The Super Bowl is where legends are made, and where coaching mistakes become immortal. One wrong call can flip a championship, destroy legacies, and haunt fanbases for decades. Whether it was a baffling play call or a clock management meltdown, these five coaching blunders will forever live in Super Bowl infamy.
5. Mike Martz Abandons the Run – Super Bowl XXXVI
With MVP Marshall Faulk in his prime, the St. Louis Rams chose to air it out against the underdog Patriots, and it cost them. Martz ran the ball just 17 times, letting the Patriots’ defense dictate the game. The “Greatest Show on Turf” stalled, and Tom Brady’s legend began with a last-second field goal.
- Blunder: Ignoring the run game despite having the league’s best RB.
4. Kyle Shanahan Gets Too Aggressive – Super Bowl LI
Up 28-3 in the third quarter, all Shanahan had to do was run the ball and drain the clock. Instead, the Falcons kept passing, including a disastrous sack and penalty combo that knocked them out of FG range. The Patriots made history, and Shanahan’s play-calling became a cautionary tale.
- Blunder: Abandoning the run with a massive lead, giving Brady extra chances.
3. Bruce Arians’ Blitz Gamble – Super Bowl LV
Facing Patrick Mahomes with a depleted offensive line, most would’ve rushed three or four. Todd Bowles (under Arians’ direction) sent the house, and Mahomes made him pay. Multiple deep passes helped the Chiefs carve up the defense, flipping momentum early and keeping Tampa Bay on their heels.
- Blunder: High-risk blitzing when a conservative game plan was safer.
2. John Harbaugh’s Clock Mismanagement – Super Bowl XLVII
Late in the game against the 49ers, Harbaugh had time and timeouts but chose not to use them after a critical 3rd down. It forced Baltimore into a panicked fourth down attempt. Though they won, the decision nearly cost the game and became one of the most criticized moments of his career.
- Blunder: Poor clock awareness in the most crucial moment.
1. Pete Carroll’s Goal-Line Pass – Super Bowl XLIX
It’s the most infamous play call in NFL history. With Marshawn Lynch in the backfield and the ball on the 1-yard line, Pete Carroll opted to pass. The result? A game-sealing interception by Malcolm Butler, handing the Patriots another ring and denying Seattle a dynasty.
- Blunder: Passing instead of running with one of the league’s most physical backs.
Super Bowl wins are remembered forever, but so are the mistakes. These coaching blunders didn’t just change games; they changed careers, franchises, and NFL history. The line between genius and disaster in football is razor-thin, and these five plays prove it.