Super Bowl 50 Notes and Records
Super Bowl 50 Notes and Records

With their victory in Super Bowl 50, the Broncos are the ninth franchise to win as many as three Super Bowl championships. This was the eighth Super Bowl appearance for the Broncos, matching the record also shared by the Patriots, Steelers and Cowboys.

Von Miller

The second overall pick in the 2011 NFL draft, Miller became the 10th defensive player in Super Bowl history to be selected as the Super Bowl MVP by harassing the first overall pick in that draft, quarterback Cam Newton of the Panthers.

Miller had 2.5 sacks, 6 total tackles, 2 forced fumbles, 2 hurries and a pass defensed.

The other three linebackers to be chosen Super Bowl MVP are Chuck Howley of the Cowboys (Super Bowl V), Ray Lewis of the Ravens (Super Bowl XXXV) and Malcolm Smith of the Seahawks (Super Bowl XLVIII).

Super Bowl 50 Records Set And Tied
Compiled By Elias Sports Bureau

​Super Bowl Records Set in Super Bowl 50

Oldest Quarterback To Start -- 39, Peyton Manning

Oldest Quarterback To Win -- 39, Peyton Manning

Longest Punt Return -- 61 yards, Jordan Norwood

Most Times Sacked, Game, Both Teams -- 12, Carolina vs. Denver

Fewest Total Yards, Game, Winning Team -- 194, Denver

Super Bowl Records Tied In Super Bowl 50

Most Sacks, Game (Since 1982) -- 3, Kony Ealy

Most Fumble Recoveries, Game -- 2, Danny Trevathan

Most Touchdowns, Fumble Recoveries, Game -- 1, Malik Jackson

Most Two-Point Conversions, Game -- 1, Bennie Fowler

Most Games, Team -- 8, Denver

Super Bowl 50 Notes and Records
Peyton Manning

Peyton Manning

With his victory in Super Bowl 50, Peyton Manning, at age 39, becomes the oldest starting quarterback to win a Super Bowl. He eclipses the previous record held by Broncos GM John Elway who was 38 when he won Super Bowl XXXIII to complete the 1998 season.

Manning is also the first quarterback to start and win Super Bowls for two different teams. He also won Super Bowl XLI (2006 season) for the Indianapolis Colts. He is the third quarterback to start for two teams, joining Kurt Warner (Rams, Cardinals) and Craig Morton (Cowboys, Broncos).

With the win, Manning became the first NFL quarterback with 200 career wins (186 regular season and 14 postseason). He had been tied with Brett Favre, a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2016, with 199.

Records

The 61-yard punt return of Jordan Norwood in the second quarter was the longest in Super Bowl history. John Taylor of the 49ers had held the mark since Super Bowl XXIII with a return of 45 yards.

The Broncos tied the Super Bowl record by recording seven sacks. It was officially set by the Bears in Super Bowl XX (1985 season) but the Steelers are also credited with seven sacks in Super Bowl X (1975 season) before sacks became an official statistic in 1982.

Although it was the Broncos with seven sacks, it was a member of the Panthers, Kony Ealy, who tied the individual sack record with three sacks. He now shares the mark with Reggie White of the Packers in Super Bowl XXXI and Darnell Dockett of the Cardinals in Super Bowl XLIII.

Ealy also became the first player in Super Bowl history to record multiple sacks and an interception in the same game. He is the first player since Leslie O'Neal of the Chargers (1/2/93 vs. Kansas City) with multiple sacks, an interception and a forced fumble in a postseason game.

Notes

With Denver`s Super Bowl 50 win, the teams wearing white jerseys have won 11 of the last 12 Super Bowl games. It is a run that began with the Patriots win over the Eagles in Super Bowl XXXIX (the Packers in Super Bowl XLV are the exception).

Teams scoring first are now 34-16 in the Super Bowl as the Broncos started the scoring with a field goal.

Denver's victory cuts the NFC's lead in Super Bowl play to 26-24.

The Panthers had trailed at halftime only twice in 18 previous games this season, and on both previous occasions by just three points. The six-point halftime deficit was their biggest of the year.

The Broncos set an NFL record (for an extended season) with 11 wins by 7 or fewer points. Their 14-point margin in Super Bowl 50 equaled their second-largest of the season (vs. Green Bay +19, at San Diego +14).

Broncos Notes

The Broncos gained only 194 yards in Super Bowl 50, the fewest for a victorious team in a Super Bowl. The previous low was 244 yards by the Ravens in their win over the Giants in Super Bowl XXXV.

The Broncos are the sixth team to win a Super Bowl without throwing a touchdown pass. The Broncos, in Super Bowl XXXII, the first of John Elway's two Super Bowl champions, were the last team to do so.

Peyton Manning's 141 passing yards represent the second-lowest total of his 27 postseason games. He had 137 in a loss for Indianapolis to the Jets in a Wild Card game on January 4, 2003.

Manning's final numbers for this postseason -- 51 of 92 (55.4%), 2 TDs, 1 INT, 75.4 passer rating.

If this is the final postseason game of for Manning, Peyton will end it second to Tom Brady (7,957) in career postseason passing yards with 7,339. Manning is also second to Brady with 649 postseason completions and 1,027 pass attempts. He is 4th behind Brady, Joe Montana and Brett Favre with 40 passing TDs.

Manning wins his second Super Bowl championship nine years after his first for the Colts in Super Bowl XLI. Only Tom Brady, XXXIX and XLIX, had a longer gap as a QB with 11 years.

Von Miller was the first player drafted by John Elway when he became Executive VP of Football Operations in 2011 (now Exec VP of Football Ops/GM).

Elway is the first Super Bowl-winning QB to also win a Super Bowl ring as a GM.

Gary Kubiak

Kubiak is the first coach to win a Super Bowl for the same team for which he was rostered as a player in the Super Bowl. He joins Tom Flores (Raiders) and Mike Ditka (Bears) as the third coach to win the Super Bowl as a head coach for a team he played for.

Kubiak became the fourth coach to win a Super Bowl in his first year as the head coach of that team. The most recent was Jon Gruden of the Buccaneers in Super Bowl XXXVIII. The others are Don McCaffrey of the Colts in Super Bowl V and George Seifert of the 49ers (over the Broncos) in Super Bowl XXIV.

Panthers Notes

The Panthers were held to 10 points, their lowest total of a season in which they led the NFL in scoring. They had reached 20 points in all but one of their 18 games (13 in their lone regular season loss to Atlanta in Week 16).

The seven sacks suffered by the Panthers in Super Bowl 50 (six of Cam Newton, one of Ted Ginn, Jr.) were the most they had allowed this season. So, too, were the four turnovers.

The Panthers did extend their streak of consecutive games with 100+ yards rushing to 32 (regular season plus postseason).

The Panthers failed in their bid to join the 49ers (Super Bowl XXI) and Bears (Super Bowl XX) as teams that won the Super Bowl with an 18-1 record. The Patriots in the 2007 season, also ended with an 18-1 record after their loss in Super Bowl XLII. The Panthers are one of eight teams to go 17-2, plus the 17-0 1972 Miami Dolphins.

Super Bowl 50 Notes and Records
Super Bowl 50 MVP Von Miller

Von Miller Named Super Bowl 50 MVP

Denver Broncos linebacker Von Miller was voted the winner of the Pete Rozelle Trophy, awarded to the Super Bowl 50 Most Valuable Player.

This marks the tenth time in Super Bowl history that a defensive player has been named Most Valuable Player. Linebacker Malcolm Smith of the Seattle Seahawks in Super Bowl XLVIII was the last defensive player to receive the honor.

The award is chosen by a panel of 16, comprised of members of the Pro Football Writers Association of America, selected members of the broadcast media and by fans interactively through the National Football League's official website, NFL.com.

Miller led a Broncos defense that recorded seven sacks, posting six tackles, two and half sacks, two forced fumbles, one pass defensed and two quarterback hits.

Miller, a fifth-year player from Texas A&M, helped force two turnovers that were instrumental in setting up both Denver touchdowns. His first-quarter sack forced a fumble that was recovered by defensive end MALIK JACKSON in the end zone for a touchdown to the give the Broncos a 10-0 lead. Miller's second full sack of the game came in the fourth quarter and forced another fumble that was recovered at the Carolina nine-yard line by safety T.J. WARD. Four plays later, Broncos running back C.J. ANDERSON ran for a two-yard score to seal the Broncos 24-10 win.

 

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