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Showing posts with label XLV. Show all posts
Showing posts with label XLV. Show all posts

Monday, January 31, 2011

Amile's Super Bowl XLV Blog: Steelers are America's REAL TEAM


Ben RoethlisbergerDonald Miralle/Getty ImagesThe Steelers have won six Super Bowls, more than any other team, and will try for a seventh Sunday.
Arguments are only as strong as the facts that support them. So to prove to you that the Steelers, the AFC representative in Super Bowl XLV, are indeed America's favorite NFL team, I present you with these incontrovertible, undeniable, irrefutable facts:
The man whose jersey outsold every other player's in the NFL this past year and the team whose merchandise outsold every other NFL franchise's this season: safety Troy Polamalu and the Pittsburgh Steelers, respectively.

The team with the most Hall of Fame inductees during the NFL's modern era: The Pittsburgh Steelers, with nine.
The team that has won more Super Bowls than any other: Umm, let me see, take a second, oh yeah, wait for it -- THE PITTSBURGH STEELERS.
Commercialism! Idol-worship! Achievement! What's more American than those? Good night, game over, light up the fireworks and sing "Yankee Doodle Dandy" while waving the Terrible Towel. Really, need I go on? OK, I will, only because the myths that the Dallas Cowboys and Green Bay Packers are worthy of "America's Team" status need to be buried. They need to be destroyed and humiliated, as the Steelers have done to opponents for the past four decades.
In fact, the notion that the Cowboys, especially, were first anointed "America's Team" has long bugged the Steelers. In the 1970s, there was no more heated rivalry in sports than these two franchises, who were as opposite in style to each other as "Jersey Shore" and "PBS NewsHour."
The Steelers represented their blue-collar, coal-dust choked city with physical dominance on the field. The Cowboys, with gleaming pants, stars on their helmets and trickery on offense, reflected the slick, oil-rich, new-money ways of Dallas. From 1971 to 1980, Dallas and Pittsburgh played in nine Super Bowls between them. Twice, after the 1975 and 1978 seasons, they played each other. Both games became, up to that point, the biggest spectacles the Super Bowl had ever seen. More media credentials were doled out, and TV commercial rates hit all-time highs.
The Steelers were defending Super Bowl champs the first time the two played for the title and had the NFL's best regular-season record heading into their second matchup. And yet, both times, Chuck Noll's players felt stung by their second-class status. At one point before the two teams' first Super Bowl, which was played in Miami, Steelers linebacker Jack Lambert complained to the media about the Cowboys' team hotel being closer to the beach than Pittsburgh's. "I hope," said Lambert, "that Roger Staubach is eaten by a shark."
"We took it personally that they were called 'America's Team,'" Steelers cornerback Mel Blount once told NFL Films. "Who granted them that?"
The Steelers, by contrast, have never been given anything. The team was founded by Art Rooney in 1933 and then had losing seasons for 36 of the next 39 years. At times, Rooney was short on funds and couldn't afford to pay a full roster of players; instead, workers from his father's brewery filled in for free. Until Three Rivers Stadium opened in 1970, the Steelers never had a home field to call their own. They practiced in South Park, a public fairgrounds, where the players had to clear rocks from the field and take cold-water showers after drills.
It was appropriate that all of the Burgh could watch this team practice, because Rooney viewed owning the team as a public trust, no matter how big the business of football became. One hot summer afternoon in 1974, Steelers linebacker Jack Ham and offensive lineman Gerry Mullins found themselves on a dusty road across from a cemetery, outside of the entrance to the Steelers' training camp. They were on strike, along with the rest of the Steelers and NFL players at training camps across the country, fighting the owners for free agency, more money, better contracts. At that moment, rookies Jack Lambert and Mike Webster and Lynn Swann and John Stallworth were at practice, getting coached up by Chuck Noll, while the veterans waited and wondered: Will we win this fight? Or will we lose our jobs?
As the day dragged on, the picket line began to thin. By late afternoon, only Mullins and Ham remained. As they sat by the side of the road, a car came flying toward them, kicking up dust. Then it stopped, right where they sat. It was Rooney. "He rolled down his window and said to us, 'Don't you boys worry about this strike. We'll get it settled,'" Mullins remembered. "Then he pulled a six-pack of beer out of the car, handed it to us and drove off."
That season the Steelers won the first of their NFL record six Super Bowls.
As fans we may appreciate the Packers' small-town narrative; we may aspire to live as large and be as brash as the Cowboys; but we are all the Steelers. A ragtag bunch of misfits, underestimated yet undeterred, born in the foundries and rising to the highest peaks.
Their story is our story. End of argument. And just like I am stubborn with the being a Titan fan..... it is true to my heart about the Steelers. 

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Amile's Super Bowl XLV Blog: Yes, the Packers love playing indoors


What follows is some unfiltered Super Bowl XLV truth. Go ahead, rub your eyes. Shed your historic stereotypes and recognize this unmistakable reality: The offense that plays in the NFL's coldest outdoor stadium is at its best when locked up in the sterile conditions of a dome.

Yes, the 
Green Bay Packers have built the league's Latest and Greatest Show on Turf.

To be sure, the Packers have produced big numbers in all venues since quarterback 
Aaron Rodgers took over as their starter in 2008. But even on that scale, their performance in 12 indoor games over that span has been unreal. It provides a substantial subtext for Super Bowl XLV, which will be played on the newest generation of artificial turf and with the roof closed at Cowboys Stadium.

"All I can do," receiver 
Greg Jennings said, "is smile."

The charts below provide the details of what Jennings and Rodgers, in particular, have done indoors since the start of 2008. Here is a snippet:

  • The Packers have averaged 31.8 points in those 12 games. That figure jumps to 33.7 if you discard a 3-point performance this season in Week 14 at Detroit's Ford Field, where Rodgers departed in the second quarter after suffering a concussion.
  • [+] EnlargeGreg Jennings
    Streeter Lecka/Getty ImagesGreg Jennings has used the word "smile" multiple times when describing the Packers' play indoors.
    They have exceeded 40 points in both of their indoor postseason games, scoring 45 points last year against the Arizona Cardinals and 48 earlier this month against theAtlanta Falcons.
  • Rodgers has thrown 26 touchdowns against five interceptions in those 12 games en route to a 111.1 passer rating.
  • Jennings has at least 100 receiving yards in seven of the 12 games, including three of the four in 2010.

Overall, the Packers are 6-6 in those games, but it would be hard to blame the offense for many of the losses. It has produced at least 27 points in nine of the 12 games.

It's only fair to point out the Packers will face one of the NFL's top defenses in the Super Bowl; the 
Pittsburgh Steelers allowed the lowest point total in the NFL this season (232) and are holding opponents to an average of 207 yards per game in the playoffs. (In their only dome game of 2010, the Steelers gave up 305 passing yards to New Orleans Saintsquarterback Drew Brees in a 20-10 loss.)

Asked last week about his clear affinity for playing indoors, Jennings used the word "smile" two more times in what was a 100-word answer.
"I mean, you go from playing in Chicago in January, late January, to Dallas and they close you inside a dome," Jennings said. "You can't do anything but smile. Obviously the surface is going to be perfect. The atmosphere is going to be unmatched.

"You can just smile. It's going to be exciting. Obviously we play well inside. But in a game like this, game of this magnitude, it [wouldn't] matter if we had to play in the park. Guys are going to bring their 'A' game and guys are going to come well prepared."

Perhaps. But it's clear the Packers are drawing a deep level of confidence from their recent performances in similar conditions. Of course, I would imagine that most offensive skill players would choose an indoor track over the unpredictability of weather and grass field conditions. But the Packers have demonstrated an obvious and special aptitude for it.

The explanation isn't complicated, said Matt Williamson of Scouts Inc.

"It's just better conditions to let athletes and speed really come out," Williamson said. "Considering that they play in Green Bay, it is a bit odd that they are constructed the way they are on offense. But they have been extremely fortunate at the quarterback position, so you build around that guy. There are obviously more variables in the pass game versus the run game, and if you can take weather out of that equation, I just think that helps the precision of it all."

I've heard Rodgers asked twice about domes in the past few weeks. Both times he smiled and muttered something about perfect weather and the opportunity to wear his preferred turf shoes. I suppose it would have been uncouth for him to tell the raw truth: 
We have a timing-based passing offense that requires precision and rewards both speed and accuracy. Between my well-honed arm and Jennings' near-perfect fundamentals, we have an ideal pairing in a game played on a solid footing.

Upon further investigation, however, Rodgers wasn't joking about the shoe part. For his entire career, he has worn Nike "Destroyers" during practice and in all indoor games. (Rodgers 
broke his left foot in 2006.)

"They're just real comfortable," he said. "Anytime I can, I like to wear them."

Long-range weather forecasts are calling for scattered showers and a high of 58 degrees in the Dallas area for next Sunday, but the NFL long ago decided to close the retractable roof at Cowboys Stadium to provide a "singular focus" on the game, said league spokesman Brian McCarthy. That decision brought smiles to the Packers' faces. The team from the Frozen Tundra is getting its dream scenario: A Super Bowl on Pristine Turf.