego 26
No one expected the Chargers to make it to this game, and they quickly set about proving that they didn't belong. San Francisco opened as a 17.5 point favorite, finished as an 18-point favorite and was out to a 42-10 lead by the middle of the third quarter. Jerry Rice caught three scores, and Steve Young threw for a Super Bowl-record six touchdowns, as San Francisco flexed its muscle throughout one of the most anticlimactic Super Bowls ever played.
and ONE More, for the pack rat to enjoy his STICK:
6. Super Bowl XLVIII: Seattle 43, Denver 8 (Seattle's FIRST win in the Super Bowl, so it is fitting to END here):
Few predicted this result, as Peyton Manning was coming off a spectacular year in which he threw an NFL-record 55 touchdown passes with just 10 interceptions. However, the game would serve not as a coronation for Manning but as a coming-out party for the Legion of Boom. Seattle's defense harassed Manning all night, including a pick-six shortly before halftime that completely deflated the Broncos. The second half was a mere formality.
BUT WAIT, there's MORE:
10. Super bowl LV: Tampa Bay 31, Kansas City 9
Not only was this game not very competitive, the fact that it wasn't close was a total surprise. If anything, most analysts expected the Chiefs to be the ones delivering a blowout. Instead,
the Buccaneers gave up the opening points on a field goal, then outscored Kansas City 31-6 the rest of the way in a completely dominant performance. Tom Brady threw three touchdowns, two of them to Rob Gronkowski, and Tampa Bay's defense thoroughly manhandled the Chiefs' offensive line and had Patrick Mahomes running for his life all night.
And there are more, HERE:
Ranking the 20 most one-sided Super Bowls
https://www.yardbarker.com/nfl/articles ... 44#slide_1
As stated near the start, pack rat is AGAIN PROVEN CLUELESS.
QED