NEW YORK – For one week, Broadway became the boulevard of broken knees.
For one week, the NFL tried to dominate Times Square, from the TKTS booth to the NYPD station, and was rewarded with massive crowds, after renaming a patch of Broadway "Super Bowl Boulevard."
A line formed at the miniaturized football field where you could try to kick an extra point. A guy in a Broncos Tim Tebow jersey booted one through on Friday, then Tebowed. The next guy up screamed "Omaha," mimicking Peyton Manning, before shanking one into the net.
Of course, there are massive crowds in Times Square when the biggest attraction is the Naked Cowboy or the Olive Garden, so the NFL didn't take Manhattan so much as it was engulfed by an unaware city.
In most locales, like in Minneapolis in 1992, the Super Bowl descends like a swarm of logoed locusts. In New Orleans, the Super Bowl is the life of a raging party. In New York, the Big Game stands on the corner and screams for attention like a comedy club barker.
This week, the Super Bowl was treated like an off-Broadway show — so far off Broadway that the actual play will occur in New Jersey.
"One unique aspect about the focus for this year's Super Bowl has been on the weather," NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said Friday. "I told you we were going to embrace the weather. Of course, we don't control the weather."
With that, a flurry of fake snow began falling behind Goodell on the Lincoln Center stage. A few minutes later, real flakes began falling outside.