| 2006 Pro Bowl | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Date | February 12, 2006 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Stadium | Aloha Stadium, Honolulu, Hawaii | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| MVP | Derrick Brooks (Tampa Bay Buccaneers) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| National anthem | JoJo | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Coin toss | Governor of Hawaii Linda Lingle | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Referee | Gerald Austin | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Attendance | 50,190 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Network | ESPN | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Announcers | Mike Patrick, Joe Theismann, Paul Maguire, Suzy Kolber, and Michelle Tafoya | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The 2006 AFC-NFC Pro Bowl was played on February 12, 2006 at Aloha Stadium in Honolulu, Hawaii. It marked the 27th consecutive time that the National Football League's all-star game was held in Honolulu. The NFC all-stars won by the score of 23 to 17.
Contents |
Game summary
The start of the game was interrupted by a surprise rainstorm that lasted through the first quarter, although it ended midway through the second. Both teams' first possessions were punted away, and each of their second drives ended in interceptions; the Chicago Bears' Nathan Vasher intercepted Peyton Manning, then John Lynch picked off Matt Hasselbeck. The AFC scored first on their next drive, culminating with a 16 yard touchdown pass from Manning to Chris Chambers. After the teams traded punts, Michael Vick took over for the NFC in the second quarter, and led the team to the AFC 14-yard line, where Neil Rackers kicked a 32-yarder to make it 7-3. Manning led the AFC right back down the field, and Shayne Graham's 31-yard field goal increased the AFC's lead.
On the NFC's next drive, Champ Bailey intercepted Vick for the AFC's second turnover (both interceptions came off passes intended for Steve Smith). However, the NFC's defense responded with another interception; this time, Darren Sharper returned the interception 35 yards to the AFC's 32 yard line. The NFC was forced to punt it away on their next drive, however there was some controversy on the return. Jerome Mathis was set to receive the punt deep in the AFC's zone, and when the kick from Josh Bidwell came near him, he opted not to touch it. However, it glanced off his leg and rolled into the end zone, where the NFC recovered it, seemingly for a touchdown. However, the officials did not see the ball hit Mathis, and since there is no instant replay in a Pro Bowl game, NFC coach John Fox could not challenge the call. The AFC took over on their own 20, but soon afterward the NFC defense came up with another interception. Roy Williams intercepted a Manning pass and returned it 11 yards before handing it off to the Atlanta Falcons' DeAngelo Hall, who took it 57 yards to the AFC's 20. Michael Vick hit tight end Alge Crumpler with a 14-yard touchdown pass with 8 seconds left in the half to tie the score at 10-10.
Jake Delhomme of the Carolina Panthers took over at quarterback at the start of the third quarter, and hit Steve Smith, with three straight passes. The Carolina Panthers provided the NFC's team with their coaching staff, and with the Panthers' quarterback and wide receiver running the offense, the NFC moved quickly down the field. The drive stalled at midfield, and the NFC punted it away. After the AFC's drive, led by Chiefs' quarterback Trent Green, ended in a punt, Delhomme once again moved the NFC downfield before being sacked by Casey Hampton, forcing a fumble that was recovered by the AFC's Marcus Stroud. The NFC's defense once again responded, and on the third play of the drive, Derrick Brooks returned an interception 59 yards for a touchdown that gave the NFC the lead at 17-10. After the AFC punted away their next drive, Santana Moss fumbled the ball away in AFC territory. Green led the AFC down the field again, thanks in large part to a 20-yard run by his Chiefs teammate, Larry Johnson. Green tied the game at 17-17 with a one yard quarterback sneak. Matt Hasselbeck took over for the NFC again, and led the team on a scoring drive, ending with a 22 yard field goal by Rackers that gave the NFC the lead again. Steve McNair came in for a play at AFC quarterback, and promptly fumbled the ball away. After the NFC punted the ball away, McNair came back and lost another fumble, giving the NFC the ball on their own 18 yard line. Following the fumble, the AFC switched to a shotgun formation. After another Rackers field goal, the AFC took over on their own 26 with 1:10 left. McNair brought the AFC to midfield, but could not get them the touchdown they needed, and the game ended on a sack by the New York Giants' Michael Strahan. Brooks was given the Most Valuable Player award.
Scoring summary
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AFC | 7 | 3 | 0 | 7 | 17 |
| NFC | 0 | 10 | 7 | 6 | 23 |
- AFC - TD Chris Chambers 16 yd. pass from Peyton Manning (Shayne Graham kick) - 5:09 1st
- NFC - FG Neil Rackers 32 yd. - 7:45 2nd
- AFC - FG Shayne Graham 31 yd. - 3:22 2nd
- NFC - TD Alge Crumpler 14 yd. pass from Michael Vick (Rackers kick) - 0:08 2nd
- NFC - TD Derrick Brooks 59 yd. interception return (Rackers kick) - 5:01 3rd
- AFC - TD Trent Green 1 yd. run (Graham kick) - 12:47 4th
- NFC - FG Neil Rackers 22 yd. - 6:29 4th
- NFC - FG Neil Rackers 20 yd. - 1:10 4th
AFC roster
Offense
| Position: | Starters: | Reserves: |
|---|---|---|
| Quarterback | 18 Peyton Manning, Indianapolis | 9 Steve McNair, Tennessee** 10 Trent Green, Kansas City** 9 Carson Palmer, Cincinnati* 12 Tom Brady, New England* |
| Running back | 32 Edgerrin James, Indianapolis | 27 Larry Johnson, Kansas City 21 LaDainian Tomlinson, San Diego |
| Fullback | 41 Lorenzo Neal, San Diego | |
| Wide receiver | 88 Marvin Harrison, Indianapolis 85 Chad Johnson, Cincinnati |
84 Chris Chambers, Miami 80 Rod Smith, Denver |
| Tight end | 85 Antonio Gates, San Diego | 88 Tony Gonzalez, Kansas City |
| Offensive tackle | 71 Willie Anderson, Cincinnati 75 Jonathan Ogden, Baltimore |
78 Tarik Glenn, Indianapolis** 77 Willie Roaf, Kansas City* |
| Offensive guard | 66 Alan Faneca, Pittsburgh 68 Will Shields, Kansas City |
54 Brian Waters, Kansas City |
| Center | 63 Jeff Saturday, Indianapolis | 64 Jeff Hartings, Pittsburgh |
Defense
| Position: | Starters: | Reserves: |
|---|---|---|
| Defensive end | 93 Dwight Freeney, Indianapolis** 56 Derrick Burgess, Oakland |
93 Kyle Vanden Bosch, Tennessee** 99 Jason Taylor, Miami* 93 Richard Seymour, New England* |
| Defensive tackle | 99 Marcus Stroud, Jacksonville 76 Jamal Williams, San Diego |
98 Casey Hampton, Pittsburgh |
| Outside linebacker | 59 Cato June, Indianapolis 56 Shawne Merriman, San Diego |
55 Joey Porter, Pittsburgh |
| Inside linebacker | 56 Al Wilson, Denver | 51 Jonathan Vilma, N.Y. Jets 54 Tedy Bruschi, New England** 54 Zach Thomas, Miami* |
| Cornerback | 24 Champ Bailey, Denver 24 Deltha O'Neal, Cincinnati |
24 Ty Law, N.Y. Jets |
| Free safety | 21 Bob Sanders, Indianapolis | 47 John Lynch, Denver |
| Strong safety | 43 Troy Polamalu, Pittsburgh |
Special teams
| Position: | Player: |
|---|---|
| Punter | 8 Brian Moorman, Buffalo |
| Placekicker | 17 Shayne Graham, Cincinnati |
| Kick returner | 13 Jerome Mathis, Houston |
| Special teamer | 31 Hanik Milligan, San Diego |
| Long snapper | 54 Mike Schneck, Buffalo[d] |
NFC All-Stars
Players selected from the NFC (starters denoted in bold, injury replacements denoted with #):
| Offense | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Player (# Pro Bowls) | Team | Position | Game statistics |
| Matt Hasselbeck (2) | Seattle Seahawks | Quarterback | 10 for 17, 85 passing yards, 1 rushing attempt, 0 rushing yards, 1 INT |
| Jake Delhomme (1) | Carolina Panthers | Quarterback | 7 for 10, 53 passing yards, 1 lost fumble |
| Michael Vick (3) | Atlanta Falcons | Quarterback | 4 for 12, 69 passing yards, 1 passing TD, 1 INT, 2 rushing attempts, 17 rushing yards, 1 fumble |
| Shaun Alexander (3) | Seattle Seahawks | Running back | |
| Tiki Barber (2) | New York Giants | Running back | 11 carries for 33 yards, 1 reception for 6 yards, 1 fumble |
| Warrick Dunn (4) | Atlanta Falcons | Running back | 7 carries for 12 yards, 1 reception for 14 yards |
| Mack Strong (1) | Seattle Seahawks | Fullback | 1 carry for 0 yards |
| Steve Smith (2) | Carolina Panthers | Wide receiver | 8 receptions for 46 yards, 1 carry for 6 yards, 1 punt return for -6 yards, 1 fumble recovery |
| Santana Moss (1) | Washington Redskins | Wide receiver | 3 receptions for 39 yards, 1 carry for 18 yards, 1 punt return for 12 yards, 1 lost fumble |
| Larry Fitzgerald (1) | Arizona Cardinals | Wide receiver | 1 reception for 32 yards, 1 carry for 12 yards |
| Torry Holt (6) | St. Louis Rams | Wide receiver | 2 receptions for 18 yards |
| Alge Crumpler (3) | Atlanta Falcons | Tight end | 3 receptions for 35 yards, 1 fumble |
| Jason Witten (2) | Dallas Cowboys | Tight end | |
| Desmond Clark (1)# | Chicago Bears | Tight end | |
| LeCharles Bentley (2) | New Orleans Saints | Center | |
| Robbie Tobeck (1)# | Seattle Seahawks | Center | |
| Larry Allen (11) | Dallas Cowboys | Guard | |
| Steve Hutchinson (4) | Seattle Seahawks | Guard | |
| Mike Wahle (1) | Carolina Panthers | Guard | |
| Walter Jones (7) | Seattle Seahawks | Tackle | |
| Orlando Pace (7) | St. Louis Rams | Tackle | |
| Chris Samuels (3) | Washington Redskins | Tackle | |
| Defense | |||
| Player (# Pro Bowls) | Team | Position | Game statistics |
| Michael Strahan (7) | New York Giants | Defensive end | 1 tackle, 1 sack |
| Julius Peppers (2) | Carolina Panthers | Defensive end | 1 tackle |
| Osi Umenyiora (1) | New York Giants | Defensive end | |
| Shaun Rogers (2) | Detroit Lions | Defensive tackle | 4 tackles, 1 sack |
| Tommie Harris (1) | Chicago Bears | Defensive tackle | 1 tackle |
| La'Roi Glover (6) | Dallas Cowboys | Defensive tackle | |
| Jeremiah Trotter (4) | Philadelphia Eagles | Middle linebacker | 3 tackles |
| Lofa Tatupu (1)# | Seattle Seahawks | Linebacker | 6 tackles |
| Keith Brooking (5) | Atlanta Falcons | Outside linebacker | 4 tackles |
| Derrick Brooks (9) | Tampa Bay Buccaneers | Outside linebacker | 2 tackles, 1 interception return for TD |
| Lance Briggs (1) | Chicago Bears | Outside linebacker | 3 tackles |
| Ronde Barber (3) | Tampa Bay Buccaneers | Cornerback | 2 tackles |
| DeAngelo Hall (1) | Atlanta Falcons | Cornerback | 5 tackles |
| Nathan Vasher (1) | Chicago Bears | Cornerback | 1 tackle, 1 interception |
| Roy Williams (4) | Dallas Cowboys | Free safety | 2 tackles, 1 interception |
| Brian Dawkins (5)# | Philadelphia Eagles | Free safety | 1 tackle |
| Darren Sharper (3) | Minnesota Vikings | Strong safety | 3 tackles, 1 interception |
| Special teams | |||
| Player (# Pro Bowls) | Team | Position | Game statistics |
| Neil Rackers (1) | Arizona Cardinals | Placekicker | 3/3 field goals (32, 22, 20), 2/2 PAT |
| Josh Bidwell (1) | Tampa Bay Buccaneers | Punter | 5 punts, avg. 48.4 yd |
| Koren Robinson (1) | Minnesota Vikings | Kick returner | 4 kickoff returns, avg. 23.5 yd |
| David Tyree (1) | New York Giants | Special teams | |
| Mike Bartrum (1)# | Philadelphia Eagles | Long snapper | |
Players unable to play due to injury:
- Mike Brown, Chicago Bears Free safety
- Rod Coleman, Atlanta Falcons Defensive tackle
- Olin Kreutz, Chicago Bears Center
- Jeremy Shockey, New York Giants Tight end
- Brian Urlacher, Chicago Bears Middle linebacker.
Clark and Bartrum were added to the roster as a "need" player by the NFC coaching staff, filling open roster spots but replacing no specific injured player.
Officials
- Referee: Gerald Austin
- Umpire: Steve Wilson
- Head Linesman: John Schleyer
- Line Judge: Carl Johnson
- Field Judge: Scott Steenson
- Side Judge: Laird Hayes
- Back Judge: Phil Luckett
2006 Pro Bowl Cheerleading Squad
AFC
- Dorothy Lee, Baltimore Ravens
- Eileen, Buffalo Bills
- Melissa Scalia, Cincinnati Bengals
- Renee Herlocker, Denver Broncos
- Rolanda Johnson, Houston Texans
- Brandi Jones, Indianapolis Colts
- Aubrey Moore, Jacksonville Jaguars
- Amy Day, Kansas City Chiefs
- Danielle O'Connell, Miami Dolphins
- Nicole Schell, New England Patriots
- Nikki Rogers, Oakland Raiders
- Lacy Harrison, San Diego Chargers
- Kerry Arrington, Tennessee Titans
NFC
- Kristi Gauble, Arizona Cardinals
- Melanie Snare (Sutton), Atlanta Falcons
- Amy Woodard, Carolina Panthers
- Lynlee Allen, Dallas Cowboys
- Theresa Baugus, Minnesota Vikings
- Lindsey Williams, New Orleans Saints
- Tara Keating, Philadelphia Eagles
- Kristin Beisel (Wolff), San Francisco 49ers
- Trina Mills, Seattle Seahawks
- Lacey Baldwin, St. Louis Rams
- Jennifer Abbott, Tampa Bay Buccaneers
- Courtney DeYoung, Washington Redskins
Fan balloting
On December 19, 2005, the NFL announced that fans had cast more than 70.5 million votes via the Internet and the Sprint wireless telephone service, bettering by more than 16% the 61 million votes cast for the 2005 Pro Bowl. Of the top ten vote-getters, all were offensive players and seven, including four of the top five, hailed from the AFC. Colts quarterback Peyton Manning led all players, garnering 1,184,142 votes, a new single-player record, and narrowly edging out Seahawks running back Shaun Alexander (1,110,575 votes) and Chargers running back LaDainian Tomlinson (1,044,360 votes).
On the defensive side, AFC players filled six of the top ten spots, though Bears middle linebacker Brian Urlacher led all defenders, earning 420,983 votes; Broncos cornerback Champ Bailey (379,477 votes), Colts defensive end Dwight Freeney (374,289 votes), and Bengals cornerback Deltha O'Neal (373,918 votes) paced the AFC.
Among NFL rookies, Buccaneers running back Carnell Williams was the leading vote-getter, receiving 219,736 votes to surpass Steelers tight end Heath Miller (217,928 votes). Cowboys outside linebacker Demarcus Ware (104,592 votes), Vikings punter Chris Kluwe (100,555 votes), and Bengals inside linebacker Odell Thurman (88,715 votes) rounded out the top five.
The top vote-getter at each position (as on the official NFL ballot), irrespective of conference:
Offense
| Player | Team | Position | Fan votes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Peyton Manning | Indianapolis Colts | Quarterback | 1,184,142 |
| Shaun Alexander | Seattle Seahawks | Running Back | 1,110,575 |
| Chris Cooley | Washington Redskins | Fullback | 422,314 |
| Chad Johnson | Cincinnati Bengals | Wide receiver | 987,650 |
| Antonio Gates | San Diego Chargers | Tight end | 941,846 |
| Jeff Saturday | Indianapolis Colts | Center | 234,847 |
| Larry Allen | Dallas Cowboys | Guard | 248,561 |
| Orlando Pace | Saint Louis Rams | Tackle | 185,095 |
Defense
| Player | Team | Position | Fan votes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dwight Freeney | Indianapolis Colts | Defensive end | 374,289 |
| Rod Coleman | Atlanta Falcons | Interior lineman (Defensive tackle) | 307,839 |
| Demorrio Williams | Atlanta Falcons | Outside linebacker | 244,419 |
| Brian Urlacher | Chicago Bears | Inside linebacker (Middle linebacker) | 420,983 |
| Champ Bailey | Denver Broncos | Cornerback | 379,477 |
| Brian Dawkins | Philadelphia Eagles | Free safety | 193,166 |
| Troy Polamalu | Pittsburgh Steelers | Strong safety | 270,348 |
Special Teams
| Player | Team | Position | Fan votes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Neil Rackers | Arizona Cardinals | Placekicker | 533,004 |
| Josh Bidwell | Tampa Bay Buccaneers | Punter | 236,305 |
| Dante Hall | Kansas City Chiefs | Kick returner | 269,541 |
| Robert Mathis | Indianapolis Colts | Special teams | 130,890 |
Notably, four players—Cooley, Williams, Hall, and Robert Mathis—finished first in the balloting for their respective positions among fans but failed to secure a starting or reserve spot for the game.
Entertainment
JoJo performed the national anthem. Musical group Backstreet Boys performed during halftime alongside "200 hula dancers, drummers and fire knife dancers and 400 youth performers[3]."
Stats
- Most players selected from one team was seven, tied between the AFC's Indianapolis Colts and NFC's Seattle Seahawks (a Super Bowl XL contender).
- Most starters selected from one team:
- AFC: Indianapolis Colts, 7 (all of the players selected)
- NFC: Seattle Seahawks (Super Bowl XL contender), 5
- First-time selections was big: a total of 36 were in the Pro Bowl; 20 were starters. Here's the count for first-time selections:
- AFC: 16 (11 starters)
- NFC: 20 (9 starters)
- Of interesting note, all four special team players (punter, kicker, kick returner, and special-team player) for both conferences were first-time selections.
References
Sources
- "Defense leads NFC to 23-17 Pro Bowl win". NFL.com wire reports. 2006-02-12. http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/recap?game_id=28858&displayPage=tab_recap&season=2005&week=PRO22. Retrieved on 2007-12-29.
- "NFL Gamebook - 2006 Pro Bowl". NFL.com. 2006-02-12. http://www.nfl.com/liveupdate/gamecenter/28858/NFC_Gamebook.pdf. Retrieved on 2007-12-29.
External links
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: 2006 Pro Bowl |
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