National Football League all-star game
2022 NFL Pro Bowl | NFC | AFC | | 35 | 41 | | Head coach:Matt LaFleur(Green Bay Packers) | Head coach:Mike Vrabel(Tennessee Titans) | |
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total | | NFC | 13 | 8 | 0 | 14 | 35 | | AFC | 14 | 14 | 13 | 0 | 41 | |
| Date | February 6, 2022 |
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| Stadium | Allegiant Stadium, Las Vegas, Nevada |
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| Offensive MVP | Justin Herbert, QB (Los Angeles Chargers) |
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| Defensive MVP | Maxx Crosby, DE (Las Vegas Raiders) |
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| Referee | Tony Corrente |
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| Attendance | 56,206 |
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| Ceremonies |
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| National anthem | Tim Brown and the NFL Players Choir |
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| Halftime show | Jabbawockeez |
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| TV in the United States |
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| Network | ESPN ABCDisney XD |
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| Announcers | Steve Levy, Brian Griese, Louis Riddick and Lisa Salters |
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| Radio in the United States |
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| Network | Westwood One |
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| Announcers | Ryan Radtke (play-by-play)Tony Boselli (color commentator) Amber Theoharis (sideline reporter) |
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The 2022 Pro Bowl was the National Football League all-star game for the 2021 NFL season. It was played at Allegiant Stadium in Paradise, Nevada, on February 6, 2022.[1] ESPN, ABC and Disney XD had the national television rights.[2] Voting for the game started on November 16.[3] The entire roster was announced on December 22.[4][5][6][7] Mike Vrabel from the Tennessee Titans coached the AFC team, while Matt LaFleur from the Green Bay Packers coached the NFC team.[8] This was the most recent traditional Pro Bowl game, as the NFL announced a switch in format for the 2022 season that included several skill competitions and a flag football game.[9]
Background
[edit] The league awarded the game to Allegiant Stadium, as a make-up for the 2021 Pro Bowl, which was originally scheduled to be held in that stadium before the COVID-19 pandemic forced alternative festivities to take place instead of an actual game. With the league expanding the regular season from a 16-game schedule to 17 games, the Pro Bowl was moved from the last weekend in January to the first weekend in February.[2]
Summary
[edit] Box score
[edit] 2022 Pro Bowl: NFC at AFC
| Quarter | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
| NFC | 13 | 8 | 0 | 14 | 35 |
| AFC | 14 | 14 | 13 | 0 | 41 |
at Allegiant Stadium, Paradise, Nevada
- Date: February 6, 2022
- Game time: 3:00 p.m. EST/12:00 p.m. PST
- Game weather: None (indoor stadium)
- Game attendance: 56,206
- Referee: Tony Corrente
- TV announcers (ESPN/ABC/Disney XD): Steve Levy, Brian Griese, Louis Riddick, and Lisa Salters
- Recap, Game Book
| Scoring summary |
| Quarter | Time | Drive | Team | Scoring information | Score | | Plays | Yards | TOP | NFC | AFC | | 1 | 12:00 | – | – | – | AFC | Interception returned 45 yards for touchdown by Shaquille Leonard, Justin Tucker kick good | 0 | 7 | | 1 | 9:57 | 4 | 39 | 1:53 | NFC | Kyle Juszczyk 14-yard touchdown reception from Kirk Cousins, Jake Elliott kick good | 7 | 7 | | 1 | 9:26 | 1 | 15 | 0:07 | AFC | Mark Andrews 15-yard touchdown reception from Justin Herbert, Justin Tucker kick good | 7 | 14 | | 1 | 0:00 | – | – | – | NFC | Interception returned 63 yards for touchdown by Antoine Winfield Jr., 2-point pass failed | 13 | 14 | | 2 | 14:48 | – | – | – | AFC | Fumble recovery returned 22 yards for touchdown by Myles Garrett, 2-point pass complete | 13 | 22 | | 2 | 10:41 | 7 | 35 | 3:46 | NFC | Mike Evans 19-yard touchdown reception from Kyler Murray, 2-point pass complete | 21 | 22 | | 2 | 5:01 | 4 | 53 | 2:08 | AFC | Mark Andrews 7-yard touchdown reception from Justin Herbert, 2-point run failed | 21 | 28 | | 3 | 7:24 | 13 | 95 | 7:36 | AFC | Hunter Renfrow 6-yard touchdown reception from Mac Jones, 2-point pass failed | 21 | 34 | | 3 | 1:39 | 7 | 28 | 4:17 | AFC | Stefon Diggs 4-yard touchdown run, Justin Tucker kick good | 21 | 41 | | 4 | 10:18 | 13 | 75 | 6:21 | NFC | Kyle Pitts 5-yard touchdown reception from Kyler Murray, Jake Elliott kick good | 28 | 41 | | 4 | 2:36 | 6 | 36 | 1:11 | NFC | Dalvin Cook 5-yard touchdown reception from Kyler Murray, Jake Elliott kick good | 35 | 41 | | "TOP" = time of possession. For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football. | 35 | 41 | |
In the first quarter and a half, the NFC matched the AFC touchdown for touchdown, with the latter team leading by one due an unsuccessful two-point conversion after the NFC's second touchdown. After the AFC scored another touchdown before halftime, they continued to extend their lead in the third quarter with two more touchdowns, which gave them a 20-point lead at the end of that quarter. The NFC attempted a comeback, scoring 14 unanswered points in the fourth quarter, but the AFC took back and kept possession for the final two and a half minutes, securing their fifth consecutive Pro Bowl win.[10]
Statistics
[edit] | Statistics | NFC | AFC |
| First downs | 18 | 19 |
| Total yards | 287 | 315 |
| Rushes–yards | 8–1 | 21–52 |
| Passing yards | 286 | 263 |
| Passing: Comp–Att | 33–54 | 25–38 |
| Time of possession | 28:11 | 31:49 |
| Turnovers | 5 | 3 |
| Team | Category | Player | Statistics |
| NFC | Passing | Kyler Murray | 18/27, 160 yards, 3 TD, INT |
| Rushing | Justin Jefferson | 1 carry, 7 yards |
| Receiving | Mike Evans | 2 receptions, 50 yards, TD |
| AFC | Passing | Mac Jones | 12/16, 112 yards, TD, INT |
| Rushing | Nick Chubb | 6 carries, 17 yards |
| Receiving | Mark Andrews | 5 receptions, 82 yards, 2 TD |
Starting lineups
[edit] Starting lineups are based on the lineups provided in the gamebook for the game. The only exception, since neither team ran their first play on offense with a fullback, is the fullback has been swapped out for the additional tight end for the NFC and additional wide receiver for the AFC.
| NFC | Position | AFC |
| Offense |
| Justin Jefferson | WR | Tyreek Hill |
| George Kittle | TE | Mark Andrews |
| D. J. Humphries | LT | Rashawn Slater |
| Ali Marpet | LG | Joel Bitonio |
| Ryan Jensen | C | Corey Linsley |
| Laken Tomlinson | RG | Wyatt Teller |
| Brian O'Neill | RT | Orlando Brown Jr. |
| Deebo Samuel | WR | Stefon Diggs |
| Kyler Murray | QB | Justin Herbert |
| Dalvin Cook | RB | Jonathan Taylor |
| Kyle Juszczyk | FB | Patrick Ricard |
| Defense |
| Cam Jordan | DE | Myles Garrett |
| Jonathan Allen | DT | DeForest Buckner |
| Javon Hargrave | DT | Cameron Heyward |
| Brian Burns | DE | Maxx Crosby |
| Chandler Jones | OLB | T. J. Watt |
| Micah Parsons | MLB | Shaquille Leonard |
| Robert Quinn | OLB | Matthew Judon |
| Budda Baker | SS | Derwin James |
| Harrison Smith | FS | Kevin Byard |
| Trevon Diggs | CB | J. C. Jackson |
| Darius Slay | CB | Xavien Howard |
AFC roster
[edit] Offense
[edit] | Position | Starter(s) | Reserve(s) | Alternate(s) |
| Quarterback | 10 Justin Herbert, LA Chargers | 15 Patrick Mahomes, Kansas City8 Lamar Jackson, Baltimore[b] | 10 Mac Jones, New England[a] |
| Running back | 28 Jonathan Taylor, Indianapolis | 24 Nick Chubb, Cleveland28 Joe Mixon, Cincinnati[d] | 22 Najee Harris, Pittsburgh[a] |
| Fullback | 42 Patrick Ricard, Baltimore |
| Wide receiver | 10 Tyreek Hill, Kansas City1 Ja'Marr Chase, Cincinnati[d] | 14 Stefon Diggs, Buffalo13 Keenan Allen, LA Chargers[b] | 13 Hunter Renfrow, Las Vegas[a]18 Diontae Johnson, Pittsburgh[a] |
| Tight end | 89 Mark Andrews, Baltimore | 87 Travis Kelce, Kansas City |
| Offensive tackle | 70 Rashawn Slater, LA Chargers57 Orlando Brown Jr., Kansas City | 73 Dion Dawkins, Buffalo |
| Offensive guard | 56 Quenton Nelson, Indianapolis[b]75 Joel Bitonio, Cleveland | 77 Wyatt Teller, Cleveland | 76 Rodger Saffold, Tennessee[a] |
| Center | 63 Corey Linsley, LA Chargers | 78 Ryan Kelly, Indianapolis |
Defense
[edit] | Position | Starter(s) | Reserve(s) | Alternate(s) |
| Defensive end | 95 Myles Garrett, Cleveland98 Maxx Crosby, Las Vegas | 91 Trey Hendrickson, Cincinnati[d] | 55 Frank Clark, Kansas City[a] |
| Defensive tackle | 99 DeForest Buckner, Indianapolis95 Chris Jones, Kansas City[b] | 97 Cameron Heyward, Pittsburgh | 98 Jeffery Simmons, Tennessee[a] |
| Outside linebacker | 90 T. J. Watt, Pittsburgh97 Joey Bosa, LA Chargers[b] | 9 Matthew Judon, New England | 58 Harold Landry, Tennessee[a] |
| Inside linebacker | 53 Darius Leonard, Indianapolis | 52 Denzel Perryman, Las Vegas |
| Cornerback | 27 J. C. Jackson, New England25 Xavien Howard, Miami | 21 Denzel Ward, Cleveland23 Kenny Moore II, Indianapolis |
| Free safety | 31 Kevin Byard, Tennessee | 32 Tyrann Mathieu, Kansas City[C] |
| Strong safety | 33 Derwin James, LA Chargers |
Special teams
[edit] | Position | Starter(s) | Alternate(s) |
| Punter | 6 A. J. Cole III, Las Vegas |
| Placekicker | 9 Justin Tucker, Baltimore |
| Return specialist | 13 Devin Duvernay, Baltimore |
| Special teams | 18 Matthew Slater, New England |
| Long snapper | 46 Luke Rhodes, Indianapolis |
bold player who participated in game
italics signifies a rookie
(C) signifies the player has been selected as a captain
a Replacement player selection due to injury or vacancy
b Injured player; selected but did not participate
c Replacement Player; selected as reserve
d Selected but did not play because his team advanced to Super Bowl LVI
(See Pro Bowl "Player selection" section) e Selected but chose not to participate
f Selected as starter, but relinquished that role
NFC roster
[edit] Offense
[edit] | Position | Starter(s) | Reserve(s) | Alternate(s) |
| Quarterback | 12 Aaron Rodgers, Green Bay[b] | 12 Tom Brady, Tampa Bay[f]1 Kyler Murray, Arizona | 8 Kirk Cousins, Minnesota[a]3 Russell Wilson, Seattle[a] |
| Running back | 33 Dalvin Cook, Minnesota | 6 James Conner, Arizona41 Alvin Kamara, New Orleans |
| Fullback | 44 Kyle Juszczyk, San Francisco |
| Wide receiver | 10 Cooper Kupp, LA Rams[d]17 Davante Adams, Green Bay[b] | 18 Justin Jefferson, Minnesota19 Deebo Samuel, San Francisco | 13 Mike Evans, Tampa Bay[a]88 CeeDee Lamb, Dallas[a] |
| Tight end | 85 George Kittle, San Francisco | 8 Kyle Pitts, Atlanta |
| Offensive tackle | 71 Trent Williams, San Francisco[b]78 Tristan Wirfs, Tampa Bay[b] | 77 Tyron Smith, Dallas[b] | 76 Duane Brown, Seattle[a]75 Brian O'Neill, Minnesota[a]74 D. J. Humphries, Arizona[a] |
| Offensive guard | 70 Zack Martin, Dallas[b]75 Brandon Scherff, Washington[b] | 74 Ali Marpet, Tampa Bay | 73 Jonah Jackson, Detroit[a]75 Laken Tomlinson, San Francisco[a] |
| Center | 62 Jason Kelce, Philadelphia[b] | 66 Ryan Jensen, Tampa Bay | 50 Alex Mack, San Francisco[a] |
Defense
[edit] | Position | Starter(s) | Reserve(s) | Alternate(s) |
| Defensive end | 97 Nick Bosa, San Francisco[b]53 Brian Burns, Carolina | 94 Cameron Jordan, New Orleans | 94 Josh Sweat, Philadelphia[a] |
| Defensive tackle | 99 Aaron Donald, LA Rams[d]93 Jonathan Allen, Washington | 97 Kenny Clark, Green Bay[b] | 97 Javon Hargrave, Philadelphia[a]50 Vita Vea, Tampa Bay[a] |
| Outside linebacker | 55 Chandler Jones, Arizona94 Robert Quinn, Chicago | 58 Shaquil Barrett, Tampa Bay |
| Inside linebacker | 11 Micah Parsons, Dallas | 54 Bobby Wagner, Seattle[b] | 45 Devin White, Tampa Bay[a] |
| Cornerback | 7 Trevon Diggs, Dallas5 Jalen Ramsey, LA Rams[d] | 2 Darius Slay, Philadelphia23 Marshon Lattimore, New Orleans | 9 Stephon Gilmore, Carolina[a] |
| Free safety | 6 Quandre Diggs, Seattle[b] | 22 Harrison Smith, Minnesota | 31 Antoine Winfield Jr., Tampa Bay[a] |
| Strong safety | 3 Budda Baker, Arizona |
Special teams
[edit] | Position | Starter(s) | Alternate(s) |
| Punter | 5 Bryan Anger, Dallas |
| Placekicker | 8 Matt Gay, LA Rams[d] | 4 Jake Elliott, Philadelphia[a] |
| Return specialist | 17 Jakeem Grant, Chicago |
| Special teams | 48 J. T. Gray, New Orleans |
| Long snapper | 47 Josh Harris, Atlanta |
bold player who participated in game
italics signifies a rookie
(C) signifies the player has been selected as a captain
a Replacement player selection due to injury or vacancy
b Injured player; selected but did not participate
c Replacement player; selected as reserve
d Selected but did not play because his team advanced to Super Bowl LVI
(See Pro Bowl "Player selection" section) e Selected but chose not to participate
f Selected but did not play due to initially retiring
Number of selections per team
[edit] American Football Conference | Team | Selections | | Baltimore Ravens | 5 | | Buffalo Bills | 2 | | Cincinnati Bengals | 3 | | Cleveland Browns | 5 | | Denver Broncos | 0 | | Houston Texans | 0 | | Indianapolis Colts | 7 | | Jacksonville Jaguars | 0 | | Kansas City Chiefs | 7 | | Las Vegas Raiders | 4 | | Los Angeles Chargers | 6 | | Miami Dolphins | 1 | | New England Patriots | 4 | | New York Jets | 0 | | Pittsburgh Steelers | 4 | | Tennessee Titans | 4 | | National Football Conference | Team | Selections | | Arizona Cardinals | 4 | | Atlanta Falcons | 2 | | Carolina Panthers | 2 | | Chicago Bears | 2 | | Dallas Cowboys | 6 | | Detroit Lions | 1 | | Green Bay Packers | 3 | | Los Angeles Rams | 4 | | Minnesota Vikings | 5 | | New Orleans Saints | 4 | | New York Giants | 0 | | Philadelphia Eagles | 5 | | San Francisco 49ers | 7 | | Seattle Seahawks | 4 | | Tampa Bay Buccaneers | 9 | | Washington Football Team | 2 | |
Broadcasting
[edit] The game was televised nationally in the United States by ESPN, and simulcast on ABC and Disney XD.[2]
References
[edit] - ^ "NFL Season to Feature 17 Regular Season Games Per Team" (PDF). nflcommunications.com (Press release). NFL. March 30, 2021. Retrieved April 28, 2021.
- ^ a b c "NFL to reimagine 2021 Pro Bowl; '22 Pro Bowl awarded to Las Vegas". NFL. October 14, 2020. Retrieved October 14, 2020.
- ^ "2022 Pro Bowl Tickets On Sale As Fan Voting Begins". NFL. November 16, 2021. Retrieved November 16, 2021.
- ^ Baca, Michael (December 20, 2021). "2022 Pro Bowl: Tom Brady, Aaron Donald, Cooper Kupp, Jonathan Taylor, Travis Kelce first five revealed". NFL. Retrieved December 21, 2021.
- ^ "2022 Pro Bowl roster: Browns, Raiders, Vikings, Bears players revealed". NFL. December 20, 2021. Retrieved December 21, 2021.
- ^ "2022 Pro Bowl: Complete AFC roster revealed". NFL. Retrieved December 22, 2021.
- ^ "2022 Pro Bowl: Complete NFC roster revealed". NFL. Retrieved December 22, 2021.
- ^ Willkennedy5 (January 24, 2022). "Mike Vrabel, Titans staff to coach AFC in Pro Bowl". DraftKings.com.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
- ^ "NFL replaces Pro Bowl with 'The Pro Bowl Games' featuring weeklong skills competitions, flag football game". ESPN.com. Associated Press. September 26, 2022. Retrieved September 26, 2022.
- ^ "2022 Pro Bowl: What we learned from AFC's win over NFC". National Football League. February 6, 2022. Retrieved February 6, 2022.
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