Archive for January, 2009

Steelers, Cardinals arrive, as do questions about Ward’s health

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009

Hines Ward isn’t cutting or turning yet on a sprained right knee — an injury that sometimes takes weeks and weeks to heal. He’s not running pass patterns or sprinting with much speed.

Not playing in the Super Bowl? Ward can’t imagine it, and neither can any of his Pittsburgh Steelers teammates, who arrived in Tampa on Monday to prepare for the game against the Arizona Cardinals.

The one question hanging over the AFC champion Steelers as their practice week begins is whether the wide receiver who owns most of the franchise’s career pass-catching records will play with a sprained right knee.

Super Bowl blog NFL.com staff are all over Tampa covering both teams and sharing their experiences about the craziness that is Super Bowl week. Keep up to date with all of the latest entries.To Ward, there’s no question at all.

“I’m playing,” he said. “I would have played if the game had been last week.

“I don’t have a brace on, I’m walking around fine,” Ward added. “I’m not going to be 100 percent, I’m not going to trick anybody. But I think I’m going to be able to go out there and perform like I’m used to.”

Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger was startled anyone doubted that one of the NFL’s toughest and most physical offensive players — and the Super Bowl XL MVP — would play.

“People ask me that question, and I want to smack them,” Roethlisberger said. “It’s Hines Ward — he’s going to be out here. It’s the Super Bowl.”

Ward has been so committed to his rehabilitation program since being hurt in the Jan. 18 AFC Championship Game that he worked out Monday before the Steelers took a morning flight to Tampa.

Ward is listed as questionable for the Sunday night game against Arizona, and Pittsburgh coach Mike Tomlin said the receiver won’t practice Wednesday, the same routine he followed all season. Ward hopes to take part Thursday in what will be the Steelers’ final, full-scale practice.

Before then, he’ll have some additional help with his rehabiliation.

Ward shipped a hyperbaric oxygen chamber to the team hotel — yes, just like the device Michael Jackson once used. Ward believes it stimulates the production of red blood cells and will hasten his recuperation from the same type of injury that sidelined running back Willie Parker for a month this season.

The Cardinals arrived in town after the Steelers but ahead of schedule, thanks to a strong tail wind.

Quarterback Kurt Warner, who won a Super Bowl title with the St. Louis Rams in 2000, leads a team of Cardinals who are mostly newcomers to the NFL’s biggest stage. After all, the franchise hasn’t played in a title game since 1947.

“Unlike probably the other two, and I think definitely the first one, this one up to this point was really like business as usual,” Warner said. “I really felt like it was just another road trip. The whole Super Bowl thing hasn’t hit me yet.”

Arizona coach Ken Whisenhunt has been here before, as offensive coordinator of Pittsburgh’s Super Bowl champions of three seasons ago.

“It’s a little muggy out here,” Whisenhunt said, “But fortunately we’ve got a week to get used to that.”

The Cardinals have much less time to get accustomed to the media frenzy that comes with the Super Bowl, and they will lean on Warner’s experience.

“Anytime you have a player that has Kurt’s credentials, that has had the season that Kurt’s had throughout this year, it commands respect,” Whisenhunt said.

Whisenhunt also said he wants his team to enjoy the experience, but “we can’t lose sight of the fact that we’re here to play a game.” He knows that trouble lurks in the party environment that leads up to Sunday’s game.

“I don’t think you can talk to them about it enough,” Whisenhunt said. “I’ve talked to them about it and will talk to them about this again. That’s something that’s very important. … The only thing is give them as much information as you can about it. It really goes back to the type of players that we have. They’ve done a really good job of handling this so far.”

The Cardinals rolled up 95 points in playoff victories over the Atlanta Falcons, Carolina Panthers and Philadelphia Eagles, heady stuff for a franchise that had two playoff victories in its entire history before this year.

Sean Morey, who made the Pro Bowl on special teams this year for Arizona, was part of the Steelers’ Super Bowl championship and was brought to the Cardinals by Whisenhunt to help instill the attitude and work ethic of a winner.

Morey said that after Tuesday’s media day, the team can focus “on the task at hand.”

This isn’t the first time the Cardinals have spent a week in the East. They stayed in suburban Washington after losing to the Redskins to prepare for the following Sunday’s game against the New York Jets.

That didn’t turn out so well. The Cardinals lost 56-35.

Arizona Cardinals update

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

NFL Network’s Alex Flanagan has the latest news coming out of Tempe, Ariz.

Steelers will don road whites, in which they’re 2-0 in Super Bowls

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009

The Steelers will wear their white road uniforms against the Arizona Cardinals in Super Bowl XLIII, just as they did when they defeated the Seattle Seahawks for the NFL title three years ago in Detroit.

The Cardinals, as the Super Bowl’s designated home team, chose to wear their red home jerseys in the Feb. 1 game in Tampa, Fla.

In Super Bowl XL in February 2006, the Steelers had the option of wearing their black home jerseys, but they elected to wear white after playing and winning three road playoff games in three weeks.

This will be only the third time in their seven Super Bowl appearances that the Steelers will wear white. They also wore white while defeating the Minnesota Vikings in Super Bowl IX in January 1975.

Haley drawing attention thanks to Cardinals’ postseason run

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009

Todd Haley is loud, blunt and often argues with his players. He also is an emerging coaching star as the man who calls the shots for the high-scoring Arizona Cardinals’ offense.

“I’m an emotional guy,” the offensive coordinator said after the Cardinals beat Philadelphia for the NFC title. “I’m not a players’ coach. I coach hard. That’s the way I was taught.”

Haley’s temper was on full display in Sunday’s game, in a first-half argument with quarterback Kurt Warner, then in a shouting match with wide receiver Anquan Boldin during Arizona’s winning fourth-quarter drive.

“Just the emotions of the game,” Haley said of his widely publicized run-in with Boldin. “We’re emotional guys. Like I said, I wear my heart on my sleeve and that’s the way I go about business and I have to deal with that on a full-time basis.” The players are used to it.

“Todd and I have argued most of the games this year,” Warner said.

Haley’s method might be heavy-handed, but there is no questioning the results. The Cardinals have scored a combined 95 points in victories over Atlanta, Carolina and Philadelphia to advance to the Super Bowl for the first time in franchise history.

Third-string quarterback Brian St. Pierre stands close to Haley on the sidelines.

“Todd is very vocal and not afraid to show his emotions, but a great coach,” St. Pierre said. “I love Todd. He’s done an incredible job this year. I can’t believe he didn’t get any interviews to be a head coach, but I’m sure that’s on the very near horizon. He’s a big part of why we’re going to the Super Bowl.”

Despite their run-ins, Haley and Warner are close, and the coach has high praise for the 37-year-old quarterback.

“I say it over and over, Kurt is a true man in every sense of the word,” Haley said after Sunday’s win over the Eagles. “He doesn’t have to be a tough guy and fight everybody, he just believes in what he believes in and he leads the team. We get into it a bunch because he’s a competitive guy, as I am, but I was really proud of him today. That was a big-time performance.”

Haley provides the volume on low-key coach Ken Whisenhunt’s staff.

“Coach (Bill) Parcells is my mentor and I gotta thank him for everything that I’ve learned from him and the time that he took with me,” Haley said. “He gave me my first chance initially and I can’t give him enough credit. There’s a reason he has success everywhere he goes and that’s the way he’s taught me and that’s the way I’m going to do it.”

He is the son of Dick Haley, former director of player personnel for the Pittsburgh Steelers and New York Jets. He started his coaching career with the Jets in 1996 and, as an offensive assistant for wide receivers, shared a small office in 2000 with Whisenhunt, who was wide receivers coach at the time.

Haley went on to coach wide receivers for the Chicago Bears for three seasons before joining Parcells in Dallas as wide receivers coach and passing game coordinator.

When Whisenhunt was hired by the Cardinals, he brought Haley in as offensive coordinator. Whisenhunt, offensive coordinator for the Steelers before coming to Arizona, called the plays at first, but gradually turned the job over to Haley late last season.

Whisenhunt said he wants to provide Haley with the same opportunity that ex-Pittsburgh coach Bill Cowher did for him.

Haley likes to spread the field to take advantage of matchups involving his standout receivers Boldin and Larry Fitzgerald. After virtually abandoning the ground game earlier in the season, the Cardinals became a threat to run the ball with the return of Edgerrin James, who had been benched midway through the season.

Fitzgerald has been phenomenal, already breaking Jerry Rice’s NFL record for yards receiving in one postseason with 419 and still has a game to go.

As the Warner, Boldin and James incidents show, Haley doesn’t ease up on the big-name players.

He said he’s been hard on Fitzgerald, working with him to improve his ability to gain ground after a catch. It’s an aspect of Fitzgerald’s game that’s been on wide display in the playoffs.

“When Larry Fitzgerald says ‘Thank you for keeping your foot on my throat the last two years,”‘ Haley said, “that’s what it’s all about as a coach.”

The Cardinals had Tuesday and Wednesday off. They will return to practice on Thursday with workouts each day through Saturday. The players have Sunday off, then fly to Tampa on Monday.

Jets hire Ravens defensive coordinator Ryan to replace Mangini

Tuesday, January 20th, 2009

The Baltimore Ravens’ defensive coordinator was hired Monday as New York’s coach, three weeks after the Jets fired Eric Mangini following a late-season collapse.

“We got the right man for the job,” owner Woody Johnson said in a statement.

It became apparent the 46-year-old Ryan was at the top of the Jets’ list of candidates when several other teams filled their coaching vacancies and New York’s remained open. The Jets needed Baltimore’s season to end — which happened Sunday with a 23-14 loss at Pittsburgh in the AFC Championship Game — before offering him the job.

Schefter’s take NFL Network’s Adam Schefter has all the latest coaching news from around the league, including which Ravens executive is the favorite to become the next general manager of the Cleveland Browns. More … Ryan, the son of former NFL coach Buddy Ryan, will be formally introduced at a news conference at 10 a.m. ET on Wednesday at the Jets’ facility in Florham Park, N.J.

“It’s been a dream of mine to become a head coach in the NFL,” Ryan said in a statement. “Coming here to the New York Jets, where my father once coached and was part of the Super Bowl III staff, is fantastic. I look around at the facilities and the people they have in place and see a first-class organization. I’m just proud to be part of it.”

The Jets announced the hiring, but released no other details. The contract is for four years, a person with knowledge of the deal told The Associated Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity earlier Monday because the deal had not yet been announced.

The deal was finalized Monday afternoon after Johnson and general manager Mike Tannenbaum flew down to Baltimore in the morning to iron out the details, Jets spokesman Bruce Speight said.

“There is no doubt in my mind that Rex has the expertise and instincts to build on the foundation that we have in place and take this franchise to the ranks of the NFL’s elite,” Johnson said.

Ryan takes over a team that started 8-3, but missed the playoffs with quarterback Brett Favre after losing four of its last five games.

“I’m very much looking forward to meeting Coach Ryan,” wide receiver Chansi Stuckey said in an e-mail to The Associated Press. “His reputation precedes him by the success that Baltimore has had, and I’m very excited to get started.”

The Ravens’ defensive coordinator the last four seasons is the twin brother of Cleveland defensive coordinator Rob Ryan. His Baltimore defense helped the Ravens to the AFC Championship Game and has been ranked in the top six in total yardage allowed the last four seasons under Ryan, including second overall this season while leading the NFL with 34 takeaways.

“I think it’s a gain for them and a loss for us, but it’s well-deserved,” Ravens linebacker Bart Scott said. “It was a long time coming.”

This will be the first head coaching job for Ryan, who is said to be well liked among his players because of his straightforward, no-nonsense style.

Scott said Ryan makes a good coach because of “his ability to come down to the level of his players and become one of them.”

Ryan also interviewed for the St. Louis Rams job that went to Giants defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo.

The Jets interviewed at least five other candidates, including offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer, assistant head coach/offensive line coach Bill Callahan, Arizona assistant head coach/offensive line coach Russ Grimm, Indianapolis defensive coordinator Ron Meeks and fired Boston College coach Jeff Jagodzinski.

Whether Ryan will have Favre on his roster this season is unclear. The 39-year-old quarterback recently said he would take several weeks before deciding whether to return.

Nicknamed “The Mad Scientist” for his aggressive and unpredictable game plans, Ryan prefers to run a 3-4 defensive scheme, which the Jets already have in place. New York spent big money last offseason acquiring players that excel in the 3-4, including nose tackle Kris Jenkins and linebacker Calvin Pace.

Ryan inherits a defense that had an impressive start with 29 sacks in its first eight games but just 12 in the last half of the season. The secondary also might need a makeover, ranking 29th overall against the pass despite Pro Bowl cornerback Darrelle Revis and playmaking safety Kerry Rhodes.

Ryan, who was with the Ravens for 10 seasons, was fired when the entire staff was let go after the 2007 season. Ryan interviewed for the job that went to John Harbaugh, who rehired Ryan

Steelers down Ravens, punch ticket to seventh Super Bowl

Monday, January 19th, 2009

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.

“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.

“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 play 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.”

Fan feedback
Will the Steelers record their NFL-record sixth Super Bowl victory? What are your thoughts? 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.

“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.

“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.

 
Celebrate the Steelers’ seventh AFC championship with NFL Shop gear.
» Order here 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 — 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.”

Baltimore’s unibrow acceptance is an all-time high

Sunday, January 18th, 2009

Even if the Baltimore Ravens lose tomorrow, at least one good thing will have come out of their playoff run.  As a nation, are more accepting of the unibrow than we’ve ever been. To me, that’s progress, and we owe it all to Joe Flacco and the abnormally hairy spot just above his nose.

As you can see, the city of Baltimore is embracing the unibrow, and, as the man describes, you can get your own official Joe Flacco unibrow for $5 by e-mailing sell-sport-01@hotmail.com

And even though the money goes to charity, if that $5 is beyond your budget, I encourage you to support the Ravens and achieve a similar Flacco-like effect by superglueing a shoestring to your forehead.

Birk, Dawkins, Warner finalists for Walter Payton award

Saturday, January 17th, 2009

NEW YORK – Brian Dawkins of Philadelphia and Kurt Warner of Arizona, who will face each other in Sunday’s NFC championship game, are finalists for the NFL’s Man of the Year award.
 
Matt Birk of Minnesota is also a finalist for the award, named for the late Hall of Fame running back Walter Payton, which goes annually to the player who combines on-field excellence with off-the-field community service.

The Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year Award is the only league award that recognizes a player’s off-the-field community service as well as his playing excellence.

The winner will be announced before the Super Bowl on Feb. 1. Recent winners of the award include Jason Taylor of the Washington Redskins (2007), Drew Brees of the New Orleans Saints and LaDainian Tomlinson of the San Diego Chargers, co-winners in 2006 and Peyton Manning of the Indianapolis Colts (2005).

The three finalists were chosen by a blue-ribbon panel from the 32 team nominees for the award, all of whom receive a $1,000 donation to the charity of their choice. The three finalists will receive an additional $5,000 donation in their name. The selection panel is comprised of NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, former NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue, Pro Football Hall of Famer Anthony Munoz, Sports Illustrated football writer Peter King, football greats Frank Gifford and Jack Kemp, Connie Payton and 2007 winner Taylor.

Warner, who at 37 quarterbacked the Cardinals to their first championship game in 60 years, created a partnership with Habitat for Humanity to sponsor construction throughout the Midwest. He has raised over $450,000, including a $100,000 personal contribution, $100,000 from his foundation, and $100,000 each from the Cardinals and the NFL Disaster Relief Fund.

Dawkins, the Eagles‘ six-time Pro Bowl safety, was selected 2008 Father of the Year by the American Diabetes Association. He contributed $10,000 to Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia in the names of his twin daughters, who faced complications from a premature birth. He also provides a local high school football player game tickets each week.

Birk has been the Vikings‘ man of the year seven straight times. He has established the HIKE Foundation — for hope, inspiration and knowledge to help give educational opportunities and resources to youngsters in Minnesota’s Twin Cities. For the last two years, he has donated part of his salary to help retired players in need.

Giants-Patriots Super Bowl the second most-watched TV show ever

Friday, January 16th, 2009

NEW YORK – The New York Giants’ thrilling win over the New England Patriots was the most-watched Super Bowl ever, with 97.5 million viewers, Nielsen Media Research said Monday.

The game eclipsed the previous Super Bowl record of 94.08 million, set when Dallas defeated Pittsburgh in 1996. More people watched Sunday’s game than all but one American television broadcast ever,
the “M-A-S-H” finale in 1983, which was seen by 106 million viewers.

The game had almost all the ingredients Fox could have hoped for: a tight contest with an exciting finish involving a team that was attempting to make history as the NFL’s first unbeaten team since 1972.

But the Giants ended New England’s bid for perfection, 17-14. Throughout the game, the teams were never separated by more than a touchdown.

Much-maligned Steelers line hopes to pave way to Super Bowl

Friday, January 16th, 2009

While the Steelers’ defense occupied its customary perch atop the NFL,
 their ground game struggled through much of 2008 and wound up ranked
23rd in the league. The team’s coaches had understandably become reluct
ant to consistently run the ball. They understandably had doubts about
the offensive line’s ability to open holes. They understandably questio
ned whether Willie Parker, who had become tentative after missing five
 games with knee and shoulder injuries, trusted his body enough to run
with the abandon that had established him as a premiere back early in
his five-year career.