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Polamalu could have a field
day............................
and there's always James Harrison
Photo
by Stephen Savoia - AP
Photo
by Jack Smith - AP |
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In handicapping this Super Bowl, I’m
reminded of that scene
from the Hannibal Lecter movie, where Hannibal’s
being interviewed by the young Ms. Starling. Hannibal
asks the green FBI agent something like “what is he at his ESSENCE,
Clarice”? And after she makes two or three dismal guesses, Hannibal says
sumthin’ like “NO, Clarice, he
COVETS”.
What is
Arizona
at its essence?
THE PASS!
Kurt Warner behind a nice big offensive line
throwing to the likes of the finest receivers in the land, Larry
Fitzgerald and
the tough, sure-handed Anquan Boldin, the guy with plates in his face
and just
keeps coming.
And, if you cover them,
there’s this troublesome rookie named Breaston.
Yeah, late in the season and in the
playoffs, they took the
wraps off Edgerrin James and ran the ball, but it was strategic-type
running,
done only so that they could go back to what they do best.
PASS!
And yeah, they score via the run sometimes, with that big
bruiser Hightower.
They’ll use him on a
third or fourth and one.
And then, when
it’s first down time again, they’ll ordinarily go back to the pass.
Once again, in the playoffs, they did some
different things with James, but they usually ran after they had
already killed
their opponent with the pass.
Incredible as it seems to me, their
opponents in the
playoffs seem not to have respected their passing game enough. A simple thing like double coverage, nobody
really did. Even when Boldin was hurt
and there was just Fitzgerald and Breaston, Carolina
and Philadelphia
let him run free against, usually, a tiny little cornerback.
As timing is so important in the passing game, you’d
think one
of these teams would have checked these big guys at the line.
But no, nobody did.
And
yeah, I know they put these guys in
motion so it’s harder to give them a shot at the line of scrimmage,
but, still,
there were plenty of opportunities to jam these guys and nobody did.
Another way to stop the pass is via
the rush, of
course. With Warner, getting a guy in
his face is most effective, so he has to scramble, usually with just
one hand
on the ball, extended, looking downfield. But
nobody really seemed to focus a rush up the
middle.
Atlanta
was just overmatched to my mind.
Nobody
expected them to win and they didn’t.
Surprisingly
though, they made the score respectable.
Carolina
“Delhommed” itself to death while trying to execute the stupidest game
plan
ever devised by anyone against any team.
Oh,
and this just in,
Carolina
just hired a new defensive coordinator.
And Philadelphia? They
came as close as anyone to beating them
but let themselves fall hopelessly behind before charging back and then
fizzling. They weren’t able to stop the
pass or run. They blitzed quite a bit
too, but they were wild, chancy blitzes, hoping against hope Warner
wouldn’t
find the open guy. He did.
Okay, Clarice, what is the Steelers ESSENCE?
DEEE-FENSE!!
Yeah, they run the ball, and yeah, they have
Big Ben
running around,
usually on third and long, finding a receiver.
But
they’re all about defense.
The single most
consistent thing about the black and
gold is that
defense.
Zone blitz? Ever
hear
of it? Of course you have, everybody
has. You couldn’t NOT hear it if you
tried. Dick LeBeau? Same
thing. Steelers and LeBeau, it’s like love
and marriage,
ham and cheese (I do
go on); you get the idea. Yeah, Mike
Tomlin might be quite a coach and a hell of a motivator, but the guy
who makes
every defensive call is Dick LeBeau.
In the zone blitz, you never know who’s coming, but the
great thing about it is there’s ALWAYS somebody back.
And that “somebody” a lot of times is going
to be one of the finest defensive players in the game, a guy named Troy
Polamalu.
Ever hear of him?
Of
course you have, usually in the same breath as “Reed, Harrison and
Polamalu”. While they’d make a hell of a
law firm, they make even better defense. That
Harrison and Polamalu are on the same team
makes things even
scarier for the Cards, and hopeful for the Steelers.
A few things make me nervous about this game though.
One is that a defense almost never can win
the game all by themselves.
It needs to
rest.
That goes for any defense.
If all a defense gets is pressure and more
pressure, it will break.
That’s why Big Ben will be so
important in this game, along
with Hines Ward, Santonio Holmes and Willie Parker.
Parker might be the most important piece of
all in this chess match of a game. Parker’s
got to take some pressure off that passing game.
The second thing is that the game pits Tomlin against
Whisenhunt, the guy he beat out for the head coaching job in
Pittsburgh.
There is a revenge factor there, yes, but,
even more
important, don’t
you suppose Whisenhunt knows all about the zone blitz?
Ya think he’s heard of Dick LeBeau?
Whisenhunt has the advantage of knowing all
about the Steelers, offense, defense, and special teams.
The third thing that bothers me is
that the Steelers seem to
have a little trouble against really good quarterbacks.
They’re 0 and 2 this year against the
Mannings, for example. They’re 0 and 1
vs McNabb. They only lost one other
game, against Tennessee,
in a meaningless game.
But I have even more concerns about the Cardinals, and it
has to do with team character. This Cards defense especially has
quite a history of lying
down.
The Steelers never lie down.
The Steelers will get their junk
touchdowns. The Cards will score but the
Cards won’t be
able to run. There will be some three and outs, which will
put even more pressure on Warner.
The Steelers will take the lead, and when
they do, they won’t fold. They are, after all, the Steelers.
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