Colts Topple Bears in Soggy Super Bowl XLI
This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.

MIAMI — Purple rain at the Super Bowl. Golden memories for Peyton Manning and the Indianapolis Colts.
In a sloppy, exciting, rainsoaked NFL title game yesterday, the Colts defeated the Bears 29–17 behind 247 yards passing from Manning, the star quarterback who finally won the big one after nine record-setting seasons that were missing very little besides a championship.
It was a surreal scene for the NFL’s showcase game, played indoors or in perfect weather for almost all of the previous 40 years, but not this time.
In a good ol’-fashioned South Florida soaker — the first Super Bowl to be played in the rain — the football squirted loose and bounced all over the waterlogged field. It resulted in eight turnovers, including two late interceptions thrown by Chicago’s Rex Grossman that sealed the game for Indy.
At halftime, Prince took to the stage and sang through the deluge — the violet stage lights shining into the storm to make the perfect setting for his hit finale, “Purple Rain.”
When the crazy evening was over, the Colts had brought the first NFL title back to Indianapolis since their late owner, Robert Irsay, relocated them there in 1984. Manning finally broke through. And the game and entire week served as proof that nice guys don’t always finish last.
The sight of Manning, the solid citizen, and his soft-spoken coach, Tony Dungy, soaking up the rain — along with the confetti and the hugs — at the end was a moment to remember. Thus ended a historic meeting between Dungy and Lovie Smith of the Bears, the first black head coaches to lead teams to the Super Bowl.
They also made it notable by the way they conducted themselves — two quiet, churchgoing, kindhearted men who proved they could succeed and lead without shouting, intimidating, bullying or humiliating players to do it.
“I really wanted to show people that you can win all kinds of ways,” Dungy said in the leadup to yesterday’s game. “It’s a good thing to see guys have success when it maybe goes against the grain, against the culture.”
Very little about this game went by the book.
It started with a 92-yard kickoff return by Chicago’s Devin Hester for a 7–0 lead 14 seconds into the game. As the evening went on and the rain picked up, the conditions made this look less like a meeting between the league’s best teams and more like a survive-the-elements contest.
The Colts proved to be much better. Manning threw a 53-yard touchdown pass to Reggie Wayne and finished 25–for–38 for a touchdown and an interception. He led the Colts on three drives that ended in Adam Vinatieri field goals. The Colts dominated the game statistically— gaining 430 yards to only 265 for Chicago — but didn’t put it away until early in the fourth quarter, when secondyear cornerback Kelvin Hayden intercepted Grossman’s pass and returned it 56 yards for a touchdown and a 29–17 lead.
Manning certainly will have plenty of good memories from this one, a game in which he picked and poked through the rain and the Bears to win the title that eluded he and his famous father, Archie, for all those years.
Meanwhile, Dungy began his celebration with a traditional ride to midfield on the shoulders of his players, then shared a long embrace with his good friend Smith to close out their week in the spotlight.
They knew coming in one would have to lose and the other would be the first black to coach his team to a Super Bowl win. But they insisted their friendship would withstand the strains of the Super Bowl spotlight.
“On this big stage, I wouldn’t want anybody else to be there other than Lovie because I have so much respect for him and he’s done such a great job,” Dungy said before the game.
While the teams battled the elements, most of America enjoyed this one from the comfort of living rooms and bars across the country. Around 140 million were expected to tune in to what is traditionally America’s most-viewed TV show — many watching as much for the game as for the commercials, the halftime show and the rest of what has become the country’s biggest unofficial holiday.
Highlights on TV included a commercial written by a fan, who beat out 10,000 other entrants in a contest seeking the best idea. It featured melancholy clips of football fans packing away their gear at the end of the season.
Another featured Kevin Federline, recently estranged from Britney Spears, poking fun at himself in an insurance commercial. And yes, that was David Letterman and Oprah Winfrey snuggling on a couch.

