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  Sunday, Jan. 30 6:25pm ET
Warner-ful finish! Rams hold off Titans
 
  RECAP | BOX SCORE

ATLANTA (AP) -- A game of yards -- hundreds of yards -- came down to mere inches for the St. Louis Rams in Super Bowl XXXIV.

Kevin Dyson
Titans receiver Kevin Dyson came up short as he tried to stretch the ball to the end zone on the game's final play.
The result was a 23-16 victory Sunday night for Kurt Warner, Dick Vermeil and the Rams that six months ago seemed no more than a dream after a 4-12 season.

Warner's 73-yard touchdown pass to Isaac Bruce with 1:54 left accounted for the winning score, 16 seconds after Al Del Greco's field goal brought the Tennessee Titans back from a 16-0 deficit.

But it took Mike Jones' tackle of Kevin Dyson at the 1-yard line on the game's final play to finally give St. Louis its win in one of the most thrilling Super Bowl finishes ever.

Dyson was left sprawled on the ground in Jones' arms, stretching the ball toward the goal line in vain. So, a team known for its high-powered offense won its first Super Bowl with the most memorable of defensive plays.

Warner passed for a Super Bowl record 414 yards and was voted MVP, capping a season that began with him fighting for a backup job and ended with him as the NFL's MVP.

"Kurt Warner is Kurt Warner, and it's not a fairy tale," Vermeil said. "He is a book. He is a movie."

Added Warner: "You may think of this as a Hollywood story, but it's just my life."

But he almost had to rewrite the script after the Titans scored on three consecutive drives to tie the score at 16-16.

Tennessee's comeback was engineered by Steve McNair and Eddie George. But it was Dyson who almost pulled off his second miracle finish in four weeks, coming up just short of the tying touchdown after taking a look-in pass from McNair at the 5 and scrambling for the end zone.

Why the Rams won:

1. Explosive offense. The Rams used all their weapons and their ability to throw down the field, which they did at will. That is why they won the game.

2. Tough throw. Kurt Warner got stuck in the mouth by Jevon Kearse on the touchdown pass to Isaac Bruce. That is the true test of a great quarterback.

3. Bruce is big. Not only did Warner do a great job just releasing the ball, but Bruce made a great adjustment to the ball. The Rams have been making big plays like that all season.

Why the Titans lost:

1. The last play. I don't know if there's another reason Tennessee lost except that Kevin Dyson couldn't break a tackle and make it the final yard on the last play of the game. The Titans had a receiver on a linebacker, and Mike Jones deserves the credit for making a great play.

2. The clock. Credit the coaches for sticking to the offensive game plan, even when they were down 16-0. The Titans ran the ball and stayed balance, doing the things that got them to the Super Bowl. Time just ran out on Tennessee.

3. No big plays. The Titans didn't create enough plays on offense or defense. The Rams could strike with one play, but the Titans needed time to work the ball down the field and score points. On defense, the Titans sacked Warner only once and allowed him to throw for 414 yards.

"I thought we could do it, but we came up about six inches from having a chance to do it," Titans coach Jeff Fisher said. "As much as this hurts, we have an awful lot of pride in coming so close."

Dyson was the man at the end of the "Music City Miracle," Tennessee's 22-16 victory over Buffalo in an AFC wild-card game, taking a lateral from Frank Wycheck and returning it 75 yards for the winning touchdown with three seconds left.

"I thought he was going to get in," McNair said. "But you've got great athletes on both sides of the ball, and they made the play. It was a matter of who won the one-on-one battle, and they won it."

Jones said: "The name of the game is to get the man on the ground. They won the wild-card game with a big play, and we knew they'd come roaring back. We just made the big play at the end. You get tired chasing Steve McNair and making plays."

It was the first NFL title for the Rams since 1951 and the first football title ever for St. Louis, which lost the Cardinals after the 1987 season but gained the Rams from Los Angeles in 1995.

It not only capped an improbable season for the team but also for Warner, who played in the Arena League and NFL Europe and was left unprotected in the expansion draft last spring. He got the starting job when free agent Trent Green was hurt and went on to win the NFL MVP and throw 41 touchdown passes, only the second quarterback in NFL history to surpass 40.

It was also a triumph for Vermeil, 63, who was out of football for 14 years before joining the Rams in 1997. He had lost the Super Bowl in 1981 as coach of the Philadelphia Eagles.

"You know I'm an emotional guy, but right now I feel so good and so proud of this football team," Vermeil said.

The Rams couldn't quite break open the game while opening up a 16-0 lead. Three consecutive times they had to settle for field goals by Jeff Wilkins of 29, 27 and 28 yards. Wilkins missed another field goal and another was aborted by a fumbled snap.

So even though Warner threw for 277 yards in the first half, and the Rams outgained the Titans 294-89, St. Louis led only 9-0 at intermission.

"We had some problems in the red zone," said Marshall Faulk, who was held to 17 yards on 10 carries but had five catches for 90 yards. "They played us tough, but we came away with field goals."

The Rams seemed to put it away when Warner hit Torry Holt with a 9-yard touchdown pass with 3:59 left in the third quarter.

Two plays earlier, the Titans, already without free safety Marcus Robertson and top receiver Yancey Thigpen, lost strong safety Blaine Bishop with a neck sprain that delayed the game for about 10 minutes while Bishop was taken off the field on a stretcher.

But suddenly, McNair and George got energized and the Rams defense began to wear down.

The Titans scored touchdowns on their next two possessions as George, who ran for 95 yards on 28 carries, scored twice on 1-yard runs. Tennessee's two-point conversion attempt failed after the first TD.

Al Del Greco tied the score on a 43-yard field goal with 2:12 left.

McNair completed nine consecutive passes during the final drive, and threw for 214 yards in the game and scrambled for a Super Bowl-record 64 more. That included a 23-yard run that set up the first score and a 12-yard scramble with a 15-yard facemask penalty added in the final rally.

"He left everything out there on the field," Fisher said. "I told him we will be back. Don't ever forget this moment because we will be back. We will be back because he has the heart of a champion."

But it wasn't enough.

On the first play after Del Greco's tying field goal, Warner went deep to Bruce, who outleaped Tennessee's Denard Walker at the 38, then cut back twice to score. The play was called by offensive coordinator Mike Martz, who will take over as coach when Vermeil retires.

"He said 'Let's take a shot. Let's go to Isaac,"' Vermeil said. "If we didn't make it, we'd try to get it on the next two downs."

Bruce said: "We had been getting field goals. We needed to get the ball in the end zone."

That still left the Titans with 1:54 and one time out. They worked the ball methodically down the field with two big plays -- 27 yards on McNair's scramble and the ensuing penalty and a 16-yard pass to Dyson to put the ball on the 10 with five seconds left.

Then the Titans called their final timeout.

The final play was a slant. Dyson grabbed the ball and lunged for the end zone, with Jones grabbing him by the ankles. He went down less than a yard from the goal, trying to get his hand with the ball in it over the goal line.

"When he got his hands on me, I thought I'd break the tackle, but he slid down to my foot like you're supposed to and made a great play," Dyson said. "I realized as soon as I stretched out and was going down that I didn't get the point of the ball over the goal line."

That was a huge relief for the Rams.

"When I saw that ball go in the air, I said 'It's a touchdown,' " Vermeil said. "I was ready to call coach Martz and tell him to get the script ready for overtime."

Instead, they wrote a script for a celebration.

 


ALSO SEE
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St. Louis Clubhouse

Tennessee Clubhouse


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Super Bowl Blitz

Theismann: Most Super of them all

Murphy: Super view from the La-Z-Boy

Rams rookie Holt comes up big

Fans agree: This was a classic

Super Bowl XXXIV: Play-by-play

Super Bowl quotebook


AUDIO/VIDEO
video
 Kevin Dyson thought he had the touchdown.
avi: 697 k
RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1

 Blaine Bishop updates his injury status.
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RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1

 Tory Holt looked for redemption after dropping an early TD pass.
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RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1

 Isaac Bruce gives thanks to the Rams' defense.
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RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1

audio
 Kurt Warner had a strong belief in himself and his team.
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RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6

 Mike Jones breaks down the game-saving tackle.
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 Isaac Bruce and the Rams went for the throat.
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 Dick Vermeil is proud of this team and organization.
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 Ricky Proehl takes his hat off to the Titans.
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 Devon Bush and the defense put the game on their shoulders.
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 Marshall Faulk calls the victory a dream come true.
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 Orlando Pace plans on making the most of the moment.
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 Kevin Dyson says it was a sickening feeling.
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 Jeff Fisher says his team just ran out of time.
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 Steve McNair did what he needed to do but came up short.
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 Eddie George says it was "one hell of a ride."
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 Bruce Matthews is pleased with the way his team has grown.
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 Steve McNair breaks down the game's final play.
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