TAMPA — Twenty-five years ago yesterday, the Baltimore Ravens didn’t just win a championship; they strangled the life out of an offense on national television. The final score of Super Bowl XXXV read Ravens 34, Giants 7, but even that lopsided number flatters New York.
On January 28, 2001, the “Bullies of Baltimore” completed a defensive masterpiece that still haunts Kerry Collins. They allowed zero offensive touchdowns. They forced five turnovers. They held the Giants to a pitiful 152 total yards. If you weren’t terrified of Ray Lewis before kickoff, you were by the time the confetti fell.
The “Mirage” in the Screenshot
The image circulating on social media today (shown above) captures the only moment New York fans had to cheer. That’s Giants kick returner Ron Dixon (#86) sprinting 97 yards for a touchdown in the third quarter. For exactly 18 seconds, it looked like we had a game. The score was 17-7.
Then, reality hit. The Ravens’ Jermaine Lewis fielded the ensuing kickoff and housed it 84 yards. The sequence was a blur: Duane Starks’ pick-six, Dixon’s return, and Lewis’s dagger—three touchdowns in 36 seconds. It remains the wildest minute in Super Bowl history.
By The Numbers: Total Domination
The 2000 Ravens defense wasn’t just good; they were historically stingy. Look at what they did to the Giants that night:
- Passer Rating: Kerry Collins finished with a 7.1 rating. (Yes, single digits.)
- Interceptions: 4 (Kim Herring, Jamie Sharper, Chris McAlister, Duane Starks).
- Rushing Yards Allowed: 66 yards.
- Sacks: 4.
“If you kill the head, the body will die.” — Ray Lewis, Ravens Linebacker (Pre-game philosophy)
“We are the greatest defense to ever play this game. Period.” — Shannon Sharpe, Ravens Tight End
The Legacy: 2000 Ravens vs. 1985 Bears
The debate rages on even in 2026. The ’85 Bears had the swagger and the “Super Bowl Shuffle,” but the 2000 Ravens had the statistical edge in a 16-game season, allowing fewer points (165) than any team in history. Super Bowl XXXV was their closing argument. They didn’t just beat the Giants; they rendered them obsolete.
While the game itself wasn’t a thriller for the casual fan, it remains the gold standard for defensive football. You don’t win championships with offense; you win them by making the other team’s quarterback wish he had called in sick.

