Showing posts with label Steelers 2010-11. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steelers 2010-11. Show all posts

Thursday, April 07, 2011

Roethlisberger talks wedding plans, media scrutiny as date nears

Thursday, April 07, 2011
By Ed Bouchette, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
http://www.post-gazette.com/sports/

ARLINGTON, TX - FEBRUARY 06: Quarterback Ben Roethlisberger calls signals out at the line of scrimmage against the Green Bay Packers during Super Bowl XLV at Cowboys Stadium on February 6, 2011 in Arlington, Texas. The Packers won 31-25. (Getty Images)


The 2005 season turned out even better than Ben Roethlisberger imagined, and his first Super Bowl victory at season's end wasn't the only one that involved a ring.

That August at training camp at Saint Vincent College, he met a Steelers fan from New Castle named Ashley Harlan. On July 23, only a week before the Steelers are scheduled to report to training camp (provided an NFL lockout of the players is lifted by then), Mr. Roethlisberger and Ms. Harlan will marry.

"I think a small part of her is hoping we hold out for a week so we can honeymoon," Mr. Roethlisberger said Wednesday. "I told her I was laughing with coach [Mike] Tomlin; he said 'You guys might have to have the honeymoon suite at Saint Vincent.' "

The 29-year-old quarterback spoke for the first time publicly since Super Bowl XLV during an interview with the Post-Gazette at his home near North Park. He confirmed for the first time the news that broke of his engagement to Ms. Harlan over Christmas and talked about his future wife and their summer wedding plans.

"I was surprised at how much media attention it was getting -- it's just an engagement," he said. "I never expected it to be on the front pages of all the papers and websites. There was speculation what our invitations would look like and who is coming! It almost seemed surreal, it was like a movie or something, it was weird."

Some of those stories detailed a "wedding" gift registry at various department stores, which in reality was a registry for Ms. Harlan's shower. Because of the publicity, she has received packages from unknown people who have bought gifts for a shower they will not attend.

"We've gotten a lot of gifts from people we don't know," Mr. Roethlisberger said.

They expect more than 500 people at the wedding that will be in the Pittsburgh area. The guest list includes all of his teammates along with coaches and team executives. They're still looking for somewhere to hold the reception after trying to rent the Consol Energy Center, which has a previous engagement -- a World Wrestling Entertainment show. Guests will be asked not to bring gifts but make donations to Mr. Roethlisberger's foundation. He will give any gifts to Ronald McDonald House and Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC.

"I don't know if it's ever been done before, but it's something I wanted to do and she's on board," he said. "We're just hoping that people who come to the wedding give a dollar or a thousand dollars or whatever it is, and at the end we'll put it all together and write a big check to Ronald McDonald House and Children's Hospital and put everyone's name who donated."

It may be a relatively short engagement but the relationship was much longer in the making. After finishing an afternoon practice in August 2005, Mr. Roethlisberger walked through part of the Saint Vincent campus, ran into a fan and started talking to him. The guy had a sister, Ashley Harlan.

"We were kind of on and off for five years -- almost six years now -- so I've known her for a while. It's not like a random new person. We dated awhile ago; we have been friends ever since."

Mr. Roethlisberger said he was determined to not only change his image but also change his ways since he was publicly humiliated -- but never charged -- after a female college student claimed he sexually assaulted her in a Georgia bar 13 months ago. Players say he has become a better teammate and friend, and many from the media covering him to those working in the front office have noticed a change in attitude. He has stayed out of the limelight, intentionally, and avoided talking even after news of his engagement first leaked while the team prepared for the playoffs in January.

Some of the reaction to his engagement coming so soon after his personal problems last year was met with skepticism.

"People will always have opinions of everybody and me, and that's fine, they're entitled," Mr. Roethlisberger said. "But people who know her, know me, know us ... it's funny because I've even had lot of fan mail through my website and stuff; people will write in and say -- even before any word came out about an engagement -- 'Ben, you look like something's different with you. You look like a happier person, you play happy, you smile more on the field.' Part of that is because I'm a happier person, I'm in a happy place, but a lot of that has to do with her, too.

"People can say that it is whatever, but people who know and can see and are around us and know me, know that it's something special when you find that person, and I'm extremely lucky."

Ms. Harlan, a physician's assistant who turns 27 in July, lives at home with her parents. Mr. Roethlisberger cited the couple's religious faith and beliefs as the reasons for not living together until marriage. He also hopes she can continue to live her life out of the spotlight.

"I try to protect her as much as I can. People have gone to her parents' house and have been doing some things," Mr. Roethlisberger said of the media. "That bothers me a little bit because it's what I do for a living, I have to deal with it, but her parents and her, that's not what they have to do. I understand it's going to happen a little bit, but I'm still going to try to be very protective of the people I love -- my family, my sister, my aunts, uncles, grandparents and now her. I try to be very protective of them because I don't want her to have to be scrutinized over every little thing she does."

For more on the Steelers, read the blog, Ed Bouchette on the Steelers at www.post-gazette.com/plus. Ed Bouchette: ebouchette@post-gazette.com. Follow him on Twitter@EdBouchette.

Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11097/1137642-66.stm#ixzz1IqN33xTi

Wednesday, March 02, 2011

Steelers' Ward to put moves on display for new audience

By Kevin Gorman, PITTSBURGH TRIBUNE-REVIEW
http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/sports/
Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Hines Ward might be counting on Steelers Nation to propel the Super Bowl XL Most Valuable Player to win ABC’s Dancing With The Stars, the popular, viewer-driven ballroom dance reality show.

What Ward shouldn’t count on are his teammates’ votes.

"He is probably the worst dancer on the show," linebacker James Farrior cracked. "I give him two weeks because of his popularity. I wish him all the best. That is all he has — personality. That is the only chance he has. Be nice and give them the old Hines Ward smile."

That smile attracted the attention of Dancing With The Stars senior producer and head of casting Deena Katz, who believes the Steelers’ career receiving leader could win the Mirror Ball Trophy as DWTS champion.

"I see Hines going real far," Katz said. "That smile alone could get him to the finals."

Katz initially was reluctant to cast another NFL player among the celebrities, but changed her tune once she learned that the four-time Pro Bowl pick was a "huge fan" of the show and willing to be a celebrity contestant.

"Once I met him, there's not a chance in the world you can’t have Hines on the show," Katz said. "He is so charming. That smile he has can light up a room. There's a twinkle in his eyes. That smile, even when he's standing on the sidelines, he's the one guy you want to embrace. I have a feeling he is going to be that one crossover star with men and women. I was hoping they would win the Super Bowl, but that didn’t make a difference."

Ward, who will be 35 by the show’s Season 12 premieres March 21, is trying to become the first active NFL player to win the popular reality show. Hall of Fame running back Emmitt Smith won Season 3, and Hall of Fame wide receiver Jerry Rice and former Woodland Hills star Jason Taylor, a defensive end with the New York Jets, also were finalists.

Ward's appearance on the show could come amid NFL labor strife. The league's owners are expected to lock out the players from off-season activities after midnight on Thursday. The series finale is May 24.

"If they’re going to lock us out, you've got to stay active. That’s one way of doing it," said Steelers right tackle Willie Colon, who was surprised to learn of Ward being cast as a celebrity contestant. "I think it's funny."

Ward said he hopes to survive the early cuts in a cast that includes actors Kirstie Alley and Ralph Macchio, WWE wrestler Chris Jericho, former world welterweight champion boxer Sugar Ray Leonard and rapper Romeo.

"I’m looking forward to it," Ward said Monday night during ABC’s Dancing With The Stars new cast reveal special. "A lot of our fears up here, we don't want to be eliminated first. For us, we want to compete hard."

Ward said he is recovering from "minor" knee surgery three weeks ago, and used his charm to gain sympathy for the Steelers’ 31-25 loss to Green Bay in Super Bowl XLV Feb. 6 at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

"With us coming off a devastating loss in the Super Bowl against the Packers, the season was long," Ward said, drawing an "awww" from the ABC studio audience. "It was just a light scope, but I'll be fine."

Ward could not be reached Tuesday, and the Steelers declined comment. Katz said Ward's knee injury was "a big discussion with his dance partner," which will be announced today on Good Morning America. (TMZ.com has reported that Ward will be paired with Australian Kym Johnson). Contestants train three-to-four hours per day five days a week, Katz said.

"They'll do dance steps that won't hurt the knee as much," Katz said. "There have only been two rehearsals so far, but he can move. He's got the best feet in the NFL, doesn’t he? When it gets to the end of the competition and gets really intense he'll have to do more, but that’s 12 weeks away."

Katz said she first spoke to Ward in November about becoming a celebrity contestant, including a conversation with his camp 10 minutes after the Super Bowl to confirm his interest. Katz believes Ward's notoriety — he has gained a reputation as one of the NFL’s dirtiest players because of his crack-back blocks, but also has become an outspoken advocate for mixed-race Korean children like himself — will attract viewers to DWTS.

"That's part of the fun," Katz said. "You've got that big fan base and those people get behind you. The Steelers are a team the whole nation loves or loves to hate. It makes for great television, for people talking about the show and it helps with the buzz. Even if you are not a Steelers fan, to have a current guy with a marquee name like Hines Ward has, you're still going to root for him. People are going to say, 'Oh, my God. I want to see Hines.'"

Staff writer John Harris contributed to this story.

Photo: Getty Images


Read more: Steelers' Ward to put moves on display for new audience - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/sports/s_725311.html#ixzz1FRaBiMBV

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Woodley deserves the big bucks

By Mike Bires
Beaver County Times
http://www.timesonline.com/sports/
Sunday, February 20, 2011


LaMarr Woodley is proof that there's value in keeping your yap shut and just doing the job you‘re paid to do.

Last summer at training camp, Woodley could have easily bickered about his contract. He was vastly underpaid in 2009 when he led the Steelers in sacks. He was going to be underpaid again in 2010. And the Steelers hadn't offered him an extension like they've done to so many of their stars in recent years.

But Woodley, the Steelers' left outside linebacker, never complained. He was the antithesis of Jeff Reed.

In fact, one particular day at camp last August, Reed and Woodley were cornered by the media and asked about their contractual status. Reed chose to whine about his situation. Woodley refused to utter a discouraging word.

Reed went on to kick his way out of town.

Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker LaMarr Woodley celebrates after he sacked New York Jets quarterback Mark Sanchez in the second quarter of the AFC Championship game in Pittsburgh, January 23, 2011.(Reuters)

Woodley went on to have another strong season, and on Friday, he was justly rewarded for his productivity and his patience. When they Steelers put the franchise tag on him, Woodley was guaranteed to make $10.2 million in 2011 provided NFL owners and players eventually end their labor dispute and there is a 2011 season.

"Just got a well-deserved, $9.5 million raise," Woodley wrote on his Twitter account. "Here's to a long-term deal."

Woodley, the Steelers' second-round pick in the 2007 draft, will eventually get his long-term deal. The Steelers would be crazy not to lock this guy in for years to come.

Obviously, he's a terrific player.

In each of his three years as a starter, Woodley posted double-digit sack totals. He's one of only two players in team history to record at least 10 sacks in three straight seasons. The other is James Harrison.

Woodley's 39 sacks in his first four seasons are the most of any Steelers defender in the first four years of their careers. He is also the only player in NFL history to post at least one sack in six consecutive postseason games.

Beyond his playing ability, Woodley is also a good guy. He's a great locker room guy and he's active in community affairs. He's a model citizen.

One day during Super Bowl week in North Texas, I asked Woodley why he never threatened to hold out or complain about his contract.

"I didn't want to be a distraction," he said.

In a season in which the Steelers had plenty of distractions, Woodley just played and played well. He was second on the team with 10 sacks (Harrison had 10.5) and was paid just $550,000. That's close to $1 million less than the Steelers paid backup nose tackle Chris Hoke.

In ‘09 when Woodley led the team with 13.5 sacks and made the Pro Bowl, he was paid $460,000. That was $160,000 less than the Steelers paid Andre Frazier, the man who backed up Woodley.

But now, that is history. Woodley is now a millionaire 10 times over.

Good for him. His patience has paid off. If anyone deserves such a raise, it's him.

Mike Bires can be reached at mbires@timesonline.com

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Turnover virus was Steelers' downfall

Tuesday, February 08, 2011
By Gene Collier, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
http://www.post-gazette.com/sports/

Green Bay Packers linebacker Desmond Bishop (55) picks up Rashard Mendenhall's fumble in the fourth quarter against the Pittsburgh Steelers during the NFL's Super Bowl XLV football game in Arlington, Texas, February 6, 2011. (Reuters)


ARLINGTON, Texas -- The Green Bay Packers rang up 111 points off turnovers this season, launching them into an exclusive status as the only team to attain the top five in that category in three consecutive years, so it shouldn't be a shock to anyone that they slapped 21 more on the Steelers in Super Bowl XLV.

No shock, perhaps, but plenty of awww ...

That's the kind of thing that isn't supposed to happen to, um, anybody, really, but especially not to a Steelers team that hadn't turned the ball over three times since Nov. 22, 2009, at Kansas City, 25 games ago.

So how does a 14-4 team that has won eight of its past nine, a team carrying the banner of the NFL's only six-time Super Bowl champion, walk out onto football's grandest stage and flash a drop-dead impersonation of the perfect Packers victim?

Let us count the ways, slowly, and as the case may be, painfully.

The first one probably wasn't Ben Roethlisberger's fault, but I'm not sure the same could be said for offensive coordinator Bruce Arians. Green Bay had just taken a 7-0 lead, and Ryan Mundy had just committed Sunday's first deadly special teams penalty to pin the Steelers offense at its 7.

Arians rarely does the safe thing in these situations (see Ben in the shotgun in his end zone to set up a Jason Taylor safety vs. the New York Jets, Dec. 19), and the play caller's first-and-10 selection was a deep throw to Mike Wallace outside the left numbers. Near the top of his throwing motion, Roethlisberger was impacted by 340 pounds of Howard Green, altering the trajectory of a pass that fell into the hands of safety Nick Collins at the 37, about 12 yards short of the target.

Collins returned it for a touchdown, followed by an excessive celebration, but you'll have to excuse him for that. He probably knew that every team that has ever returned an interception for a touchdown in the Super Bowl has won the thing.

Yeah, I'm sure he knew that.

The second interception was all on Ben, who fixated on Wallace as he crossed in front of the coverage right to left, ignoring a wide open Heath Miller down the seam. Roethlisberger also forgot to account for Jarrett Bush, who caught it at the spot to which Wallace was headed. Four plays later, Aaron Rodgers zipped one 21 yards to Greg Jennings for the touchdown that made it 21-3.

Jarrett Bush of the Green Bay Packers intercepts a pass intended for Mike Wallace of the Pittsburgh Steelers during the NFL Super Bowl XLV football game on February 6, 2011 at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas. (Getty Images)

But that wasn't the worst pass Big Ben would throw on a day when his passer rating came home at 77.4, not as dreadful as the 35.5 he posted against the Jets in the AFC championship game, but certainly forgettable. Though he commonly jokes that Wallace's speed is so great he can't be overthrown, Roethlisberger picked a terrible time to ruin that line. Trailing 21-17 with 6:50 left in the third quarter, Wallace scalded Packers safety Charlie Peprah on a streak toward the left pylon from the Green Bay 44.

Roethlisberger's throw cleared him by 5 yards.

Over the wrong shoulder.

And it brought a rare public look-at-that from Arians.

"We had a chance for a touchdown pass to take the lead," Arians said, "but we just missed it."

But in betraying their own status as a plus-17 team when it comes to turnover ratio, the second best such figure in the league, the Steelers undoubtedly saved the worst for last, and there was plenty of blame to spread around on this one.

Rashard Mendenhall, who played an effectively robust game despite getting only 14 carries against a middling Packers rush defense, took a handoff and headed between the tackles at the Green Bay 33.

Momentum, it appeared, had shifted the Steelers' way inalterably behind a defense that forced Green Bay's attack to look like this to that point in the second half: three and out, three and out, four and out, three and out.

But Mendenhall had the ball for less than a second before he had linebacker Clay Matthews on his hands as well, and Matthews was quickly joined by 340-pound defensive end Ryan Pickett. The ball popped free like a bar of soap, and linebacker Desmond Bishop scooped it for a short return to the 45. The entire right side of the Steelers' formation failed on that play, as well as the running back.

"Late in the game, especially when Pittsburgh made that run, I mean any great team is going to make a run and we knew that," said veteran Packers safety Charles Woodson, who hurt his shoulder defending Wallace and missed all of the second half. "They made some plays but when we had to, we made the stops and came up with the turnovers. That's what we've done all season."

Maybe we should have known the Steelers were coming down with something, as there was that postseason turnover virus going around. They had seven in three playoff games, more than in the entire second half of the season.

The Steelers kept the ball for nearly 34 minutes in Super Bowl XLV, making MVP Rodgers a spectator the majority of the time. Had they just not spent so much of their possession time de-possessing.


Gene Collier: gcollier@post-gazette.com.

Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11039/1123797-150.stm#ixzz1DYmFCOj8

Wednesday, February 09, 2011

Super Bowl loss lingers for Ward

Wednesday, February 09, 2011
By Ed Bouchette, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
http://www.post-gazette.com/sports/

Peter Diana/Post-Gazette

Steelers wide receiver Hines Ward walks off the field thru confetti after losing Super Bowl XLV Sunday at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas.


Hines Ward is hurting, and while not all of it comes from the Steelers' Super Bowl loss, he can have the other stuff repaired surgically. It will take awhile to fix the broken heart.

Ward will have two surgeries this week, the first on his left knee, the second on his left thumb. His knee, the one without an ACL, has cartilage damage that must be repaired, something that has bothered him since training camp. He has a torn ligament in his left thumb from throwing a block in the second game of the season at Tennessee. The thumb can bend all the way back past his wrist, which is why he wore a protective cast on it all season.

Ward isn't the only player who will have surgery. Rookie receiver Emmanuel Sanders will have his broken foot repaired and untold others are in line.

Dr. James Bradley, the team's orthopedic surgery, will have a busy three weeks as players rush to get their surgeries before their insurance runs out with the expected March 4 lockout. Players cannot even visit the trainers room for rehab once they are locked out.

The Steelers held their final meeting Tuesday with the coaches, then had another with quarterback Charlie Batch, a member of the NFL Players Association board, to discuss such things as health and disability insurance and answer questions.

That stuff is quickly becoming a reality, but what remained in the forefront for the players Tuesday was their 31-25 loss to Green Bay two days earlier.

"It's tough," Ward said. "I was really depressed. I didn't want to watch TV because all you saw was Green Bay and stuff. It hurts more I think because we had an opportunity to win the game.

"Anybody who turns the ball over three times and still has an opportunity to win shows a lot about the team. But we didn't play our best ball. That's disappointing for me personally because for big games I just knew we would step up big, but we didn't do that on Sunday."

Ward thought they'd do it right until the end, when they had a first-down on their 13 and two minutes to go. However, without criticizing anyone, he was not happy he did not get much of an opportunity on that drive. Heath Miller caught the first pass for 15 yards. Ward caught the next for 5 yards -- which wasted about 30 seconds because Antwaan Randle El acknowledged he lined up on the wrong side. The next three passes all were aimed at Mike Wallace but never connected.

"I'm thinking deja vu, here we go again," said Ward, who caught seven passes for 78 yards and one touchdown in the game. "Two minutes, let's go down there. I really felt like I was in a zone, that anything that came my way it was going to get caught no matter what. I didn't get an opportunity. I would like to have gotten opportunities [on the final series] but it didn't happen."

Asked what areas he thought the Steelers might need to fortify before next season, Ward mentioned the offensive line, where he pointed to the uncertainty, including what will become of two right tackles, Flozell Adams and Willie Colon. The offensive captain also praised the work of Doug Legursky at center Sunday for injured Maurkice Pouncey.

"Legursky played his tail off. I just watched him [on tape]. I watched the game. He battled. He held his own. I was real happy about that."

There was little happiness, though, on the team's South Side campus on Tuesday.

"It still hurts. I don't know how long it will take. Just a lot of guys are sad, disappointed because we know we could have played better."

Ward and five others gathered at James Farrior's home Monday night after they arrived from Texas to commiserate.

"We all got together to talk among each other about the game and get it off our chests. That's the best relief you need. When you're around family and friends they can always tell you, but they don't really know.

"We had a phenomenal year, considering how we started, the teams we beat to get to that point, but to fall short the way we did, that's what's so disheartening to the guys."

Ward will return for his 14th season in 2011, but it was still good for him to hear coach Mike Tomlin does not want him to retire.

"He just told me it's not even an option, so don't even think about it. He wants me back. I just have to get away. Once I get all my surgeries cleaned up, I'll come back fresh. I'll feel better. I've been playing with that all year long."

He refused to blame his lower stats -- his 59 receptions were his fewest since 2000 -- on the injuries.

"They said it'll feel much better. I've been playing for so many years on it and never really had surgery on it. They'll go in there and clean it up a little bit and I'll be fine.

"To go out there and still make plays the way I did in the Super Bowl, there's still some playing days left. I'm not going to hang it up just yet."


Ed Bouchette: ebouchette@post-gazette.com.

Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11040/1123988-66.stm#ixzz1DSvyI0Rs

Tuesday, February 08, 2011

Super Bowl XLV will be the one that got away

Tuesday, February 08, 2011
By Ed Bouchette, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
http://www.post-gazette.com/sports/

Peter Diana / Post-Gazette

Steelers Hines Ward and Antonio Brown sit on the sidelines as confetti falls around them marking the Packers' victory in Super Bowl XLV.


ARLINGTON, Texas -- Steelers fans should have been nervous before the game even started, when Pittsburgh native Christina Aguilera fumbled some lyrics while singing the national anthem.

Steelers players took her cue and tripped over their lines one too many times in their 31-25 Super Bowl loss Sunday to Green Bay. Although they still own more Lombardi trophies than any other NFL team, the Steelers long will remember the seventh that got away.

Those three turnovers that led to 21 of Green Bay's 31 points, however, were not so much giveaways as they were takeaways.

Take the first one. Ben Roethlisberger, throwing from his 7 on first down, fluttered a pass short and way off target from Mike Wallace speeding deep down the left sideline. It was intercepted and returned 37 yards for a touchdown. The reason? Howard Green, a 340-pound defensive tackle, slammed into the quarterback before he could complete his follow-through.

Roethlisberger's second interception was right on target in tight coverage between two Green Bay defenders. Wallace seemed to get his hands on it but safety Jarrett Bush strong-armed him to come up with the football for an interception.

The final turnover, a fumble by Rashard Mendenhall, came after Ryan Pickett and Clay Matthews slammed hard into him to force it. That was no soft fumble. Those calling him Earnest Byner Mendenhall might want to remember the great Jerome Bettis' fumble in Indianapolis that Roethlisberger's shoestring tackle saved from becoming The Bus' legacy.

If anything, it was failure on the part of the Steelers defense to prevent touchdowns after two of those turnovers and their defense's inability to stymie Aaron Rodgers and the Packers offense that prevented another Lombardi delivery to the South Side trophy case.

Green Bay's offense moved 53 yards in just four plays to score after Roethlisberger's second interception. The Packers moved 55 yards in eight plays to score after Mendenhall's fumble. Holding them to field goals on one or both of those drives might have been enough.

The Steelers defense did hold the Packers to a field goal on their final drive, but that came at a deep cost. With six minutes left in the game, with the Steelers trailing by three after a touchdown and 2-point conversion, Green Bay had the ball on its 25. It was third-and-10. A stop there, the Packers would have punted and the Steelers would have had plenty of time to run their usual offense to either move into a tying field-goal try or possibly taking the lead with a touchdown.

Instead, Rodgers' pass sailed over the top of Ike Taylor and into the hands of Greg Jennings for a 31-yard completion and a first down that kept their drive to three more points going, a drive that would kill four more minutes.

More missed opportunities

That Mendenhall fumble on second-and-2 at the Green Bay 33 with the Steelers trailing by four after scoring two touchdowns was a killer for them. But so was another offensive series that penetrated to the Packers 29 before dissolving.

It occurred before the fumble with the score still 21-17. A drive that started from their 40 moved snappily to a first down at the Packers 29.

Earlier in that series, from the Packers 44, Wallace streaked past his man deep but Roethlisberger did something he has not done for most of the season either in games or practice -- he overthrew the speedy Wallace, who seemed to slow up and reach for the ball rather than run to it. It would have gone for a touchdown and put the Steelers ahead.

A 15-yard pass to Ward did get them a first down at the 29. But from there, Matthews deflected a pass on first down. On second down, Roethlisberger completed a pass to Heath Miller who was thrown for a 3-yard loss. On third down, Roethlisberger was sacked for a 2-yard loss. On fourth down, Shaun Suisham hooked his 52-yard field-goal attempt wide to Forth Worth.

Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger takes a snap from center Doug Legursky (64) during the NFL's Super Bowl XLV football game against the Green Bay Packers in Arlington, Texas February 6, 2011. (Reuters)

Kudos to offensive line

The best play by one group of Steelers was their maligned offensive line. With Doug Legursky replacing injured Pro Bowl center Maurkice Pouncey, with right tackle Flozell Adams leaving for a time with a stinger and then returning to play, that offensive line played the game of its season and gave the Steelers a chance to win.

Roethlisberger's first interception, returned for a touchdown, came when he was blasted and that goes to his protection, but he was sacked just once. And the Steelers ran for 126 yards.

The way Legursky played, perhaps the Steelers should consider their original 2010 plan for next season with Pouncey -- put him at right guard and keep Legursky at center.

"They did a great job," said Mendenhall. "They controlled the line of scrimmage all day."

Ward climbs list

Lost in the Super Bowl shuffle was the fact that Hines Ward moved into second place with the most receptions in postseason history with 88. He caught seven Sunday and passed Hall of Famer Michael Irvin, who had 87.

Ward's touchdown also tied him for third place in the postseason with three others who scored 10 receiving. And his 78 receiving yards left him third on the all-time list in that category with 1,245 career yards in the postseason.


Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11039/1123800-66.stm#ixzz1DN2wQvnw

Polamalu out of position in center field

By Mark Madden
Beaver County Times
http://www.timesonline.com/sports.html
February 8, 2011

Green Bay Packers' wide receiver Greg Jennings goes airborne after avoiding a tackle from Pittsburgh Steelers' safety Troy Polamalu during the fourth quarter of the NFL's Super Bowl XLV football game in Arlington, Texas, February 6, 2011. (Reuters)

This column was supposed to run yesterday, but was largely unintelligible. That’s the last time I hire Christina Aguilera as a ghostwriter. Now, finally ... refreshing Super Bowl notes. Slash with the Black Eyed Peas? Rock really is dead.

* On the day, the better team won. Every time Green Bay lost momentum, Green Bay recaptured it. Aaron Rodgers was brilliant. The Packers never really seemed in danger of losing.

* Troy Polamalu says he was healthy. If that’s true, why was he deployed so passively against Green Bay? Polamalu’s probably lying about the state of his Achilles’ tendon because he doesn’t want to make excuses. But he’s making defensive coordinator Dick Lebeau look bad. Polamalu was a non-factor throughout the playoffs. Clay Matthews made plays. Polamalu didn’t. He was too far away from the ball.

* When Polamalu is at the top of his game, Ryan Clark is an adequate sidekick. When Polamalu isn’t, Clark stinks.

* Defining moment: Third-and-10, 5:59 left, Green Bay with the ball on its own 25. Packers lead 28-25. Greg Jennings beats Clark, and Rodgers finds him for 31 yards. If your defense can’t get off the field there, you don’t deserve to win.

ARLINGTON, TX - FEBRUARY 06: Greg Jennings #85 of the Green Bay Packers catches a 31 yard pass in the fourth quarter against Ryan Clark #25 and Ike Taylor #24 of the Pittsburgh Steelers during Super Bowl XLV at Cowboys Stadium on February 6, 2011 in Arlington, Texas.(Getty Images)

* The Steelers defense couldn’t get a turnover. Three sacks seem inadequate when Rodgers passed on practically every down. Better is expected from a unit that too often teeters between brilliant and overrated. Sure, the Steelers “stopped” the run. But Green Bay barely bothered. Sure, Green Bay got 21 points off turnovers. But the Packers drove 53 and 55 yards for 14 of those points.

* Ben Roethlisberger is an elite quarterback, but had a bad game. He certainly deserves his share of the blame. Even when he got the ball with two minutes left and a chance to win, Roethlisberger never created that buzz. He threw two picks that led to 14 Green Bay points. Enough said.

* Among the differences between 2009’s two-minute drill and Sunday’s two-minute drill: Santonio Holmes. Think the Rooneys regret proving that particular point?

* Roethlisberger got the Steelers to three Super Bowls in six seasons, winning two. If you don’t think he’s an elite quarterback, I’d love to hear your definition.

* Now we find out if Pittsburgh has REALLY forgiven Roethlisberger.

Green Bay Packers safety Nick Collins runs with the ball after an interception that he returned for a touchdown against the Pittsburgh Steelers in the first quarter during the NFL's Super Bowl XLV football game in Arlington, Texas February 6, 2011. (Reuters)

* Keyaron Fox set a new team standard for selfishness and stupidity when his unnecessary roughness penalty put the Steelers at their own 13 to begin their final possession. Mike Tomlin should have cut Fox before he got to the sideline. Under Tomlin, the Steelers are reckless and often dirty.

* Tomlin wasn’t out-coached by Green Bay’s Mike McCarthy. But the Steelers came out flat, and blame for that usually goes to the coach. Tomlin erred when he had Shaun Suisham attempt a 52-yard field goal with the Steelers down 21-17 in the third quarter. Suisham’s not going to make that kick. Pin Green Bay deep with a punt.

* Those who suggest the Steelers abandoned the run too early are insane. Green Bay ditched it from the get-go, rushing the ball just 11 times. The Steelers trailed almost the entire game. It’s a passing league. The preoccupation with “the Steelers’ way” is maddening and outdated.

* Injuries caught up with the Steelers, especially on the offensive line. Only Roethlisberger’s elusiveness kept that unit from looking low-rent. But Doug Legursky filled in admirably at center. He wasn’t Maurkice Pouncey. But he wasn’t bad.

Mark Madden hosts a radio show 3-6 p.m. weekdays on WXDX-FM (105.9).

Monday, February 07, 2011

No big finish

From Fox's penalty to not throwing to Ward late, the Steelers made plenty of mistakes

Monday, February 07, 2011
By Gene Collier, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
http://www.post-gazette.com/sports/

ARLINGTON, TX - FEBRUARY 06: Tramon Williams breaks up a pass to Mike Wallace late in the fourth quarter during Super Bowl XLV at Cowboys Stadium on February 6, 2011 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images)

ARLINGTON, Texas -- The Steelers and the Green Bay Packers have been playing each other since Dan Rooney was 1, first on Oct. 15, 1933, and most recently in one of the greatest championship games ever, but it is Pittsburgh that awakes this Monday morning wondering whether it will take another 78 years to forget Super Bowl XLV.

Staked to an 18-point halftime lead thanks mostly to a wretched first half by Ben "Piano Man" Roethlisberger, the Packers hung on like a pit bull until Roethlisberger's typical deep pocket of miracles produced a late handful of only lint and regret.

Asked for his evaluation of the quarterback's performance, Mike Tomlin said flatly, "It was a losing one, just like mine."

The final three passes of this overachieving Steelers season all went to Mike Wallace, who had a great year but did not emerge as the answer to the hypothetical question, "Who will succeed Santonio Holmes as Pittsburgh's last-minute Super Bowl hero?"

In a postseason in which no Steelers wideout produced a 100-yard game, it was Hines Ward who lifted his team off the floor in the first half with his consistently reliable excellence, catching three passes on the final possession of the half. The third one was a twisting, leaping grab in the right corner of the end zone on a ball thrown over the wrong shoulder, an 8-yard reception for a touchdown that defibrillated the Steelers back to life and sent them to the locker room trailing, 21-10.

They trailed the Baltimore Ravens, 21-7, at the half to start these playoffs, but this Packers atmosphere wasn't as favorable somehow.

"We thought if we got a taste of a lead we could keep it in our mouths for a while," said Troy Polamalu. "We weren't able to get any turnovers on defense. They made plays on defense and we didn't. There were a couple of times when I could have made a play, but I was just a step off.

"It's incredibly humbling."

For Troy, breakfast is incredible humbling.

ARLINGTON, TX - FEBRUARY 06: Jordy Nelson tries to stay in bounds on a 38 yard reception in the second half against Troy Polamalu during Super Bowl XLV at Cowboys Stadium on February 6, 2011 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

On the long list of Steelers errors and their authors, Polamalu's name was near the bottom. Inserting his at the top at the worst moment possible was special teams captain Keyaron Fox, who committed an idiotic unnecessary roughness penalty after Isaac Redman returned the game's final kickoff to the 26. Instead of starting there, Fox shoved his team back to the 13, from where Ben started with 1:59 to play, behind by six, with only one timeout remaining.

"You can't do that," Ward said directly. "We were goin' over our two-minute offense on the sideline and you think you're starting near the 30-yard line and you find out you're starting back there near the 10. We knew we had to play perfect ball today to have an opportunity to beat these guys."

Roethlisberger found Heath Miller by himself underneath the coverage for 15, then threw it to Ward for the final time, inexplicably enough. Then he started firing at Wallace.

"We were just running fire zone blitzes," said Packers defensive coordinator Dom Capers, who used to do the same thing for the black and gold once upon a time. "Hopefully, you don't give Ben enough time to look around back there. We had to adapt in the second half as much as we ever have in this game. We had to adapt on the run."

The Packers lost stalwart pass defenders Charles Woodson and Sam Shields for large chunks of the game, but the Steelers couldn't exploit those losses to the extent necessary. The decision to ignore Ward in the final minute, particularly on third-and-5 and fourth-and-5, might sting for a while.

Ward not only dragged the offense off the deck, his 15-yard reception on a 66-yard fourth-quarter drive that pulled the Steelers within 28-25 helped set the stage for the scripted Ben heroics that never came.

"I thought it was going to be one of those magical moments," Ward said. "It's something we've done all year, but we just didn't finish. It's just disappointing, especially in a Super Bowl. You can't do the things we did on this stage, in this game."

While no one was really noticing, that 15-yarder moved No. 86 into the top five postseason receivers of all time in terms of yardage. Only Jerry Rice, Michael Irvin, Cliff Branch and Andre Reed have piled up more postseason yards than Ward.

But this eighth Steelers Super Bowl was a dreary textbook example of the yards too often trumped by turnovers, of course, and the fact that the Steelers outgained the Packers 387 yards to 338 turned out to be a one one-hundredth as meaningful as their three turnovers. Green Bay, doing what champions do, converted those turnovers into 21 points, and used the final one, a second-half fumble by Rashard Mendenhall, to wrest from the Steelers all the momentum in the massive building.

"I don't feel anything but pain," linebacker James Harrison said. "It's not who we are, this game, but each one of these guys is my brother and I mean that to the depths of my soul. I'm going back to the hotel and play with my son. He has 60-some uncles out here that are feeling the same way I am."


Gene Collier: gcollier@post-gazette.com.

Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11038/1123707-150.stm#ixzz1DH8LSNla

Sunday, February 06, 2011

Highlights: Packers 31, Steelers 25

Cheesed off after 'Stairway' denied

By John Mehno
Beaver County Times
http://www.timesonline.com/sports.html
Monday February 7, 2011 12:25 AM

Howard Green's pressure forces an interception of a Ben Roethlisberger pass in the first quarter of Super Bowl XLV. Nick Collins returned the interception for a touchdown to give the Packers an early 14-0 lead. (AFP PHOTO / Timothy A. Clary/Getty Images)


Seven can wait. Sorry, after a week’s worth of “Stairway to Seven” and “Seventh Heaven” and all the other plays on the Steelers’ quest for a seventh Super Bowl victory, it was inevitable.

People who had emotion invested in the outcome don’t want to hear this, but Super Bowl XLV was a darned good football game.

The Green Bay Packers won 31-25, and they deserved to. They were the better team, and they played better.

It went back and forth, although the Steelers could never quite catch up after falling behind 21-3.

When you strip away the overblown halftime spectacular, the funny commercials and the day-long pre-game show, the Super Bowl is a football game.

And what do we know about football games?

We know that turnovers are deadly, and that the line between winning and losing is sometimes razor thin.

The Steelers turned the ball over three times, leading directly to 21 Green Bay points.

Rookie receiver Emmanuel Sanders was the only one who officially sustained a foot injury, but the Steelers spent most of the game collectively shooting themselves in the foot.

None of the self-destructive mistakes was bigger than Rashard Mendenhall’s third-quarter fumble.

Green Bay was reeling, and Mendenhall’s fumble not only gave the Packers the ball, it gave them a pulse.

The swing was palpable, and although the Steelers fought back, they never really recovered from losing the ball in Packers’ territory.

Pittsburgh Steelers running back Rashard Mendenhall (34) has the ball knocked loose by Green Bay Packers linebacker Clay Matthews (2nd L) and Packers defensive tackle Ryan Pickett as Steelers tight end David Johnson (L) follows the play during the NFL's Super Bowl XLV football game in Arlington, Texas February 6, 2011. (Reuters)

The Pittsburgh mistakes started early, when Christina Aguilera, the only former Rochester resident ever to sing the National Anthem at the Super Bowl, skated over some of the lyrics.

Patriotism aside, it was probably just as well. At the pace she established, the kickoff was in danger of being pushed back to 7 o’clock.

Ben (Piano Man) Roethlisberger never seemed to be especially sharp, and it looked as though he was short-arming the ball after being tackled in the first quarter.

Fox analyst Troy Aikman, who knows something about quarterbacking, never mentioned any change in Roethlisberger’s throwing motion, so perhaps it was just a mirage.

For the third straight postseason game, an opponent found a way to make deep threat Mike Wallace a non-factor for most of the game. He caught one touchdown pass and was close to another, but Roethlisberger overthrew him.

The Packers held on, despite losing Charles Woodson from their secondary and No. 1 receiver Donald Driver during the game.

Although the Steelers led the NFL in sacks during the season, they couldn’t find a way to get to Aaron Rodgers often enough.

For whatever reason, Troy Polamalu was rarely a factor — maybe it was his bad Achilles tendon, or maybe it was a Green Bay scheme that neutralized his impact.

Whatever the case, the flying hair that mattered belonged to Green Bay linebacker Clay Matthews.

There was a play late in the game that makes you wonder if players disengage their brains, even though the stakes are as high as they can get.

Special teams player Keyaron Fox shoved a Green Bay player in full view of an official on the Packers’ last kickoff.

He got a personal foul penalty that cost 13 yards on the Steelers’ last drive at a time when every yard is precious.

But, yeah, he showed that guy he wasn’t going to take anything.

Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers looks to pass against the Pittsburgh Steelers in the first quarter of the NFL's Super Bowl XLV football game in Arlington, Texas, February 6, 2011.(Reuters)

The weekend turned into something of a Friday the 13th troika for Pittsburgh sports fans — the Steelers lost the Super Bowl, the Penguins’ Evgeni Malkin was found to have a knee injury that could end his season, and the Pirates sent their equipment south to start spring training.

Triple yoi.

It’s an uncertain future for the Steelers since the NFL labor agreement is about to expire and the storm clouds have been building.

Reality is that the Steelers are an older team, especially on defense, and they’re in a division where Baltimore is just half a step behind them.

Who knows what the future holds?

And there’s this, too.

If and when the Steelers get back to the Super Bowl, they’ll dust off all that “Stairway To Seven” and “Seventh Heaven” stuff again.

Big Ben will repay his biggest debt

Teammates stood behind quarterback during his trying year

Sunday, February 06, 2011
By Ron Cook, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
http://www.post-gazette.com/steelers/

PITTSBURGH, PA - JANUARY 23: Ben Roethlisberger drops back against the New York Jets during the 2011 AFC Championship game at Heinz Field on January 23, 2011 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The Steelers defeated the New York Jets 24-19. (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)

ARLINGTON, Texas -- The other Steelers had Ben Roethlisberger's back as long ago as that disgusting March night in Milledgeville, Ga., despite assertions to the contrary that you might have heard this week from NFL commissioner Roger Goodell. They had his back when Dennis Dixon and mostly Charlie Batch led the team to a 3-1 start during his four-game NFL suspension. They had his back here, deep in the heart of Texas, all week during the hysterical run-up to Super Bowl XLV.

Tonight, Roethlisberger will return the favor. Tonight, he will say thank you to his teammates in the best possible way. Tonight, he will lead the Steelers past the Green Bay Packers for their third Super Bowl title in the past six seasons and their record seventh in franchise history.

I write that even though a big part of me thinks the Packers are going to win. They are 2 1/2-point favorites for a reason -- they are very, very good. Their powerful front seven could cause fits for the Steelers offensive line, which will play without Pro Bowl center Maurkice Pouncey. Their franchise quarterback, Aaron Rodgers, and his cast of thousands at wide receiver could do the same to the Steelers secondary, much as Tom Brady and his New England bunch did earlier in the season.

But now that it's time to pick the game, I can't pull the trigger and go with the Packers. I can't pick against Roethlisberger. There's just no way. I fully expect him to find a way to win the game for the Steelers.

It's funny, I had to laugh the other day when Steelers wide receiver Mike Wallace called Roethlisberger "one of the best clutch quarterbacks probably to ever play the game." Wallace is 24, hardly old enough to remember Johnny Unitas and Joe Montana and maybe even John Elway. But I'm more than old enough to know those players' greatness. Roethlisberger is right there with them, at least he will be if he leads the Steelers to that third title. I believe he's Hall of Fame-worthy right now, but he'll be an absolute lock if he gets that third ring, a number reached only by Montana and Terry Bradshaw, who have four, and Brady and Troy Aikman, who have three.

Roethlisberger already has led an Elwayesque-drive in a Super Bowl. Two years ago, in Super Bowl XLIII, he took the Steelers 78 yards in the final two minutes for the winning touchdown to beat the Arizona Cardinals, 27-23. His 6-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Santonio Holmes is one of the fabulous plays in the Steelers' long, storied history.

Roethlisberger is 10-2 as a postseason starter after victories in these playoffs against the Baltimore Ravens and New York Jets. He wasn't even close to being spectacular against the Jets -- his 35.5 passer rating is pretty good proof -- but he made two throws in the final three minutes that the Steelers had to have to win.

That's what Roethlisberger does.

He wins football games.

Don't be fooled by the front that Roethlisberger puts up for the media. Before the game against the Jets, he talked about their great defense beating Brady and the Patriots and Peyton Manning and the Indianapolis Colts. "I don't know what I'm supposed to do against them." Here, when told that national surveys showed that more people would pick Rodgers to be their quarterback than him, he grinned and said, "I'd take Aaron, too."

That's nonsense, of course.

Roethlisberger hardly lacks confidence.

Especially late in games when everything is on the line.

"I don't know what it is," he said. "I think it's probably the competitiveness, the drive to want to do whatever it takes to win the game. I want it to be on my shoulders. I don't do it for the glory. I don't want to be a hero. I just want to win the game."

Or, as Steelers offensive line coach Sean Kugler put it so eloquently, "Competitiveness, desire, that unbelievable will to win, you name it, this guy has it."

The other Steelers see it. They appreciate it. Mostly, they love that Roethlisberger wins games, puts money in their pockets and rings on their fingers.

That's why it wasn't surprising when all of the Steelers rushed to support Roethlisberger last week after Goodell was quoted by Sports Illustrated that "not a single player" came to Roethlisberger's defense after he was accused of sexual assault in Milledgeville. I know Roethlisberger wasn't the most popular player in the locker room at the time, but I don't believe Goodell for one second in this instance. Nor does Steelers defensive end Brett Keisel, who is among Roethlisberger's closest friends.

"All of us care about him," Keisel said. "We are his brothers."

Roethlisberger anticipated the questions about his personal life during Super Bowl week. But he was blind-sided by Goodell's assertion, which was deplorable considering the timing of the story. Clearly, he appreciated the united show of support from everyone from coach Mike Tomlin to offensive coordinator Bruce Arians, who said, "I couldn't ask for a better person for [my kids] to hang out with," from Keisel to running back Rashard Mendenhall, who said, "Ben is a great teammate and a great leader."

Said Roethlisberger, "I'm just lucky to be on this team with these guys."

Roethlisberger said he wants to win tonight for Steelers offensive tackle Flozell Adams, who spent the first 12 years of his NFL career with the Dallas Cowboys and was a part of just one wild-card round playoff win before joining the Steelers in the summer. But that's only a part of Roethlisberger's motivation. He wants to win for all his guys. He is determined to have their backs in the biggest game after they had his for so long.

I can't pick against that.

Steelers 24, Packers 17.


Ron Cook: rcook@post-gazette.com. Ron Cook can be heard on the "Vinnie and Cook" show weekdays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on 93.7 The Fan.

Read more:

Ben Roethlisberger worries about winning his next game and not about his legacy -

http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11037/1123124-66.stm

Forty years of glory for Pittsburgh ... and more? -

http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11037/1123144-66.stm


History on history as two storied NFL franchises in Super Bowl XLV

By Mike Lupica
The Daily News
http://www.nydailynews.com
February 6, 2011

Sabo, News/Daily News/Getty/WireImage/AP
From Vince Lombardi (l.) to Terry Bradshaw (r.), the Packers and Steelers share a rich history.


DALLAS - Here is what the country sees Sunday night when it goes to a football game, here is a matchup as good as there is in this sport or any sport, as good as any Super Bowl has ever seen:

Packers vs. the Steelers.

History on history.

This isn't because of all the games they played in the past, this is a game that feels as if it comes roaring into Jerry Jones' new football palace out of the past. It is about time they played a game like this. It feels like they don't just settle this season Sunday night, it feels like they settle about a century of them.

"It just sounds like football," NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said on Friday morning in a crowded ballroom at the media hotel. "Packers-Steelers."

This is Curly Lambeau and it is old Art Rooney. This is Lambeau Field and the old Steel Curtain. This is Bart Starr and Jerry Kramer and Paul Hornung and Ray Nitschke. This is Bradshaw and Stallworth and Lynn Swann and Franco Harris.

This is the Steelers' six Super Bowl wins against all the championships the Packers have won, before and after they won the first Super Bowl. This is the Steelers trying to win another Lombardi Trophy and Mike McCarthy's Packers trying to bring the Lombardi Trophy back to Green Bay, what the locals will always consider the capital of the National Football League.

"We are trying to bring the Lombardi Trophy home," McCarthy said on Friday morning.

They asked him about what this moment was like for him personally, being this close to the Super Bowl.

"I've always dreamed about championships," he said. "That dream is just heightened by the fact that I work for the Green Bay Packers."

This isn't just the history of the sport, it is also about the beauty of the sport: Both these teams think of themselves as the Yankees of the NFL. Only they are not New York. They are Green Bay and they are Pittsburgh, Pa. As Goodell said on Friday, "Both of them are small markets. It speaks to what is unique about the National Football League."

It does. Oh, it sure does. Lombardi's Packers won the first two Super Bowls. The late Max McGee didn't expect to play in Los Angeles and had stayed out all night, saying goodbye to a lady friend at 8 in the morning. But then Boyd Dowler separated a shoulder on the Pack's second series of the game and McGee, as hungover as he was, had to play.

All he did that day was catch seven balls for 138 yards and two touchdowns and become the first great star of the Super Bowl. He always joked to me, "I thought I should have gotten credit for more catches, because I felt like I was seeing two balls all day."

The Packers came back and won again but then it was the Steelers in the '70s who became the storied franchise of the sport, playing four Super Bowls and winning all of them, with Chuck Noll as the coach and Terry Bradshaw as the quarterback and one of the truly great defenses of all time.

Now all this time later Ben Roethlisberger is the quarterback of the Steelers. And Aaron Rodgers, as much a star of pro football as anybody this season when he was healthy, tries to win the big game for Green Bay the way Starr and Brett Favre did.

The Steelers started out the season without Roethlisberger, suspended because of dirt-bag behavior - what else do you want to call it? - with women. But in the early going the Steelers showed they could win with anybody at quarterback, even old Charlie Batch.

So they were the darlings. The Packers? They were everybody's hot pick before the season even started. Then they lost their running game to injury, saw big players go down all over the place. Lost games in overtime. Played a whole season on the edge, never behind by more than a touchdown, perhaps the most amazing statistic of the year. Rodgers suffered two concussions.

But the Packers kept coming. They went into the New Meadowlands Stadium when they looked to be in huge trouble and shut out the Jets, never seemed worried by the Jets' offense the whole day. They nearly beat the Patriots in Foxborough with Matt Flynn at quarterback. And now the Pack was back.

Even as the No. 6 seed in the NFC, they have been the best team in the playoffs from either conference. They beat Michael Vick and the Eagles in Philly and destroyed the Falcons in Atlanta and then took apart the Bears in Chicago before they got sloppy and had to make some plays in the fourth quarter to get back to the Super Bowl.

Right now, this minute, Roethlisberger, even with his fancy playoff record, isn't the star quarterback of the league, and neither is Tom Brady, even with his Offensive Player of the Year Award. Neither is Peyton Manning. When it was all on the line for the Packers, when even their last few regular-season games were the same as playoff games, Rodgers was the best quarterback and the best player in the league.

They asked McCarthy about being with the 49ers when they had to choose between Alex Smith and Rodgers in the draft and ended up going with Smith. And McCarthy talked about that and tried not to throw anybody from San Francisco under any buses and finally he said: "We are here today because Aaron Rodgers is in Green Bay."

Now McCarthy, Packers coach, tries to win the Lombardi Trophy. Rodgers tries to win the game that Favre won. Roethlisberger and Mike Tomlin and Troy Polamalu and Hines Ward try to make their own history. History on history Sunday night. Packers vs. Steelers. Sounds like football because it is.



Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/football/2011/02/06/2011-02-06_ghosts_of_footballs_past_present_in_super_bowl_xlv_as_pittsburgh_steelers_face_g.html#ixzz1DC01Ghyl

Saturday, February 05, 2011

The journey to meet Mike Tomlin

Seven perspectives of a man who, for some, isn't known all that well

By Elizabeth Merrill
http://espn.go.com/nfl/
February 3, 2011


FORT WORTH, Texas -- This can't be a Mike Tomlin profile. The subject is too athletic to chase, especially with an inch of ice on the ground, and, quite frankly, isn't interested. See the PR guy with the hurried look on his face standing beside Tomlin? He's there to limit the questions, which are fruitless anyway.

The measure of a coach's success in Pittsburgh is often gauged by how well he blends in -- how little he's noticed -- and perhaps the best compliment Tomlin would accept is that nothing in the City of Bridges has changed. January coughs its last breaths of frozen air, February creeps in and the Steelers are back in the Super Bowl. It's expected. It's what drove Tomlin in his first days on the job four years ago, passing by those five Lombardi trophies on the way to meeting rooms, visualizing a batch of his own.

And that's about as far as he goes. Tomlin exits up the auditorium steps after a Wednesday news conference, in black warm-ups, a gray vest and white sneakers -- young, 38, and full of energy like the men he coaches. He does not stop for cappuccino with reporters. Mike Tomlin reveals himself in glimpses, and only when he wants to.

"He's not a self-promoter, that's for sure," said Matt Kelchner, an old friend who recruited Tomlin to play at the College of William & Mary two decades ago. "He's always said to me, 'I just want to coach football … That's what my life is. I'm not interested in a lot of other malarkey.' That's just the way he is."

But it's Super Bowl week, which means there is a great demand for malarkey, in 2,000 words or more. Tomlin is going for Pittsburgh's seventh Lombardi trophy and the second of his own. In honor of that, here are seven perspectives of a man who's savvy enough to keep you guessing and smart enough to stay out of the way.

The best friend

The first stop on this journey to find Mike Tomlin's inner being is Bethlehem, Pa. Terry Hammons is there, and he has all night to talk. Another snowstorm has socked the East Coast, and Hammons is cooped up in his basement practicing his putting.

He has known Tomlin since college, when they were teammates at William & Mary and fraternity brothers and pledged Kappa Alpha Psi. He has seen the lengths Tomlin goes to for the sake of keeping secrets. At his core, Tomlin always wanted to be known as a jock. He hated when people talked about how smart he was and reportedly destroyed one of those "My kid is an honor roll student" bumper stickers that his mother proudly displayed when he was a teen.

Tomlin was a receiver at the College of Wiliam & Mary.(College of William & Mary)

"He's what I would refer to as a closet nerd," Hammons said. "He doesn't let on how intelligent he is. Even when we were in college, he used to read the newspaper every morning. I didn't know anybody our age who did that."

Tomlin used to tease Hammons about how Hammons always had his nose in a book and thought up a nickname for him: Poem Boy. But it was Tomlin who'd disappear during finals week, cramming until dawn. His mom wanted him to be a lawyer, friends say. That's the path he appeared to be headed when he left his home in Newport News, Va., and traveled 20 minutes to attend William & Mary.

Football seemed to capture his best qualities. He could motivate anyone, make him feel as if he could do anything. Hammons and Tomlin were wide receivers in college. Tomlin was 6-foot-1 and 190 pounds; Hammons stood 5-6.

But man, was he confident. Tomlin made him that way. They called themselves "The Bomb Squad" and thought up a little slogan. We might not be the best wide receiving corps in the nation, but we think we are.

Tomlin and Hammons used to love to watch old NFL Films back then. They wore out the Jim Brown tape. And on game days, they'd prance and do their own pregame routine, just as Brown did. They wore half-shirts just to show off their abs. The trash talk flowed.

"He helped me survive out there," Hammons said. "He'd say, 'Hey, Ham, be careful out there. It's a dangerous game, and you're a small man.'"

And that was all it took to motivate Hammons. They've stayed close all these years, even though their jobs have taken them in completely different directions. Hammons is an executive at a global industrial gas company; Tomlin is simply global.

But sometimes, you wouldn't know it. Tomlin still prank-calls Hammons at work, and it's 1994 all over again. Sometimes, he says he'll tell Hammons' assistant that his father is on the line. Or, he'll say it's Col. Sam Trautman, and Hammons knows it's just Mike being silly. Trautman is the name of a character in one of their favorite movies, "Rambo."

"Sometimes when I'm watching his press conferences, I have to chuckle," Hammons said. "He's very, very serious. I know he's obviously good at what he does, and he takes his job very seriously.

"But the guy, he's hilarious. If you just watched his press conferences, you wouldn't have a clue. You're just seeing one slice of a very complicated individual."

The beard

The unique thing about Pittsburgh, well, one of many unique things, is that coaching changes happen about once a generation. Chuck Noll was hired in 1969 and ran the team until '91; Bill Cowher held the reins from 1992 to 2006.

"He just has a great understanding of his team," defensive end Brett Keisel says. (Gregory Shamus/Getty Images)

When Cowher retired, it was assumed that the Rooney family, an anchor of NFL stability, would hire in-house. There were two seasoned and well-liked assistants up for the job in Russ Grimm and Ken Whisenhunt. They were considered front-runners. The Rooneys picked Tomlin, who was 34 with just one season as a defensive coordinator in Minnesota under his belt.

The news was a jolt to veteran players like defensive end Brett Keisel.

"Initially," Keisel said. "But Mr. Dan Rooney … I was eating lunch one day, and he came down. He asked me, 'Have you met the new coach yet? You're really going to like him.' And he's right. I really do.

"He just has a great understanding of his team. He talks to us a lot. He asks the veterans what we need. He understands the makeup of this team, and I think that's what great coaches do. When it's time to push us, he pushes us. And when it's time to pull the reins back, he pulls the reins back."

The first training camp was brutal. Tomlin scheduled twice as many two-a-days as Cowher. He told reporters he wanted a unified group that was ready for battle. He was testing the players.

His first team went 10-6 and made the playoffs, then Tomlin did a little more pulling than pushing. He relates to his players. He knows them. Recently, Tomlin joined Keisel and quarterback Ben Roethlisberger in growing solidarity beards for their push to the Super Bowl. Keisel's is so long that it attracts large crumbs and odd looks; Tomlin's is stylish and neat.

"Brett Keisel talked me into this," he said. "I can't wait 'til it's over."

The old man

If you want to know how Tomlin can relate to anybody, you go to Dick LeBeau. The Steelers' defensive coordinator is 73 years old but is fit and strong and looks as if he could kick your ass. He played for Woody Hayes at Ohio State, was drafted by the Cleveland Browns 13 years before Tomlin was born and played alongside guys with cool names like Dick "Night Train" Lane.

LeBeau sits at a table Wednesday, and reporters lean in to hear him softly talk about how his defense plans to attack the Green Bay Packers. They stick their microphones next to his face because he's so quiet. LeBeau is considered one of the greatest defensive gurus of all time, and he's asked how a young man and an old man make it all work.

When he became the Steelers' head coach, Tomlin kept much of the previous coaching staff, including defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau. (Matthew Emmons/US Presswire)

"I'm still here," LeBeau said. "So I guess it's worked."

It's worked because Tomlin recognized what he had. Most new coaches clean house and hire their own, but Tomlin retained a good chunk of Cowher's staff. He kept LeBeau even though they have different defensive philosophies. Tomlin, a Tony Dungy disciple, ran a 4-3 defense; LeBeau runs a 3-4.

He trusted LeBeau so much that he kept his scheme.

They met in Cincinnati years ago, when Tomlin was a college assistant for the Bearcats and LeBeau was with the Bengals. In those precious moments of free time, the young man and the old man would talk about defense.

Age has never affected their chemistry, LeBeau said. And he never questioned the Rooneys' decision.

"He had a tough job following Bill Cowher, who was a great, great coach," LeBeau said. "I think the best thing Mike did was he didn't try to be Bill Cowher. He was Mike Tomlin."

The other coordinator

Bruce Arians is a little more direct.

"I knew this was a rising star," Arians said. "And some people would get real jealous about that. But when you're lucky enough to see one and work with one, you count your blessings because you get to go to Super Bowls."

Arians, another Cowher holdover, is the Steelers' offensive coordinator. The first time they met, Arians was struck by Tomlin's intelligence. He's so smart that he occasionally says things that go over Arians' head. But he never loses anyone.

"He can communicate at any level," Arians said, "whether it's with the president of the United States or some dumb-ass rookie."

Sometimes, Arians says, the most impressive action is inaction. Tomlin, like anyone in the NFL, has an ego. But he put it aside in favor of progress. He listens, Arians said. To him, to LeBeau and to veterans who are just a few years younger than he is.

"He has a message, and he's got a course," Arians said. "And he ain't getting off that course. He knows what it takes, and he's going to stay there. And very few young coaches have that."

The old school

The fire, really, started at William & Mary. Tomlin's team had winter workouts, at 6 a.m., in January, outdoors. One morning, it was so cold and miserable that the track had to be shoveled before the team could run.

"I remember everybody came traipsing in there, and they were pretty long in the face," Kelchner said. "Mike, he was all fired up. He was jumping around. I don't remember what he said, and I probably shouldn't repeat it. But he had everybody excited, and guys did their work."

Tomlin was always doing things like that. William & Mary, the alumni will tell you, is a prestigious academic institution. Just being a student there is an up-at-dawn, late-night cram-session commitment. Tomlin never seemed to be overwhelmed.

When he signed his letter of intent to go there, his mother cried. She was so proud of him. The Tidewater area is a hotbed for talent and trouble, producing Michael Vick and Allen Iverson. It swallows up the meek. By an early age, it was clear that Tomlin was going places, and people would follow him.

"Once he became a coordinator in the NFL," William & Mary coach Jimmye Laycock said, "I told a number of people, 'Just watch. He's going to be a head coach. And they're going to be blown away.' He's just an all-around good person, and he doesn't try to be something that he's not."

A few years ago, Tomlin went back to his alma mater to give the commencement speech. It must've been such a kick for Tomlin. Prince Charles, James Baker and Tom Brokaw have spoken at commencements in the past.

Tomlin got in front of the crowd and spoke of teamwork. Of having confidence in yourself. Earl Granger, a former classmate who works in fundraising at William & Mary, said the crowd was captivated.

"People were pumped up when he left."

The draft pick

Flash forward to last week. It was the last day of workouts in Pittsburgh, and Tomlin scheduled a walk-through practice. At the last minute, he switched gears, canceled practice and took the team to Dave & Buster's. And for a couple of hours, they played pool and shuffleboard and video games like kids.

Linebacker Lawrence Timmons says Tomlin knows how to get his players "prepared for his game plan." (Ron Chenoy/US Presswire)

"He knows how to get his guys geeked up and prepared for his game plan," Steelers linebacker Lawrence Timmons said. "He also knows about letting everybody have fun and be themselves. That's what I think makes him such a great coach and different from the others."

Tomlin and Timmons have a history. They came in together. With the first pick of Tomlin's first draft, he snagged Timmons in 2007. Timmons calls Tomlin Mike T. He says he'll do anything for his coach.

When Timmons arrived in Pittsburgh, Tomlin called him into his office and took 100 pounds of pressure off his shoulders. You're young, Tomlin told him, and you're coming in to a place where everything is on the highest of pedestals. Don't worry about the expectations. Don't worry about starting right away.

Timmons says Tomlin has a handful of mottoes, but there's one he uses the most. "The standard is the standard."

What does it mean?

"It's like us going into this game," Timmons said. "You're the No. 1 defense. Play like the No. 1 defense."

The backup

So it's Wednesday, and the game already has been regurgitated in several languages by thousands of publications. Another news conference starts, and the media swoop in on the usual suspects. Tyler Grisham sits at a lonely table with the injured and the scout-team fodder. Steelers die-hards know Grisham. The baby-faced receiver played in four games last year and spent 2010 on the practice squad. But he's wearing his No. 19 uniform today, in large part so people will know who he is, and he has something to say about Mike Tomlin.

Tomlin makes the rookies stand up on the first day and introduce themselves to the team. Last year, Grisham decided to crack a funny. He gave his name and vitals, and said he's worth $1,500, because that's what his signing bonus was.

Tomlin chuckled and approached Grisham, which scared the rookie at first. He put his arm around Grisham. He cracked a joke, too.

The thing about Tomlin, Grisham says, is that he creates a locker room where everyone is important, everyone is family. One day, he saw Grisham and asked how his Maggie was doing. Grisham was floored that he knew his wife's name.

The week is getting shorter, and the lines around Ben Roethlisberger and Hines Ward are getting longer, so maybe it's up to the polite young man at the empty table, who's available, to answer. Who is Mike Tomlin?

Grisham stopped and thought about it. When Tomlin pumps up the players, really gets going, he reminds him of Denzel Washington in some of his very best movies. He's passionate, and everybody listens. When Tomlin is excited, he can be emotional and giddy, just like them.

"I guess no reporter gets to know that side of Coach," Grisham said. "It's pretty simple. Like he tells us, too many rules will get you beat. We're here to win, we're here to be professionals. We're here to be champions."


Elizabeth Merrill is a senior writer for ESPN.com. She can be reached at merrill2323@hotmail.com.

Steelers' Troy Polamalu achieved greatness by learning from many

By Carlos Mendez
The Fort Worth Star-Telegram
http://www.star-telegram.com/superbowl/
February 5, 2011

He is supposed to be the only safety of his kind in the NFL -- a mix of speed, unpredictability, fierceness and intimidation never before seen in pro football.

But Troy Polamalu of the Pittsburgh Steelers said he's just trying to be like a lot of other safeties.

"I've broken down a lot of film of Ed Reed, of Rodney Harrison, of Brian Dawkins, of Sean Taylor, Bob Sanders, Adrian Wilson," he said. "I've watched almost every play of their careers. I try to incorporate their style of what they do well into my game. And some of it I'm not capable of doing because they're more athletic. Some of it I was able to do, and then you can form that into your own game."

Polamalu's own game is impressive.

His speed allows him to cover vast amounts of ground between the sidelines. He can put on a hit to rival teammate James Harrison. He forces turnovers because he does the unexpected. He intimidates, and his distinctive, flowing hair makes it look as though he's in more than one place at the same time.

"That's my guy," safety Ryan Clark said. "Playing with Troy, it's like having a front-row seat to the circus every week. It is amazing, each and every week to watch him go out there and do his job in a way that I don't think anybody else could do it."

When he missed most of last season with an injury, the Steelers cratered without him. They didn't even make the playoffs.

Is it any coincidence that with health this season, he was selected the NFL Defensive Player of the Year, the Steelers are the top scoring defense, and they reached another Super Bowl?

Not to Steelers secondary coach Ray Horton. He called Polamalu the greatest safety to ever play the game.

"I definitely don't agree with it, but I respect coach Horton's opinions," Polamalu said. "He's been around the game a lot, and he's won a Super Bowl as a coach and as a player. He's had so much to do with the success that we've had as a secondary -- my own, personally, as well as the guy on the other side of the ball who's coaching the safeties for the Green Bay Packers. He was here my rookie and second year and had so much to do with helping me understand the game."

Polamalu referred to Darren Perry, the Packers secondary coach, who was an assistant at Pittsburgh when Polamalu was drafted out of Southern Cal.

"He taught me so much," Polamalu said. "We've been through a lot together, because my rookie year wasn't very good, so I had to lean on him a lot emotionally as well as, obviously, learning the defense."

Polamalu does not stop giving credit.

"There are a lot of great safeties that have played behind me that I've learned more from," he said. "I've learned a lot from rookies, from a safety on [the Packers], Anthony Smith, who's on IR. From Tyrone Carter, who plays for the San Diego Chargers now. Chris Hope, who plays for the Tennessee Titans and the stuff he brought. I've learned a lot from all of these other guys."

Has he reshaped the safety position?

"I would say Ed Reed was kind of the guy who broke down the barriers of taking the top off defenses, and Rodney Harrison being able to be the most universal safety in the sense of being able to play man-to-man in the slot when he was in New England, or playing the deep halves, with freeing up and playing the run as well," he said. "If there is any safety that I really admired the most, it would have probably been Rodney Harrison."

Carlos Mendez, 817-390-7407
cmendez@star-telegram.com


Read more: http://www.star-telegram.com/2011/02/04/2824861/steelers-troy-polamalu-achieved.html#ixzz1D4tXOXjU

Friday, February 04, 2011

2009 matchup offers some clues

By John Clayton
http://espn.go.com/nfl/
Thursday, February 3, 2011

Close to a week of Super Bowl hype hasn't changed anything: The No. 6 playoff seed that has only two players with Super Bowl experience remains a 2½-point favorite over an experienced No. 2 seed filled with veterans who own two Super Bowl rings.

Plenty of other things don't make sense in Super Bowl XLV.

• The Pittsburgh Steelers and Green Bay Packers, participants in this Super Bowl, last met during the 2009 regular season. Both were ranked among the NFL's top five defensive teams, but they played a 37-36 shootout that the Steelers won at Heinz Field -- a game in which Ben Roethlisberger and Aaron Rodgers combined for 886 yards of passing offense.

• Jerry Jones' plush new Cowboys Stadium, arguably the most lavish one constructed, is built next to a Walmart and a short jog from a Ross Dress For Less.

• Because of a once-in-two-decades cold spell, the Packers and Steelers, along with more than 5,000 credentialed media members, are experiencing their version of the Ice Bowl. The temperature in Dallas on Tuesday was lower than it was in Green Bay, at least for one day. It has been colder all week than it has been in Pittsburgh, and ice on the roads won't melt until the weekend. The Dallas-Fort Worth area has mounds of salt to spice up margaritas, but no one in North Texas can put in a to-go order on rock salt to melt the ice.

1. Take the over: The Steelers rank second in the NFL on defense. The Packers rank fifth. But based on last year's matchup between these two, it's hard to imagine a low-scoring game. Oddsmakers put the over/under at 44½. Because both teams use basically the same schemes, the chances of big plays abound. Packers defensive coordinator Dom Capers and Steelers defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau installed the Steelers' "Blitzburgh" defense with Bill Cowher in 1992. The Packers hired Capers to install that same 3-4 scheme in 2009. Both are high-risk, high-reward schemes that gamble extra rushers to sack the quarterback or create turnovers. Roethlisberger and Rodgers see those defenses every day in practice, so they won't be surprised by anything and will have the opportunity to make big offensive plays. The teams put up 973 yards of offense combined in their last meeting.

The Steelers brought back Bryant McFadden to bolster their secondary.

2. Differences from the 2009 meeting: The Steelers' defense was vulnerable to Rodgers in 2009 because safety Troy Polamalu didn't play. History shows that Polamalu's presence shaves a touchdown per game off the Steelers' defensive stats, and the 2010 NFL Defensive Player of the Year will do his best to confuse Rodgers by the way he lines up and rushes. Although cornerback might not be a strength position for the Steelers, they brought back Bryant McFadden, whom they had let go in free agency in 2009, and now have three experienced cornerback starters -- Ike Taylor, McFadden and William Gay. For the Packers, Tramon Williams, a Pro Bowl cornerback, and Sam Shields upgrade a 2009 secondary in which Jarrett Bush was torched at cornerback. On offense, though, the Packers are missing two significant players who were not injured for last year's contest -- tight end Jermichael Finley and running back Ryan Grant.

3. Dome-field advantage: Some say that the Packers' passing offense offers some of the excitement of the Dick Vermeil-Mike Martz St. Louis Rams, once billed "The Greatest Show on Turf." The Steelers must expect Rodgers and his receivers to be even more dangerous when playing indoors. During his career, Rodgers completes 66.8 percent of his passes, averages 8.62 yards an attempt, gets 265 yards a game and 1.8 touchdown passes a game when playing indoors. The key stat is he has only five interceptions in 10 dome games. Outdoors, Rodgers averages 3 percent fewer completions and almost a yard per throw less, and he has 27 interceptions in 44 games.

4. The Pouncey factor: Center Maurkice Pouncey, a Pro Bowler in his first NFL season, is expected to miss Super Bowl XLV with a high-ankle sprain. His replacement, Doug Legursky, handled the situation adequately during most of the AFC Championship Game. The good news for the Steelers is they have had two weeks to prepare Legursky and make sure his center-quarterback exchanges with Roethlisberger are smooth. They also have had time to scheme for the problems he will have with Packers nose tackle B.J. Raji, who is becoming one of the most dominating nose tackles in football. Expect the Steelers to run less into the middle of the field and maybe try more rollouts with Roethlisberger to protect him against blitzes over the center.

5. The "big five" strategy: Packers coach Mike McCarthy knows the importance of trying to establish the run, but he knows that running the football will be hard against the Steelers. That's why McCarthy's "big five" receiver package could be the key to the game. The Patriots and Ravens were at the forefront of using three-or-more-receiver sets to attack the Steelers' defense the past few years. The theory is simple and smart. Why run against a defense that gives up only 62.8 yards a game on the ground? Putting three or more receivers on the field forces nose tackle Casey Hampton to go to the sideline. According to ESPN Stats & Information, the Steelers have the league's second-lowest quarterback rating (69.1) when offenses use three or more receivers against them. The Packers use at least three receivers on three-quarters of their plays, and Rodgers completes 65.3 percent of his passes and has 25 touchdowns compared with nine interceptions against spread sets.

6. Dangers of the "big five": Those five-receiver formations leave Rodgers only five pass-blockers and six pass-protectors at most. They also leave him vulnerable to the blitzes of linebackers LaMarr Woodley and James Harrison. Harrison and Woodley combined for 20.5 sacks during the regular season. Packers tackles Bryan Bulaga and Chad Clifton have surrendered a combined 19.5 sacks. Woodley will go against Bulaga, who surrendered 11 sacks in 12 starts as a rookie. Rodgers' key in the spread set will be to get his passes out quickly.

Aaron Rodgers' new helmet might have protected him from another concussion when he took a high hit from Julius Peppers in the NFC Championship Game.

7. Further protection for Rodgers: Rodgers wisely tried a new helmet that was designed to further protect his head. The helmet, although tight and uncomfortable to wear, worked well in preventing him from having a third concussion after a high hit from Bears defensive end Julius Peppers. Will it work in Super Bowl XLV? One of the scary hits from the 2009 meeting between the Steelers and Packers was a first-quarter legal shot by Woodley on Rodgers. Steelers linebackers are taught to aim high instead of launching their bodies below the belts of offensive players. Rodgers is vulnerable to a concussion, and the five-receiver set could leave him exposed to a concussion-inducing hit.

8. Improvements in Big Ben: Ben Roethlisberger has handled Super Bowl Week well. He smiles while answering every question during interview sessions. On the field, Packers defenders know they must try to aim toward Roethlisberger's right shoulder while trying to tackle him because he can use his powerful left arm to fend off potential tacklers. Roethlisberger is going for his third Super Bowl ring. If the game is close, he could be the difference-maker who could win it.

9. Punching it over: One of the problems with a five-receiver offense is that blockers have a tougher time converting goal-line runs and short-yardage plays. Steelers running back Rashard Mendenhall scored 12 touchdowns on runs inside the 5-yard line during the regular season, according to ESPN Stats & Information. Packers rookie James Starks is still learning how to be a featured back, but the Packers are just average when they need a yard or two in running situations.

10. No script for the Packers: Most teams script their first 15 offensive players. The Packers don't. McCarthy and Rodgers work on a "first idea" system in which they think about what they might do during the week and make the calls during the first quarter of games. Surprisingly, the Steelers did a better job of scoring off first drives during the regular season. They scored 27 points on opening drives, ranking 15th in the league. The Packers were tied for 18th with 23. Sometimes, it's hard to get off to fast starts offensively in Super Bowls because of the nerves and pressures of the game. The other potential problem facing Rodgers is using the Super Bowl football, which has a painted spot that often causes problems for quarterbacks. Rodgers doesn't think it will be a problem, but he can't know for sure. Roethlisberger has been through two Super Bowl games, so it shouldn't be an issue for him.

John Clayton, a recipient of the Pro Football Hall of Fame's McCann Award for distinguished reporting, is a senior writer for ESPN.com.