Aaron Toney
Scott Adkins (in boots, Aaron in Boxing sneakers)
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Shad Gaspard
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Anthony Mackie & Martha Higareda
Jackie Chan [Rush Hour 3 set]
Joel Mchale & Gillian Jacobs
Josh Hartnett & Woody Harrelson
Keltie Knight & Michael Lehr (1st Right, Listed 5'10")
Oleg Prudius
Sammo Hung
Sebastian Stan
Vanessa Cater
[With Heels?]
Aaron Ly (2nd right, Listed 5'10")
Al Thompson (Listed 179cm), C.C. Ice (5’4” tops), Marija Abney (Listed 5’6”), Meredith Richardson (Listed 5’4”) & guy fernandez jr (1st right, Listed 6’4”)
Andrew Chin (5'7.5" tops)
Aramis Merlin (5'8.5" tops)
Bethany Levy (2nd right, Listed 5'7")
Brad Allen (Listed 5'4")
Chad Stahelski (Listed 6'1")
Chris Carnel (5'9" max)
Crystal N Hooks (Listed 5'7")
Derron Ross (5'10" range)
George Crayton (Listed 5’8”) & Ivan flipz velez (5’4” tops)
Greg Rementer (5'11-11.5") & Mark A Wagner (Listed 5'10")
Greg Rementer (5'11.5" tops)
Guy Fernandez Jr (Listed 6'4")
Jenel Stevens (Listed 5’8”), Maria Hippolyte (Listed 5’3”) & Marie Mouroum (5’7” tops)
Jess Durham (middle, 5’7-8” max)
John Nania (Left, 5'11" tops)
Julia Maggio (Listed 5'3")
Khalid Ghajji (5’10” range)
Kim Chiang (Middle, 5’3.5” tops)
Ladell Preston (5'8.5" tops)
Lloyd Pitts (Left, 5'10" range)
Ludi Lin & Brian Ho (5'8" tops)
Maria-Antoaneta Tudor (middle, Listed 5'3.5")
Matt Mullins (Listed 6'1")
Michael Tatum (1st left, Listed 5'11")
Mike Ching (5'10" range)
Noah Garret (Right, Listed 6'1")
Penelope Talleur (Listed 5'0")
Perry Madison (5'8" range)
Philip J Silvera (Middle, Listed 5'10")
Renes Rivera (Listed 6'6")
Sam Hargrave (Listed 6′0″)
Samuel Le (Listed 5’9”) & Megan Le (Listed 5’7”)
Sarah Molasky (Listed 5’5”) & Mark A Wagner (Antman costume, Listed 5’10”)
Seth Allyn Austin (Listed 5'7")
Shota Tsuji (Listed 5'10")
Taylor Tai (4th right, 5’5” range)
Tess Lani (Listed 5'4")
Yoshi Sudarso (5'10.5")
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Notes taken during Super Bowl XXX
PREGAME
This is another Channel 4 joint. Gary Imlach, Marv Levy, and Drew Pearson are the UK commentators.
Cowboys to receive the kickoff.
NBC had this game in the United States. Dick Enberg on PBP. Paul Maguire is the color commentator. Phil Simms is in the booth too, it seems.
FIRST QUARTER
First play is a pass to Jay Novacek underneath. Broken up by Carnell Lake.
Second down, intermediate pass to Michael Irvin. 20 yards, out to midfield. Irvin motioning that he couldn't see the ball because he was looking into the sun. Caught it anyway.
Michael Irvin can’t see.
Deion Sanders in at WR for the Cowboys now, so of course they hand the ball to Emmitt Smith. 23 yard run, to the Pittsburgh 28.
Third and long, jet sweep to Kevin Williams. Enberg calls it a reverse. (Grrrrr.) He's stuffed and the Cowboys will attempt a 42 yard field goal. Chris Boniol. Yep, got it. 3-0 Dallas, less than three minutes into the game.
NBC graphic: Team scoring first has won 21 of 29 Super Bowls.
Steelers heading into the sun in the first quarter. First play is a handoff to Erric Pegram for two yards.
Kordell Stewart in for Pittsburgh as a slot receiver. 1995 appears to have been the year of the multi-position star.
Steelers go five-wide on third down. Enberg says it's a revolutionary formation from the Steelers this year. That seems a bit overly effusive, no? I feel like run and shoot teams like the Falcons, Oilers, and Denver Gold would have gone five-wide with some regularity.
O'Donnell throws underneath on third and long. Receiver tackled immediately and it's a three-and-out.
Imlach asks Marv Levy how the Steelers should deal with the great Dallas offensive line. I love Marv Levy dearly - he's one of my favorite sports people of all time - but I think we've established that Marv doesn't have a bunch of answers for the Cowboys in the Super Bowl.
NBC graphic: Cowboys offensive line averages 333 pounds per person.
Maguire: Steelers say Cowboys' offensive strength is their run game. Cowboys say Cowboys' offensive strength is their pass game.
Aikman goes deeeeep on a post pattern to Deion Sanders. Perfect throw. Sanders makes the grab. 47 yard gain, inside the Pittsburgh 20.
Maguire: Aikman tells a story about practice, when he threw a pass to Deion Sanders as far and as hard as he can throw it. He was certain he'd overthrown Sanders, but when he went back and watched the film, Deion actually had to slow down to catch the pass.
Aikman to Novacek inside the 5. First and goal from the 3.
Next play, play fake to Smith, toss to a wide open Novacek. Easy score. 10-0 Dallas in the first quarter. Replay shows it was pretty clearly an illegal pick to clear space for Novacek.
Drew Pearson: Expect Steelers to pass more - need to open things up for the run game.
Levy: Novacek hid behind his line on the touchdown pass, lined up as a wingback right and crossed behind the line, and the Steelers lost track of him.
Maguire: This is a brand new field since the Fiesta Bowl. Players expected it to be tight, but they're slipping all over the place. Field isn't tight.
Steelers go no-huddle after a first down. Cowboys only have nine players on the field and have to call a timeout.
NBC promo: Next weekend, Gulliver's Travels starring Ted Danson!
Byron "Bam" "Choo Choo" Morris into the backfield for Pittsburgh. CHOO CHOO!!! Up the middle for six.
Third down, a pitch to Kordell Stewart. Short by a half-yard. What a weird call - why not just snap it directly to him, since he's a quarterback and stuff.
Steelers going for it on fourth and less than a yard. Kordell Stewart lines up under center and Neil O'Donnell lines up as a wide receiver. Again, weird. Everybody in the stadium knows you're not passing the ball to Neil O'Donnell. Why play with 10 offensive players? Anyway, it works. QB sneak.
Enberg: Bill Cowher is the youngest coach ever to take a team to the Super Bowl. 38 years old.
Third and 8, O'Donnell stands in and fires it to Andre Hastings. He has plenty of time. First down.
They go no-huddle again and the shotgun snap is about five feet over O'Donnell's head. Loss of 13.
Current drive: 11 plays, 24 yards, 5:07 and counting. 11 plays for 24 yards!
Last play of the quarter, O'Donnell to Corey Holliday. He's a rookie who had zero receptions in the regular season and, over the course of his career, had a total of one regular season catch.
First quarter ends. Dallas 10, Pittsburgh 0.
SECOND QUARTER
3rd and 13, O'Donnell rolls and is nearly picked off by Larry Brown. It's decision time on 4th and 13 from the Dallas 39. They'll punt. There are no good choices here, only choices that are less bad than others. Predictably, Rohn Stark blasts it through the end zone for a 19 yard net.
Enberg: Jay Novacek's mom collected aluminum cans all year so she could pay her own way to see her son in the Super Bowl. She didn't want him to have to pay for her.
Four passes in a row to Novacek. His mom's getting her money's worth.
Second and 10, Aikman to Irvin into Steelers territory for a first down.
Maguire: Emmitt Smith told his linemen that when they block, he doesn't want to see their stomachs. Just keep blocking straight ahead and Emmitt will find the hole.
Simms: Steelers are getting no pressure at all on Aikman.
Third and 5, Aikman is confused by the play call. Looks at the sideline quizzically, figures it out, and completes a pass to Moose Johnston for four and a half. It's a measurement, but it's almost certainly going to be short. He is. It's about eight inches short. Barry Switzer will go for it.
Moose Johnston gets it easily. Everybody expected Emmitt, Switzer crossed them up.
Aikman looks deep and Michael Irvin grabs it as he steps into the end zone. Offensive pass interference. He grabbed Carnell Lake on the way past him.
So what do the Cowboys do? They throw the ball to Jay Novacek. He's having another big Super Bowl. 19 yard gain.
Cowboy drive stalls there and Chris Boniol comes on for a 35 yard field goal attempt. Right down the middle. Three possessions, three scores for Dallas. 13-0, mid-second quarter.
During commercial break, Channel 4 plays a bit of the Navajo language broadcast of the game. Neat.
Drew Pearson: Players are probably using wrong shoes for this surface, there are a lot of slips. If it were me, I'd use Astroturf shoes because the ground is hard under the grass.
O'Donnell throws behind Yancey Thigpen on first down. Nearly picked off..
Pittsburgh goes three and out. Rohn Stark punts. While the ball is rolling, a Steeler comes from out of nowhere and clobbers a Cowboy in the back, sending him flying into the ball. The Steelers recover, but it's (correctly) ruled Dallas ball. That was weird. Pittsburgh players are flipping out, but c'mon. That was never your ball.
Levy says the Dallas player should have been nowhere near that ball, regardless of whether he was shoved.
Pearson: Steelers are confused. Don't know whether they want to run the ball or throw it. Dallas defense is dominating at the line of scrimmage and O'Donnell isn't hitting passes.
Greg Lloyd hits Emmitt Smith in the knee on a tackle on second down. It wasn't intentional. Emmitt is limping a bit.
Third and 10, Chris Oldham knocks down a pass intended for Irvin, who was behind the defense. Cowboys three and out for the first time.
Steelers take over at their 46. First down, O'Donnell misses an open receiver. Second down, it's a coverage sack. Charles Haley got him for a loss of 10. Third and 20, O'Donnell to Hastings for 19 yards. Maguire emphatically says they have to go for this. This is four-down territory, period.
A replay shows Deion Sanders completely whiffed on an attempted tackle on the third down play.
Fourth and inches, Kordell Stewart has no trouble picking up the first down on a QB sneak.
Second and 10, CHOO CHOO! Bam Morris blows through the line for around 13 yards. We hit the two-minute warning with the Steelers at the Dallas 30.
Third and 7, O'Donnell to Mills for six and a half yards. It's an absolutely horrible spot and the refs give Pittsburgh a free first down.
Enberg begins to talk about NBC coverage of this game on the World Wide Web, but Channel 4 cuts away mid-sentence. That was the first internet reference I've seen during a Super Bowl.
Third and long, O'Donnell finds Mills near the 5. Probably should have been overthrown, but it was a great catch. Steelers call timeout with 0:17 left in the half. They have no more timeouts. If they don't kick here, they need to throw into the end zone.
And they do exactly that. O'Donnell zips it through some traffic to Yancey Thigpen, who beat Deion Sanders. Deion shoved him into the path of the ball. Suddenly, despite the Cowboys' dominance, it's only 13-7. 13 seconds left - you'd think Pittsburgh squibs the kickoff and Dallas takes a knee on first down.
Cowboys run a reverse on the kick return. They get it to their 37.
Yep, Aikman takes a knee. 13-7 at the half.
THIRD QUARTER
Kickoff goes out of bounds. Steelers get it at their own 40 yard line.
CHOO CHOO! Bam Morris blows through tacklers like a freight train. 15 yard run gets the Steelers to the Cowboys' 35.
Steelers go five-wide on third and 9. Dallas blitzes and O'Donnell has to throw too quickly. Incomplete pass, so inexplicably they'll punt from the Dallas 33. Rohn Stark kicks it into the end zone because that's what happens when you punt from the opponent's 33.
Pearson: Steelers didn't really lose momentum on that drive. Didn't score, but they moved the ball.
Second and 11 for the Cowboys, the Steelers try to cover Michael Irvin underneath with a linebacker. Predictably, this doesn't work and Dallas gets 15.
Cowboys don't do much - just the one first down to Irvin - and they punt.
Steelers run on first down. Maguire says he cannot understand why the Steelers aren't running four and five wide receivers.
Second down, Kordell Stewart takes a handoff on a run/pass option. Doesn't have his receiver open, pulls the ball down and jets down the sideline for 12.
Maguire: Steelers are throwing plays away. I don't even know why they're running some of these plays. (Runs up the middle on first down, in particular)
Third and ten, Pittsburgh goes four-wide, Neil O'Donnell has plenty of time, and throws the ball right to a wide-open Larry Brown. He hit Brown right in the numbers. The problem is that Brown is a cornerback for the Cowboys. Brown returns it inside the Steelers' 20. First turnover of the game.
First play of the Dallas drive, Aikman to Irvin on the sideline. Steps out of bounds at the 2.
One play later, Emmitt Smith powers it into the end zone. Or so the officials say. He's clearly down before the ball crosses the goal line. Whatever. It's a touchdown. 20-7 Cowboys, middle of the third quarter.
Levy: Not sure the interception was a gamebreaker, but it's going to come down to how the Steelers respond. And the fact that they got called for a penalty on the kickoff return isn't a great sign.
Levy thinks Smith got into the end zone, for what it's worth. I disagree, but I respect Marv.
Pearson: I'm not saying the Steelers need to abandon their (run-heavy) gameplan, but they need to throw the ball a bit to open up space in the Dallas defense.
Maguire is still baffled by the Steeler offense after they hand the ball to Choo Choo Morris on 2nd and 13. They pick up the first down on third and long when Andre Hastings breaks a tackle.
Third and short, O'Donnell pitches the ball way the heck backwards to Erric Pegram. I really hate the call - going backwards to go forwards when you need a yard and a half - but he cuts it back for a first down.
Incredible catch by Ernie Mills out near midfield. He was wide open and had to dive with his arms fully extended to get to the ball. Miserable throw.
Fourth and yard and a half near midfield. 2:00 or so left in the third. Steelers go for it, run Choo Choo into the teeth of the defense, and he doesn't have a chance. Cowboys take over on downs, up 13 with 1:26 left in the third quarter.
...and they do nothing with the ball. Cowboys will boot it away after Rod Woodson makes a nice break on a third down pass to Michael Irvin. John Jett kicks it through the end zone.
Steelers pick up 12 on a first down pass to Mills. Deion Sanders, in coverage, tells his teammates after the play that was his fault, he should have done better. Third quarter ends, still 20-7 Dallas.
Pearson: Very surprised Cowher went for it on the fourth and one, particularly at midfield. Would have run a lead blocker.
FOURTH QUARTER
First play of the quarter, Choo Choo shows his nimble footwork. Dances to midfield.
One play later, Ernie Mills is nearly decapitated by Scott Case on a catch over the middle. He maybe drops the pass, maybe fumbles, but it's called a fumble. Tight end Mark Bruener recovers. The officials didn't seem to know what to do. It took them forever to make that call.
Later in the drive, O'Donnell scrambles, rolls right and finds Mills. Nearly picked by Larry Brown. He easily could have had three picks by now.
Third and short, O'Donnell to Thigpen now. Pittsburgh is moving the ball. A touchdown here and it's anybody's game. 12:00 and counting on the clock.
Steelers have to burn a timeout before a crucial third down play. That hurts.
What hurts worse is a sack by Charles Haley on that third down. Knocks Pittsburgh almost out of field goal range.
Norm Johnson attempts and makes a 46-yard field goal on a field with shaky footing. Nice kick. It's now 20-10 Cowboys. Steelers still alive.
Onside kick! Steelers recover! They've got it at midfield and coach Bill Cowher is PUMPED.
Enberg: 12th onside kick in Super Bowl history. Fourth successful one.
Steelers on fire now. Two great catches on the first two plays and they're inside the Dallas 30.
Third play of the drive, O'Donnell to Mills near the Dallas 20. Larry Brown hits Mills in the back and the receiver's knee twists. Mills is injured and the furious Steelers comeback has to take a break.
Steelers get inside the Dallas 20 on a punishing Bam Morris run up the middle.
O'Donnell to Thigpen, and the Steelers have reached the Dallas 5. Thigpen is decked by linebacker Dixon Edwards, but holds on.
First down, Morris to the 2. Second down, Morris to about the six inch line. He got royally boned on that call. He was in the end zone.
There's no such controversy on third down as Morris goes untouched around right end. He walks into the end zone. Suddenly it's a three-point ballgame. 20-17, mid-fourth quarter. (6:36 to be exact.)
Kevin Williams drops the kickoff and only gets out to the 12. Steelers fans in the stadium are going crazy.
NBC graphic: Cowboys have a total of 41 yards on their last five drives. They get 22 yards on the first play of this drive.
Second down, linebacker Levon Kirkland blitzes and runs into Aikman. Didn't tackle him, but blasted him backwards for an eight yard loss. Now it's 3rd and 17.
Incomplete pass on third down, Kevin Williams wants pass interference, the officials (correctly) say nope. John Jett will punt. The Steelers have 4:15 to get into position for a game-tying field goal. Plenty of time.
First down, Andre Hastings drops an easy one. He was wide open downfield.
Second down, O'Donnell hits a wide-open Larry Brown in the numbers again. Still a problem: Brown still plays for the other team. He returns it to the Steelers' 6. Looked like O'Donnell expected his receiver to break outside and he didn't.
Replay shows that if O'Donnell had thrown downfield, his receiver was so wide open that could have almost walked into the end zone. That's (probably) the ballgame.
Yep, it's the ballgame. Emmitt gets into the end zone on second and goal. 27-17 Dallas. That's Smith's 18th career postseason touchdown, tying Thurman Thomas for most all-time.
The Steelers need 10 points in 3:43. Not impossible, but certainly improbable.
First down, Andre Hastings fights for an extra five yards and stays in bounds instead of getting out and stopping the clock. Next play, complete to Corey Holliday. Holliday now has more catches in this game than he had in all of the regular season games he ever played combined.
Enberg: O'Donnell is #1 all-time in least interceptions thrown. Presumably this is in terms of INT%.
Steelers near the Dallas 40 as we hit the two-minute warning. Again, this comeback isn't impossible, but it's unlikely.
Maguire says he thinks Deion Sanders might take a year off from baseball if the Cowboys win this game. They did and he did.
Third down, Andre Hastings drops another pass. O'Donnell is limping after Cowboys DL Chad Hennings lands on him.
John L. Williams, one of the best receiving backs of his era drops a pass on fourth down. The ball was behind him, but he probably should have had it. Cowboys get the ball on downs.
Larry Brown named MVP. Was a 12th round pick in the draft, 320th player picked.
Aikman takes a few knees and the game ticks away.
Simms: The Steelers had many, many chances to win this game.
0:13 left, fourth down, and Dallas will punt because they have to do something. Dallas downs it with 0:03 left. The Steelers need 10 points in three seconds. Spoiler alert: They don't do it.
12th consecutive Super Bowl win for the NFC. (XIX-XXX)
Steelers lining up to throw deep on the final play. Why not, I guess. Brock Marion picks it off, not that it matters.
Final score: Dallas 27, Pittsburgh 17.
POSTGAME
Enberg: Pete Rozelle said his favorite Super Bowl was the 35-31 Steelers-Cowboys game in Super Bowl XIII. (For what it's worth, I agree and also have that game atop my list, at least through the first XXX Super Bowls.)
Marv Levy: Games in which a team has turnover differential at least +2, they win 94% of the time.
Imlach to Pearson: Are the Cowboys a legitimate Team of the 90s? Pearson: Yes, they're absolutely the Team of the 90s.
I think this is the first trophy presentation to happen on the field.
Jerry Jones: I want to tell all Steelers fans, and their owners and coaches, what a great team you have and how hard they fought tonight.
Jones: As talented as our players are, they're even more mentally tough than that.
Jones: Of my three Super Bowl wins as an owner, this is the sweetest. This was the closest game of the three.
Greg Gumbel to Switzer: Before the game, you told me whether you win or lose, you're not concerned what people think about you. Is that still true? Switzer: Yes, still true. I care about my family, and these guys are who I want to be with. The Dallas Cowboys.
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