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Super Bowl 50: Denver Broncos Take Home The NFL Title

Ryan Harris of the Denver Broncos celebrates after defeating the Carolina Panthers on Sunday. The Broncos beat the Panthers 24-10.
Al Bello Getty Images
Ryan Harris of the Denver Broncos celebrates after defeating the Carolina Panthers on Sunday. The Broncos beat the Panthers 24-10.

Peyton Manning, in the first quarter of Super Bowl 50.
Ezra Shaw Getty Images
Peyton Manning, in the first quarter of Super Bowl 50.

Peyton Manning is once more on top of the world. The Denver Broncos quarterback — a future Hall of Famer in what may be his final season — is once more a Super Bowl champion. The Broncos have beaten the Carolina Panthers, 24-10.

The game fell well short of a quarterback duel, though. Again, it was the Denver defense that led the way, harassing Cam Newton, forcing turnover after turnover and even tacking on a score of their own.

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It was sloppy, it was often ugly, but it was, without a doubt, the biggest game of the year. Naturally, we decided to cover it with the littlest poems we could think of: haiku.

With a hat tip to our colleagues at WBUR's Only a Game, where they've long been asking listeners for haiku, we decided it was time for us to try our hand at the art form: a three-line poem, with five syllables in the first line, seven in the second, and five again in the third.

(And yes, haiku-purists, we know the poems are supposed to be about nature, too. But give us some leeway here.)

Think of it as a syllable-conscious live-blog. We tweeted our updates in haiku as the game went on, retweeting your contributions and doing it all using the hashtag #SuperBowlHaiku. You can find all the tweets above.

Now, you might be asking yourself why, exactly, we covered the big game with all these tiny poems. Good question. That's because — well, because this is NPR.

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