Top 10 Worst Super Bowl teams
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1. 2008 Arizona Cardinals
This is good news for Ken Whisenhunt, who gets another two weeks to play the
"no respect" card. But as impressive as this playoff run has been, when
ranking the worst Super Bowl teams of all time, we must go on the full
resume. Being one of only two 9-7 teams ever to reach the Super Bowl speaks
for itself, but getting blown out late in the season by scores of 35-14,
48-20 and 47-7 (at New England, pictured) will get you high on the list.
2. 1979 Los Angeles Rams
Thanks to this year's Cardinals, the '79 Rams are finally not the only 9-7
team ever to reach Super Sunday. Like this year's Cards, the Rams barely
outscored their opposition (+14, compared to Arizona's +1 this season) and
profited from a poor NFC West. Unlike the Cards, the Rams had to win their
way into the playoffs and were 5-6 in mid-November at one point until a late
four-game win streak. While the NFC was the poor, outmanned conference in the
1970s, the Rams had seven other 10-win seasons sandwiching the '79 campaign,
showing they were a quality team for years, though not good enough to beat
Terry Bradshaw and the Steelers in Super Bowl XIV.
3. 1989 Denver Broncos
Denver was the unlucky Super Bowl punching bag for the dominant NFC during
the late 1980s, and no season better exhibits the era than 1989, when the
11-5 Broncos were the only 10-win team in the AFC — compared to the NFC's
seven 10-win squads. After managing to make it back to the Super Bowl, some
searching for any hope pointed to Denver's NFL-low 226 points allowed.
Analyst Terry Bradshaw saw through the mirage and boldly predicted a 55-3
whitewash. He was wrong, of course. It was 55-10.
4. 1985 New England Patriots
The 11-5 Patriots got hot at the right time, becoming just the second
wild-card team at that time to win three road games and reach the Super Bowl.
New England was a quality squad, with a strong defense led by LB Andre
Tippett (a poor man's Lawrence Taylor). But a team with a starting QB with 12
TD passes versus 17 interceptions (Tony Eason) had absolute zero chance
against the legendary 15-1 Chicago Bears, who crushed New England 46-10 in
Super Bowl XX.
5. 1986 Denver Broncos
The 11-5 Broncos were good, but a mere +51 point differential would suggest
they were only the ninth-best team in the NFL that year. It's somewhat of a
miracle that they reached the Super Bowl at all, considering Denver finished
3-4 in their last seven regular-season games and the defense was an open
wound in the final month (28+ points allowed in each of the final four
games). It took "The Drive" by John Elway, the Broncos' 98-yard game-tying
march in Cleveland in the AFC title game, to help lead the Broncos to Elway's
first Super Bowl slaughter, a 39-20 loss to the Giants.
6. 1994 San Diego Chargers
Hey, someone had to represent the AFC, right? The 11-5 Chargers, led by the
very un-legendary Stan Humphries at quarterback, squeaked by the Dolphins
(22-21) and Steelers (17-13) before being thrown to a drooling Steve Young,
San Francisco's future Hall of Fame QB who was yearning for his first ring as
a starter. The Chargers were no match for Young, whose six touchdown passes
set a Super Bowl record in the 49-26 rout.
7. 1996 New England Patriots
Bill Parcells' 11-5 Patriots were fortunate to avoid the top-seeded 13-3
Broncos in the playoffs, who fell victim to a smoking-hot Jacksonville
Jaguars team on the rise who would become one of the top AFC teams for the
ensuing few seasons. This meant the Jags had to take their passing game to
frigid Foxboro, where the Pats iced Mark Brunell and Co. Eventually, the
Patriots had to face the better conference in 1996 (the NFC had three of the
NFL's top four teams) and lost 35-21 to Green Bay in the Super Bowl.
8. 2002 Oakland Raiders
Though led by a high-powered offense and MVP Rich Gannon, the Raiders were
the beneficiary of the only non 10-win season of the Bill Belichick/Tom Brady
era in New England in 2002. The AFC was muddled, with plenty of decent teams,
but only four teams with 10+ wins and only the Raiders and Titans at 11-5.
Not many Super Bowl teams endured a four-game losing streak during their
season, either. Getting blown out in the Super Bowl by the Bucs (then
following up that debacle with six straight losing seasons) shows the Raiders
were somewhat a flash in the pan.
9. 2003 Carolina Panthers
Just like many of the Super Bowl teams on this list, the 11-5 Panthers were
good, but certainly not Super Bowl champion-worthy. They almost missed the
playoffs after a late-season three-game losing streak, but righted their ship
and shut down Philly in the NFC title games — those vaunted Eagles of Todd
Pinkston and James Thrash at wide receiver. The Panthers did give us an
exciting Super Bowl ending before losing to Tom Brady's Patriots by a late
field goal.
10. 1995 Pittsburgh Steelers
When you think of the Steelers, you think defense. These Steelers had a fun,
attacking defense, but still gave up 327 points (ninth-fewest in the NFL) —
a whole 104 more points allowed than this year's Steelers. The 11-5 Steelers
were one of only three AFC teams to register double digits in wins back in
1995, the infancy of free agency, when it was the Cowboys and 49ers — and
everyone else. Alas, Pittsburgh gave it a good run in Super Bowl XXX — even
leading Dallas during the fourth quarter — but two phantom interceptions
thrown by Neil O'Donnell to Super Bowl MVP Larry Brown (who just happened to
be the only one around the ball) gave Dallas a 27-17 win.
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