Saturday, February 5, 2011

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Prepare yourself, folks.

During the next two weeks, you’re going to be hit over the head with more Super Bowl discussion and debate than you might be able to physically handle. As someone far smarter and pithier than me once described the two weeks before the Super Bowl — we’re about to enter the “”paralysis of analysis” zone.

Yes, until Feb. 6, you’re going to read and hear it all. We’ll be flooded with all the many lessons Aaron Rodgers learned or didn't learn from Brett Favre, the lessons Sam Shields and Tramon Williams have learned from Charles Woodson and the lessons Ben Roethlisberger learned after taking that fateful trip down to Milledgeville, Ga., last summer.

We’ll see more than enough NFL Films footage from two franchises that have combined for 18 league championships and 49 Pro Football Hall of Famers, hear the name Lombardi even more than usual, and maybe — just maybe — get a few Lynn Swann highlights.

Screaming talking heads on TV will debate if Dick LeBeau’s the “greatest defensive mind ever,” they’ll shout at each other until they're red in the face over which of these two die-hard fan bases is the superior clan, and they’ll lose their breath over some worthless argument surrounding Terrible Towels and cheese-shaped hats made of foam. Points will be made, heads will be nodded and there will be countless laughs at jokes that aren't funny.

The Black Eyed Peas will be involved in a news story at some point, and so might a media-starved ex-player promoting a soup product or fashionable sports drink. Media Day will bring out the freaks, the few days following Media Day will feature members of the media grasping at straws for far-reaching angles that haven’t been exhausted, and the bookmakers out in Vegas will share their exotic prop bets to a nation salivating for something new to chew on.

As for the actual football?

You’d be surprised, but there usually isn't that much X’s and O’s discussed during these two endless weeks of buildup. If there’s anything that’s lacking from the dead zone between the conference championship games and the Super Bowl, it’s the actual analysis of the game, itself.

In truth, this one has all the makings of a classic. Off the field, it has all those bells and whistles, too. On the field? It should be awesome. Here are my five first-glance things to watch for in a Steelers-Packers Super Bowl.

1. The two 3-4 masters and the quarterbacks who just don’t go down: With apologies to Rex Ryan and Wade Phillips, defensive coordinators Dom Capers and Dick LeBeau are the top two 3-4 defensive minds in the NFL, and between them, combine for more than 50 years of NFL coaching experience. The difference in their respective Super Bowl game plans, of course, will be the two quarterbacks their respective pass-rush happy 3-4 defenses will be facing.

Capers, a former NFL head coach with both the Panthers and Texans, relies on endless pass rushing pursuit from All-Pro outside linebacker Clay Matthews. Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger might not evade Matthews with agility and sheer speed, but Roethlisberger’s nearly impossible to bring down at first contact. His carnival of pump fakes and dips and dunks, paired with an uncanny ability to find receivers in stride on third-and-long, make him just about immune to a ferocious pass rush.

Aaron Rodgers, on the other hand, is the closest thing to Steve Young that we’ve seen since the 49ers Hall of Fame quarterback retired in 2000. In addition to his Young-like accuracy, Rodgers is arguably the top scrambling quarterback in the NFL. And that includes Michael Vick. James Harrison and LaMarr Woodley might get to Rodgers in the Super Bowl, but his ability to make nothing out of something with his feet creates a potential matchup problem for LeBeau and his hard-charging defense.

Everyone knows about Roethlisberger and Rodgers’ incredible arms and their ability to hit receivers downfield. Their abilities to evade hard-pressing pass rushers, though, could actually play bigger roles in determining the better team in Dallas.

Either way, both Capers and LeBeau's game plans will be fascinating to watch unfold.

2. The Packers and their newly found running game: During the preseason, I sat with a few friends who’d just finished their fantasy football draft. One of my buddies, a cat named Scott, obnoxiously boasted all afternoon about his “Sleeper Pick of the Year” — Packers running back James Starks. Scott, of course, is one of the seven State University of New York — Buffalo football fans in America, and thus, had a bit of a paternal love for Starks, his fellow Buffalo Bull.

After a season battling injuries and finding himself in and out of the active lineup, Starks finally made an impact on the Packers' offense in the final month of the season. During the playoffs? He’s provided the necessary balance to a Packers offense that struggled to find a running game for the bulk of the season.

In Sunday’s NFC Championship Game at Chicago, Starks carried the ball 22 times for 74 yards with a touchdown. In Green Bay’s three postseason games, he’s averaged 23.3 carries a game. Heading into the playoffs, everyone pointed to the Packers’ running game as the team’s Achilles’ heel.

Now? It’s a strength.

Starks didn't do much for Scott's fantasy football team, but he's doing a heck of a lot for the Packers this month.

Of course, for all of his success this postseason, James Starks hasn’t seen anything like the Steelers’ defense, which gave up an NFL all-time best 63 rushing yards per game in 2010.

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The Jets, one of the top rushing teams in the game, scrapped for just 70 yards on Sunday. New York's the only team to top the 100-yard mark all season vs. the Steelers, and did so in Week 15.

The spotlight will be on bigger names, but James Starks — the former Buffalo Bull — might be the most important player on the field in Dallas.

3. The fast start: After Jim Cornelison’s riveting rendition of the national anthem got a frenzied Chicago crowd rocking for Sunday's opening kickoff, the Packers started on fire and numbed any momentum the Bears might have had in the early moments of the NFC Championship Game. You know that image of a balloon being popped by a pin and weezing its way into oblivion? That was Soldier Field five minutes into Sunday's game.

The Packers’ first offensive series could serve as a study for high school football teams looking to analyze “The Perfect Drive.” Rodgers completed four passes for 76 yards and scrambled for the game’s first score. They scored on a Starks touchdown a few minutes later, stretching the lead to 14-0. The rest was history.

A few hours later in Pittsburgh, the Steelers opened the game with a clock-eating nine-minute scoring drive and jumped to an early 7-0 lead. They’d extend that lead to 24 points before giving up 19 consecutive to close out the game. Both teams started with well-defined game plans, executed them perfectly, and did enough damage in the first half to withstand late comebacks from their rivals. Though the Steelers did come back from a 14-point halftime deficit vs. the Ravens two weeks ago, it’ll be hard to do the same on a neutral field versus an offense as high-powered as Green Bay’s. The fourth quarter might be when it matters most, but those first 15 minutes could very well be when this Super Bowl is won.

4. Shootout Part II? Doubtful. The most entertaining regular-season game of the 2009 season pitted the slumping Steelers vs. the red-hot Packers in a late December aerial show at Heinz Field. Rodgers completed 26 of 48 passes for 383 yards and three touchdowns that afternoon, while Roethlisberger torched the Packers for 503 yards and three scores, including a game-winning touchdown pass to then-rookie Mike Wallace late in the fourth quarter.

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What really killed the Packers in that game? Besides their horrendous pass defense? Penalties.

Five of Green Bay’s seven penalties in that Week 15 game resulted in first downs for Pittsburgh. The Steelers, as they usually do, capitalized and optimized their opportunities.

Can we expect a similar type of game two weeks from now? I highly doubt it. Rodgers and Roethlisberger are playing well, but neither of these two defenses is giving up 400 yards in the air anytime soon.

Green Bay’s two young defensive backs — Tramon Williams and Sam Shields — have played above and beyond what the Packers ever expected from them this season. Meanwhile, the Steelers defense has a certain guy with long hair named Pola-something in the defensive backfield this time around. There’s no chance Rodgers puts up the fireworks he did last season against Pittsburgh with No. 43 in the lineup.

5. The ‘Ol vets: In the end, this one might come down to veteran players making the biggest plays down the stretch. In Green Bay, there’s wide receiver Donald Driver, playing in his first Super Bowl after 12 seasons in the league, and Charles Woodson — the 1998 Heisman Trophy winner — who’ll be suiting up for his second shot at a Super Bowl after his Raiders were blown out by the Buccaneers in Super Bowl XXVII. Woodson has been waiting eight years to return to the big stage. Chad Clifton’s a longtime Packer but has yet to play in the big game, while Ryan Pickettsuited up for the Rams in their loss to the Patriots back in 2001. To be certain, there haven’t been many Super Bowl highlights, let alone memories, from the Green Bay locker room.

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Meanwhile, in Pittsburgh, most of the guys suiting up on Feb. 6 already have Super Bowl rings, if not two. Three players — Larry Foote, Antwan Randle El, and Bryant McFadden — won rings with the Steelers, left to play elsewhere, only to come back for this 2010 campaign. Been there, done that? You can say that again. Even coach Mike Tomlin, in just five years in Pittsburgh, is the only head coach in NFL history to coach in two Super Bowls before age 40.

If we’ve learned anything in the past three weeks, it’s that this Packers team isn’t scared of challenges. To be certain, they do not become weeping willows when under the national spotlight. But will the bright lights of the Super Bowl be an entirely different ballgame for this year’s road warriors? Will the Steelers' edge in Super Bowl experience make a difference? From the coaching staffs down to the special teams, I can’t recall a Super Bowl matchup with a bigger differential in the two teams’ Super Bowls played.

Then again, it hasn’t fazed this Packers team this month. Why should such a silly thing as big-game experience matter now?

And now with those five things out of the way, let’s get back to what really matters . . . what song will the Black Eyed Peas open up with at halftime?

Ah, the Super Bowl. There's really nothing like it.


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nfl hall of fame 2011

The votes are in, and just like every year, someone is left standing on the outside looking in—such as wide receiver Tim Brown, who will now have to vie for a spot in next year's selection to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

However, this may be no easy task.

While some may say this was the toughest year to decide who is enshrined into football immortality, others may agree that next year's class is filled with more talent—and even more questions.

Watch this game here Pittsburgh Steelers vs Green Bay Packers

Former Kansas City Chiefs OT Willie Roaf will not be part of the Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2011. Roaf made it past the first cut -- from 15 to 10 finalists -- but was not part of the final cut.

Your 2011 Pro Football Hall of Famers: Richard Dent, Marshall Faulk, Ed Sabol, Deion Sanders and Shannon Sharpe. Chris Hanburger and Les Richter were senior selections.

Deion Sanders seemed to be a lock and Marshall Faulk had a very good shot. Sharpe has been denied in the past so, even though he's from the rival Denver Broncos, I'm glad to see him get in.

The most debated member was Ed Sabol, founder of NFL Films. To me, his contribution is incredibly huge considering how much of the game he's preserved.

The class of 2012 will include another Chief -- Will Shields -- so, hey, it's possible we see two Chiefs make it next year.

Here's the view of the Hall of Fame announcement from my seat:

Hall4_medium

A group of 15 modern-era players and contributors were named finalists for the 2011 NFL Hall of Fame class, joining a pair of senior nominees on the ballot. The Hall's selection committee will vote on this year's class on Feb. 5, 2011 in Dallas, one day prior to the Super Bowl.

For a nominee to be inducted into the Hall of Fame, he must earn 80 percent of the committee's vote.

Jerome Bettis, Marshall Faulk, Curtis Martin, Willie Roaf and Deion Sanders -- all in their first year of Hall of Fame eligibility -- were among the finalists. The complete list of 2011 Hall finalists:

o. Jerome Bettis, RB (1995-93 Los Angeles/St. Louis Rams, 1996-2005 Pittsburgh Steelers)

o. Tim Brown, WR/KR (1988-2003 Los Angeles/Oakland Raiders, 2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers)

o. Cris Carter, WR (1987-89 Philadelphia Eagles, 1990-2001 Minnesota Vikings, 2002 Miami Dolphins)

o. Dermontti Dawson, C (1988-2000 Pittsburgh Steelers)

o. Richard Dent, DE (1983-1993, 1995 Chicago Bears, 1994 San Francisco 49ers, 1996 Indianapolis Colts, 1997 Philadelphia Eagles)

o. Chris Doleman, DE/LB (1985-1993, 1999 Minnesota Vikings, 1994-95 Atlanta Falcons, 1996-98 San Francisco 49ers)

o. Marshall Faulk, RB (1994-98 Indianapolis Colts, 1999-2005 St. Louis Rams)

o. Charles Haley, DE/LB (1986-1991, 1999 San Francisco 49ers, 1992-96 Dallas Cowboys)

o. Cortez Kennedy, DT (1990-2000 Seattle Seahawks)

o. Curtis Martin, RB (1995-97 New England Patriots, 1998-2005 New York Jets)

o. Andre Reed, WR (1985-1999 Buffalo Bills, 2000 Washington Redskins)

o. Willie Roaf, OT (1993-2001 New Orleans Saints, 2002-05 Kansas City Chiefs)

o. Ed Sabol, Contributor (1964-1995 NFL Films)

o. Deion Sanders, CB/KR/PR (1989-1993 Atlanta Falcons, 1994 San Francisco 49ers, 1995-99 Dallas Cowboys, 2000 Washington Redskins, 2004-05 Baltimore Ravens)

o. Shannon Sharpe, TE (1990-99, 2002-03 Denver Broncos, 2000-01 Baltimore Ravens)

The two senior nominees are: Chris Hanburger, LB (1965-78 Washington Redskins); and Les Richter, LB (1954-62) Los Angeles Rams.

Names like Don Coryell, Roger Craig, Terrell Davis and Ray Guy did not make the cut from the semifinal round to the list of finalists.

Sanders and Marshall Faulk led a class of seven voted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame on Saturday. Joining them were Shannon Sharpe, Richard Dent, Ed Sabol, Les Richter and Chris Hanburger.

As talkative as he was talented, known as much for his celebration dances as his interceptions and kick returns, Sanders was an outstanding cornerback and sometime wide receiver with five teams. He's a two-time Super Bowl winner and was the Defensive Player of the Year in 1994.

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Super Bowl 2011 LIVE


Sanders
"I'm excited. These guys -- are you kidding me? It's hard to describe," Sanders said. "To be held up in high regard, to this standard ... I am honored."

Sanders also played Major League Baseball. But football clearly was his calling.

"He was an electrifying performer who put fans on the edge of their seats every time he manned his cornerback position or dropped back to receive a kickoff or field a punt," Falcons owner Arthur Blank said. "Deion is, without question, one of the greatest players in the history of the NFL."

Super Bowl 45 is finally here. The Pittsburgh Steelers and the Green Bay Packers will duke it out for the Lombardi Trophy at 6:30 p.m. ET. Ben Roethlisberger will look for his third Super Bowl victory since 2005 and Aaron Rodgers is going for his first in just his third year as Green Bay's starting quarterback.

Three-time Super Bowl champion Roger Craig has been in Dallas all weekend and is sending photos and updates from Cowboys Stadium. Craig made the Pro Bowl four times as the San Francisco 49ers running back and he played along side Joe Montana and Jerry Rice. Scroll down for live updates from Super Bowl XLV and don't forget to predict the winner!

Steelers vs Packers

Cornerback Deion Sanders, who made the moniker "Prime Time" his own, and NFL Films creator Ed Sabol, whose historic and famous footage changed the way the game was watched, led a seven-member Class of 2011, announced live Saturday night on the NFL Network.

Sanders and Sabol were joined by defensive end Richard Dent, running back Marshall Faulk, tight end Shannon Sharpe and a pair of veterans committee inductees in linebackers Chris Hanburger from the 1960s-70s and Les Richter from the '50s.

The trio of Sanders and Faulk made it in in their first year of eligibility. Sabol, now 95, also was up for induction for the first time after a small faction of voters lobbied for him to be considered for the impact his creation, NFL Films, had on the game.

The new class will officially be enshrined at the Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio in August.

Sanders put the "f" in flamboyant and basically put the phrase "PT" in the everyday football vernacular from the moment he dared to play in a NFL game in Miami for the Atlanta Falcons and flew to Pittsburgh afterward to be with his Atlanta Braves teammates in their their NLCS game against the Pirates on Oct. 11, 1992. Over 14 seasons, Sanders won Super Bowls in San Francisco and Dallas, intercepted 56 passes, returning nine for touchdowns to go with nine more TDs on kick returns. He was a first-team All-Pro nine times and was named to the NFL's 1990s All-Decade Team.

"You can't pick the class you go into, like you can't pick the team you go to in the NFL [draft] ... but I love you all," Sanders said, looking around at his classmates Faulk and Sharpe to his right and past inductees Michael Irvin, Rod Woodson and Steve Young to his left. "I love you all and admire you all. I'm excited."

Sabol was founder, chairman and president of NFL Films, having reached out to NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle to bid on the rights to film the 1962 championship game and thus changing the game's archives forever. Rather than using single sideline cameras high in the stadium, Sabol added field-level and end zone cameras and filmed in slow motion. He later added microphones on coaches, players and referees, then later those famous "football follies."

"Film-making, like football, is a team sport," said son Steve Sabol, appearing on his father's behalf. "To bring my dad's vision to life, we've had so many great cameramen, musicians, sound men and graphic artists. ... I just want to thank those [people] who worked with us over the last 50 years."

Faulk was the No. 2 overall pick of the Indianapolis Colts in 1994 and rookie of the year that season. After being traded to St. Louis, Faulk helped lead the Rams to the franchise's only Super Bowl title in 1999 and chased that with a league MVP award the next season. He was the first player in history to amass 2,000 yards from scrimmage in four straight seasons and retired in 2005 as No. 9 rusher of all time (12,279 yards).

"There are guys in this Hall of Fame I look so far up to," Faulk said. "I never thought I'd be in that room with them. It's special."

Dent played for four teams in 15 seasons, but was Super Bowl XX MVP with the Chicago Bears and won a second ring with the 49ers alongside Sanders in '94. He retired in '97 with 137.5 sacks, the third-most ever at the time.




Sharpe was one of the most quotable players ever to have microphone put in his face, but hardly all talk. He won two Super Bowls with John Elway in Denver and a third with the Baltimore Ravens. The eight-time Pro Bowler retired after the '01 season with 815 career catches -- the most by a tight end at the time -- for 10,060 yards and 62 touchdowns.

"If you are going to have letters behind your name, I wasn't going to have M.D. or PhD. HOF is pretty good," Sharpe said.

Hanburger, nicknamed "Hangman" for his clothesline tackling techniques, was an 18th-round draft pick by Washington in 1965 and went on to play 14 seasons, be voted to nine Pro Bowls and become one of the most famous faces of a Redskins defense during George Allen's era coaching the "Over-the-Hill Gang."

Richter played for the Los Angles Rams from '54-62. The team acquired his rights in exchange for 11 players and did not regret it, as Richter was voted either first- or second-team All-NFL five straight seasons, and in doubling as a kicker led the team in scoring five straight years. Richter was 79 when he died last June.

The Hall's voters needed 7 1/2 hours to reach the final count of seven. The day began with 15 finalists on the 44-member committee's ballot.

Running back Jerome Bettis, in his first year of eligibility, along with wide receivers Tim Brown and Cris Carter, and defensive ends Charles Haley and Chris Doleman were eliminated after the first vote. The second vote eliminated center Dermonti Dawson, defensive tackle Cortez Kennedy, wide receiver Andre Reed and offensive tackle Willie Roaf.
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