Tuesday's sports stories

Super Bowl LVII draws 113 million viewers, up 1% from 2022
Fox's Sunday evening telecast of the Super Bowl drew 113 million viewers across digital and traditional TV platforms, making it the most-watched Super Bowl since 2017, according to ratings from Nielsen.
Why it matters: A nail-biter finish to a high-scoring game, along with a buzzy halftime show, proved to be the perfect formula for winning America's attention.

Rihanna first to perform pregnant at Super Bowl halftime
Superstar recording artist Rihanna shocked millions by revealing her pregnancy during her highly anticipated Super Bowl halftime show performance on Sunday.
Driving the news: Reps of the seven-time Grammy winner confirmed to multiple outlets that the singer is expecting her second child.

Chiefs win Super Bowl, 38-35
The Kansas City Chiefs are world champs yet again, beating the Eagles, 38-35, on Sunday night in the third-highest scoring Super Bowl ever.
Game recap: Philadelphia took a 10-point lead into the locker room on the strength of a Jalen Hurts masterclass, as the MVP runner-up rushed for two scores and threw for another just in the first half.

Rihanna stuns fans during Super Bowl halftime show
The first ever Apple Music-sponsored Super Bowl halftime show did not disappoint.
Why it matters: In her first return to the stage in seven years, Rihanna shocked fans with a pregnancy announcement, reps confirm to People, making her the first to perform the Super Bowl halftime show pregnant.

All-women pilot team makes Super Bowl flyover history
A U.S. Navy flyover piloted by seven women made history just before kickoff at the Super Bowl game between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Philadelphia Eagles on Sunday.
Why it matters: The flyover at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona, commemorating 50 years since women were allowed to become U.S. Navy pilots marked the first time the spectacle had been piloted by all-women crew.

Hurts and Mahomes make history at 2023 Super Bowl
Patrick Mahomes and Jalen Hurts made history on Sunday, becoming the first Black QBs to start against each other in the Super Bowl.
Why it matters: The vast majority of NFL players are Black men (70% as of 2022). Finally, they comprised both starters at football's most important position, on football's biggest stage.
- Hurts: "It's a historic moment. It's telling kids that maybe if someone is telling them they can't do something, that it can be done."
- Mahomes: "The guys that came before me and Jalen set the stage for this, and I'm just glad that we can set the stage for … kids that are coming up now."
The backdrop: Doug Williams, the first Black quarterback to start and win a Super Bowl, was on hand during a pre-game ceremony. It’s been 35 years since Williams led Washington to a 42-10 victory over the Denver Broncos in Super Bowl 22.
- Williams: Won SB XXII in 1988 (Redskins 42, Broncos 10)
- Steve McNair: Lost SB XXXIV in 2000 (Rams 23, Titans 16)
- Donovan McNabb: Lost SB XXXIX in 2005 (Patriots 24, Eagles 21)
- Colin Kaepernick: Lost SB XLVII in 2013 (Ravens 34, 49ers 31)
- Russell Wilson (2x): Won SB XLVIII in 2014 (Seahawks 43, Broncos 8); lost SB XLIX in 2015 (Patriots 28, Seahawks 24)
- Cam Newton: Lost SB 50 in 2016 (Broncos 24, Panthers 10)
- Mahomes (3x): Won SB LIV in 2020 (Chiefs 31, 49ers 20); lost SB LV in 2021 (Bucs 31, Chiefs 9); playing SB LVII
The big picture: It took an agonizingly long time to reach this milestone, but the increasing prevalence of Black QBs suggests matchups like this one will become more commonplace going forward.
- To wit, a record 11 Black QBs started in Week 1 this season, breaking the record of 10 set two years prior.
- Three of the four Black QBs to win NFL MVP have done so in the last seven years, with Cam Newton (2015), Mahomes (2018) and Lamar Jackson (2019) joining McNair, who in 2003 became the first to win the award.
The other side: Similar progress has not been seen among the head coaching ranks, despite a rule implemented 20 years ago aiming to do just that.
- Just 28 of the 519 head coaches in NFL history have been Black and just four of 30 active head coaches are Black.
- Only one of those four, Mike Tomlin, has held his current position for more than a year.
🎧 Listen: Doug Williams joins roundtable discussion about the long road for Black QBs to Sunday’s historic matchup (Apple Podcasts)





