Tough and mean, like the original Steel Curtain.
These Pittsburgh Steelers delivered too many hard hits and their
quarterback was steady enough to outplay the kid and the rest of
the Baltimore Ravens. With Troy Polamalu ending any chance Baltimore
had for a comeback with a 40-yard interception return, the Steelers
bullied their rivals 23-14 on Sunday to reach their seventh Super
Bowl.
“It was a typical, hard-hitting, physical game. It’s
the way every Baltimore-Pittsburgh game is,” said Steelers
wide receiver Hines Ward, who missed most of the game with a knee
injury. “Sometimes guys get hit so hard, you don’t know
if they’re going to get up. They say defense wins championships,
well, we have the No. 1 defense. And they’re the reason why
we’re really going to the Super Bowl.”
Next, Ben Roethlisberger and Pittsburgh will play the Arizona Cardinals
in two weeks in Tampa.
After beating Baltimore for the third time, the Steelers set up
an intriguing matchup — Mike Tomlin vs. the Cardinals’ Ken
Whisenhunt, the offensive coordinator when the Steelers won the Super
Bowl three seasons ago who went to Arizona after being passed over
for Pittsburgh’s job.
Whisenhunt and his top assistant, Russ Grimm, left after the Steelers
unexpectedly hired Tomlin, who has done something even Chuck Noll
and Bill Cowher couldn’t do by taking Pittsburgh to the Super
Bowl in his second season.
The Steelers harassed Joe Flacco all game long as he tried to become
the first rookie quarterback to take a team to the Super Bowl. Normally
unflappable, he looked lost at times and finished 13-for-30 for 141
yards and three costly interceptions.
Instead, Pittsburgh ended its home-field jinx in AFC championship
games.
“It’s always that way,” said Roethlisberger, who
took a vicious shot to his shoulder in the first half. “This
is always a 12-round slugfest. We always go at it. It’s always
violent from start to finish. I was ready when I took a knee at the
end, you never know when somebody is going to fire off the ball.”
Roethlisberger, picked off four times by New England in his rookie-year
AFC title game, was a workmanlike 16-of-33 for 255 yards and, most
importantly, no interceptions. If nothing else, it showed how much
experience mattered in a game so important.
“Here’s my advice to the Arizona Cardinals: Don’t
rush Ben Roethlisberger,” the Ravens’ Trevor Pryce said. “After
that, he’s a playground football player. That’s what
he is, and he’s a damn good one.”
Roethlisberger would laugh at that analogy — he said the Steelers’ big
of the game, a 65-yard touchdown pass to Santonio Holmes that made
it 13-0, was an improvised play “just like on the playground.”
After Polamalu’s twisting, turning run sealed it with 4:39
to play, the game was held up when Willis McGahee, who scored both
Baltimore touchdowns, was carted off the field following a frightening
hit to the helmet by Pittsburgh safety Ryan Clark.
The Ravens said he had “significant neck pain,” but
movement in his arms and legs.
Only the Steelers, 49ers and Cowboys have won five Super Bowls,
and Pittsburgh can be the first to win six. If the Steelers beat
Arizona, the 36-year-old Tomlin would be the youngest coach to win
an NFL championship.
“They did it tonight the way we’ve done it all year,” Tomlin
said. “We’ve got a very humble group, a very selfless
group.”
Earlier in the day, before Whisenhunt knew the outcome of the Steelers-Ravens
game, he said he wanted to match up against Pittsburgh in the Super
Bowl.
“I mean, I’m glad we’re playing in it, but the
reason I’m here is because of my time with Pittsburgh,” Whisenhunt
said, “and I am very grateful for that.”
The Steelers proved it is possible to beat a good team three times
in a season, and will now face a team they share a history with.
They were merged as Card-Pitt during World War II in 1944 when the
Cardinals were in Chicago and went 0-10, the only winless team in
Steelers history.
Steelers owner Dan Rooney recalls them being nicknamed the Car-Pitts “because
everybody walked all over us.”
Nobody walks over these Steelers, a hard-hitting, tough-guy team
with the NFL’s best defense, at least statistically, in nearly
20 years. The unit is a worthy descendant of the Steel Curtain teams
of the 1970s that virtually defined the way defense is supposed to
be played.
They spent the game pressuring Flacco, who was outplayed as badly
as Roethlisberger was by the Patriots’ Tom Brady in his first
AFC title game four years ago, and the mismatch at QB may have made
the difference.
Down 16-14, Flacco tried to rally the Ravens in the closing minutes.
That’s when Polamalu stepped in.
“I think Troy was probably just able to read my eyes,” Flacco
said. “I think he was just able to jump over there, read a
little bit and he made a nice play.”
Said Roethlisberger: “He went against the No. 1 defense in
the world.”
Ravens teammate Terrell Suggs said, “I don’t think he
struggled. They just made plays. When you got a defense that can
make plays like that, I don’t think he was placing the ball
where he wanted to but this was just their night.”
Still, Roethlisberger cautioned, “You can’t make mistakes
and win a big game.”
Maybe it helped that the two athletes largely responsible for Pittsburgh’s
last two major sports championships — former Steelers running
back Jerome Bettis and Penguins co-owner and Hall of Famer Mario
Lemieux — were among the record crowd of 65,350 in Heinz Field.
The franchise, for all of the success it has enjoyed while playing
in a record-tying 14 AFC title games, had lost an unprecedented four
of its five most recent conference championship games in Pittsburgh.
The run of losses almost made the Steelers glad to go on the road
for the entire Super Bowl run-up to their last title.
The Ravens and Steelers own the NFL’s nastiest ongoing rivalry.
This game was expected to be low-scoring, physical and tense and
it was, especially after Baltimore came back from an early 13-0 deficit
to get to within 16-14 on McGahee’s second short touchdown
run of the game, a 1-yarder with 9:32 remaining.
“We were up 13-0 and then we’re up 13-7 then we’re
up 13-whatever, it was like, ‘Man, this game is going slow,’ ” the
Steelers’ Deshea Townsend said. “But then Troy steps
up and makes a huge play and kind of seals the game for us.”
Another such play — Roethlisberger’s 45-yard completion
to Hines Ward on third-and-12 play — led to the first of Jeff
Reed’s field goals, a 34-yarder, in the first quarter.
On the Ravens’ second possession, Flacco made the kind of
mistake he didn’t make in playoff wins over the Dolphins and
top-seeded Titans, throwing the ball into the hands of nickel back
Townsend for the rookie’s first interception in 98 passes.
Ward kept the ensuing Steelers drive going with an 11-yard catch
on third-and-10, leading to Reed’s 42-yard field goal, but
hurt his knee while landing.
Now, the Steelers can’t wait to see some old friends.
“We got our old coaches. We all won a Super Bowl here with
the Steelers together,” linebacker James Farrior said. “I’m
sure they’re going to be coming after us to get this one.”
70's Steel
Curtain Defense Talks About the Current Steelers Defense
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