This mostly on how other teams have gone to SuperBowls

Once Peyton Manning see's that he starts the play and the fowl is offsides for the other team.I really won't blame the Colts for doing this because there is no flag or anything wrong with it. This mostly on how other teams have gone to Super-Bowls.But I am not saying that they are not player wise not good.I mean look they have Peyton Manning one of the best quarterbacks ever, Reggie Wayne who almost always catches the ball and more.Especially Donald Brown their new rookie who has seemed to prove that he is a good player, and this is just offense.They have Bob Sander, Dwight Freeney and way more This is just exactly what makes up an amazing team Good players smart thinking coach and players. Its just what might actually put them in the Super-Bowl.For one reason this is why the Colts have the record they currently have as 11-0. NEW YORK (Hollywood Reporter) - The presidential election and worsening economy pushed the war in Iraq mostly out of the headlines, especially among the Big Three evening newscasts.

Entertainment TelevisionThe Big Three newscasts devoted a total of 3,677 minutes to the presidential campaign in 2008, according to network news analyst Andrew Tyndall of the Tyndall Report. That's up from 2,433 in 2004 and is the most coverage for a presidential campaign since at least 1988 when the Big Three devoted 3,117 minutes of coverage during the year.The coverage winner was President-Elect Barack Obama, who garnered 745 minutes to become the top story of 2008. His GOP challenger, John McCain and his presidential campaign, received 531 minutes of coverage. Tyndall said even McCain received more coverage for any presidential nominee since 1988.Rounding out the top five stories of 2008 was the Hillary Rodham Clinton campaign (288 minutes), the federal bailout of the financial industry (281 minutes) and the crude oil/gasoline prices (273 minutes).

There were 2,767 minutes of coverage of the recession on the three newscasts, more than the past two (1,775 minutes in 2001 and 1,872 in 1990).Politics and the economy overwhelmed 2007's big story, which was the war in Iraq. There were 434 minutes of coverage for the war in 2008, down from 1,888 minutes in 2007 and 2,009 minutes in 2006.Iraq combat stories were the seventh most-covered story of 2008. It was, ahead of troubles in the auto industry (239), the summer Olympics in Beijing (236) and the nomination of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin as the GOP vice presidential candidate (215).Tyndall said ABC and CBS had 21-year lows for stories involving their foreign bureaus."If NBC had not been shilling in Beijing for NBC Sports' Olympics, its decline would have been greater," Tyndall wrote. "And Baghdad Forget about it."The hardest-working network correspondent for 2008 was NBC's Andrea Mitchell, who got 355 minutes of airtime. ABC's Jake Tapper, who was 2007's winner, was in second place with 230 minutes as a campaign reporter CBS' Dean Reynolds came in third place with 262 minutes.