EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — It wasn’t the safety on the first play. It wasn’t the Seahawks’ absolute demolition of the Broncos (43-8, if you forgot). The real MVP of Super Bowl XLVIII showed up before the clock even started.
A resurfaced clip from Inside the NFL’s “Top 60 SB Mic’d Up Moments” is tearing through social media today, reminding everyone of the time Broadway Joe Namath strutted onto the frozen MetLife turf wearing a fur coat that cost more than most cars—and proceeded to nearly ruin the coin toss.
The Coat That Broke the Internet
Joe Namath has never done subtle. But in February 2014, with temperatures hovering near 49 degrees, the Jets legend walked out to midfield looking like a luxury yeti. He rocked a massive coyote and white fox fur coat that immediately eclipsed Peyton Manning’s pre-game jitters.
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The visual was jarring. You had players in high-tech thermal gear, coaches in heavy parkas, and then Namath, looking like he just walked off a 1970s movie set. The Broncos captains—Manning included—didn’t know where to look. The Inside the NFL clip captures the sheer bewilderment in the huddle. You can practically see the thought bubbles: “Is that… is that mink?”
“Wait, Joe! Not Yet!”
The fashion statement was loud, but the toss was louder. In the clip, the mic picks up the chaos perfectly. Referee Terry McAulay hadn’t even asked the Seahawks for their call (“Heads” or “Tails”) when Namath launched the coin into the air.
McAulay intercepted the coin mid-air. It remains the only interception of a coin toss in NFL history. The mic catches the panic, the laughter from the sidelines, and Namath’s grin as he realizes he jumped the gun. He didn’t care. He’s Joe Namath. He guarantees wins, and apparently, he guarantees the coin flies whenever he feels like it.
“Boy, I tell you what, that coat… that thing had its own zip code. You just don’t see that every Sunday.” — Unidentified Broncos Player (Mic’d Up Audio)
Why It Still Matters
This moment captures why we love the “Mic’d Up” series. It’s not just about the bone-crushing hits; it’s about the human moments where NFL titans turn into fans. Seeing Manning and the Broncos—moments before getting crushed—stop and stare at an NFL icon in a ridiculous coat is pure gold. It’s a reminder that even in the highest-stakes game on Earth, football is still weird, funny, and unpredictable.

