The Commercial Appeal

The best teams that fell short of Super Bowl

- Nate Davis

We’re a week away from the NFL crowning its 57th Super Bowl champion, obviously rarefied air considerin­g the immortal teams that have accomplish­ed it ... and also while ruminating on some of those that fell short on Super Sunday or fell short of Super Sunday entirely.

And that leads you to veer into some thought-proving “what if” territory, specifical­ly when pondering which are the best single-season teams that didn’t qualify for the big game. It’s an exercise in reminiscen­ce and appreciati­on for some fantastic squads that have faded over time yet may trigger melancholy for fans who haven’t forgotten. So, regarding the Super Bowl era, which began in 1966, these are the teams I rank as the 12 best (listed in ascending order) which didn’t earn their opportunit­y to play for the Lombardi Trophy:

12. 1968 Dallas Cowboys (lost divisional round)

Probably the most dominant regularsea­son team in franchise history, their margin of victory in the regular season exceeded three touchdowns. But a topranked offense that averaged 31 points during the season only managed 20 in a one-and-done postseason defeat to the Cleveland Browns.

11. 2011 Green Bay Packers (lost divisional round)

QB Aaron Rodgers reached fullblown superstard­om in his first MVP season, leading the defending champions to a 13-0 start. But after a franchiseb­est 15-1 regular season, Green Bay lost at Lambeau Field in a 37-20 playoff flameout against the New York Giants.

10. 2006 San Diego Chargers (lost divisional round)

MVP Ladainian Tomlinson led the Bolts to a franchise record 14-2 regular season, LT piling up a single-season record 31 TDS. But the ride ended in frustratio­n with a playoff loss to the Patriots, Tomlinson angrily storming off the

turf feeling New England players disrespect­fully celebrated on the Chargers’ midfield logo ... and probably equally peeved about S Marlon Mccree’s boneheaded fumble after intercepti­ng Tom Brady on fourth-and-5 midway through the fourth quarter.

9. 1975 Minnesota Vikings (lost divisional round)

Perhaps league MVP Fran Tarkenton’s best team, the Vikes started 10-0 on their way to the NFC Central title. But the “Purple People Eaters” exited the playoffs in jaw-dropping fashion, victimized by Staubach’s famous 50-yard “Hail Mary” TD to Drew Pearson in subfreezin­g temperatur­es at Minnesota’s old Metropolit­an Stadium.

8. 2011 New Orleans Saints (lost divisional round)

QB Drew Brees fired off 46 TD passes and a then-record 5,476 passing yards for, by the numbers anyway, what was New Orleans’ best team (franchise-record 547 points and 208-point differenti­al to go with 13-3 ledger). The club was largely overshadow­ed by the 15-1 Packers in 2011 but had a much better— if more heartbreak­ing — postseason, losing a 36-32 barnburner at San Francisco’s Candlestic­k Park. TE Vernon Davis snagged the game-winning TD pass from Alex Smith with 9 seconds left.

7. 1968 Oakland Raiders (lost AFL championsh­ip game)

Statistica­lly, the reigning AFL champs stacked up better when compared to the famed ‘68 Jets, whom Oakland beat that year in the infamous “Heidi Game.” But unlike New York, the Raiders were forced to endure a Western Division playoff against a stout Chiefs team. Namath and Co. eked out the playoff rematch with the Raiders at Shea Stadium the following Sunday before pulling off their legendary Super Bowl stunner over the heavily favored Baltimore Colts.

6. 2005 Indianapol­is Colts (lost divisional round)

This had the look of a history-making squad after its dominant 13-0 start. The Colts’ 14 wins and +192 point differenti­al represent the heights of their tenure in Indianapol­is and peak regular-season performanc­e during the Peyton Manning era. But Indy lost three of its final four — coach Tony Dungy’s son committed suicide during that stretch — the final blow coming when K Mike Vanderjagt shanked a game-tying field-goal attempt in the final seconds of a 21-18 home playoff loss to Pittsburgh.

5. 2012 New England Patriots (lost AFC championsh­ip game)

Only New England’s ‘07 team — the one that went 16-0 in the regular season – had a higher point differenti­al in franchise history than this group, which outscored the opposition by 226 points. But Brady and Co. got their doors blown off 28-13 at home in an AFC title rematch against the Ravens.

4. 2019 Baltimore Ravens (lost divisional round)

Easily the greatest regular-season edition of a franchise that’s almost always in playoff contention, the AFC’S top-seeded team featured a record 13 Pro Bowlers and won a club record 14 games with a margin of victory averaging nearly three TDS. Led by league MVP

Lamar Jackson – he rushed for 1,206 yards, a record among quarterbac­ks, and passed for 36 TDS — Baltimore racked up an NFL single-season record 3,296 rushing yards and ended the season on a 12-game winning streak. But it all went up in smoke in the playoff opener, when Baltimore was stunned 28-12 by the wild card Titans.

3. 1992 San Francisco 49ers (lost NFC championsh­ip game)

With legendary QB Joe Montana mothballed, Steve Young finally blossomed— throwing a league-high 25 TDS while earning his first league MVP award and leading the Niners to a 14-2 finish. Probably the best San Francisco team not to win the Super Bowl after coming up short against the “Triplets” Cowboys for the NFC crown.

2. 1976 Pittsburgh Steelers (lost AFC championsh­ip game)

There’s never been a Super Bowl three-peat, but they almost pulled it off despite losing QB Terry Bradshaw for a chunk of the season and, worse, seeing both their 1,000-yard rushers (Franco Harris and Rocky Bleier) injured in the divisional round of the playoffs. Still, an argument to be made that this was the best team of the Steel Curtain era, the defense blanking five opponents and allowing fewer than 10 points per game.

1. 1998 Vikings (lost NFC championsh­ip game)

They went 15-1 in the regular season, posted a then-record 556 points and struck fear into opponents with Hall of Fame WRS Cris Carter and Randy Moss — then a breakout rookie — catching passes from All-pro QB Randall Cunningham. However, All-pro K Gary Anderson’s infamous wayward FG, the only kick he missed all season, opened the door for an Atlanta Falcons’ overtime upset in the NFC title game. The Vikes’ loss aborted what projected as one of the all-time championsh­ip matchups against the Denver Broncos, who rolled over the Falcons in Super Bowl 33 to successful­ly defend their crown in QB John Elway’s final game.

 ?? AP ?? Ravens QB Lamar Jackson and Bills counterpar­t Josh Allen have led great teams but none that have reached the Super Bowl.
AP Ravens QB Lamar Jackson and Bills counterpar­t Josh Allen have led great teams but none that have reached the Super Bowl.

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