<P> Super Bowl I was the only Super Bowl in history that was not a sellout in terms of attendance, despite a TV blackout in the Los Angeles area (at the time, NFL games were required to be blacked out in the market of origin, even if it was a neutral site game and if it sold out). Of the 94,000 - seat capacity in the Coliseum, 33,000 went unsold . Days before the game, local newspapers printed editorials about what they viewed as a then - exorbitant $12 price for tickets, and wrote stories about how viewers could pull in the game from stations in distant markets such as Bakersfield, Santa Barbara and San Diego . </P> <P> All known broadcast tapes of the game in its entirety were subsequently wiped by both NBC and CBS to save costs, a common practice at the time . This has prevented studies comparing each network's respective telecast . </P> <P> For many years, only two small samples of the telecasts were known to have survived, showing Max McGee's opening touchdown and Jim Taylor's first touchdown run . Both were shown in 1991 on HBO's Play by Play: A History of Sports Television and on the Super Bowl XXV pregame show . </P> <P> In January 2011, a partial recording of the CBS telecast was reported to have been found in a Pennsylvania attic and restored by the Paley Center for Media in New York . The two - inch color videotape is the most complete version of the broadcast yet discovered, missing only the halftime show and most of the third quarter . The NFL owns the broadcast's copyright and has blocked its sale or distribution . After remaining anonymous and only communicating with the media through his lawyer, the owner of the recording, Troy Haupt, came forward to The New York Times in 2016 to tell his side of the story . </P>

Who scored the first points in superbowl history
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