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Okay, after studying this thing
to death for 2 or 3 days, I
can confidently say the Steelers should win this 45th Super
Duper
Bowl. Although they are still 2 ½
point
underdogs in this contest, and most observers have picked the Packers
to win,
football games are dictated by matchups, and this particular matchup
favors the
team from Pittsburgh.
Most prognosticators are
infatuated with Aaron Rodgers and
his remarkable performances and numbers, much as they were quite taken
by Tom
Brady earlier in the season. Both those
QB’s, and both those teams, can just eat an opponent up, and do more
often than
not.
When they cannot eat up their
opponents though, when the
opponent has a sound defensive plan against the pass, as the Bears did
in their
three contests against the Packers and as the Jets did in their
playoffs
victory, those QB’s and those teams have looked very vulnerable.
The Steelers will be able to run
the ball, conspicuously to
the left side, or the Packers right side, away from both AJ Hawk and
Clay
Matthews. The Steelers offensive line
will be good enough in the running game to allow Ben Roethlisberger to
pass
just enough to keep the Pack defense honest. The
Steelers will run left, run left, and run
left some more.
Aaron Rodgers will get his
passing yards to all those great
receivers. The Pack will matriculate the
ball down the field and, more often than not, fail to score the
touchdown. Their running game will not go. Nobody runs on this Steelers defensive unit,
especially not the Packers.
The Steelers offense can be
compared closely with the
offense of the Atlanta Falcons in that they have a big running back, a
smart
quarterback and a couple of good receivers. The
Falcons played the Packers twice. In the
first contest, a very meaningful one
for both teams, Michael
Turner ran successfully all day long, very conspicuously, to the
Packers right
side. The Falcons prevailed 20-17 in
that one on a very late field goal.
In the second contest, the even
more important playoff game,
the Packers romped. In that contest, the
Falcons, after taking a lead early, couldn’t stop Aaron Rodgers and the
Pack
passing game at all. To make matters much worse, Falcons QB Matt Ryan
was
intercepted for another TD, and the rout was on. The
Falcons abandoned their running game. They
had to.
The Steelers won’t have to
abandon the running game. The Steelers
pass defense is much better than
that of the Falcons. They may be stopped
early in the game but they’ll keep running. They
may fall behind (in fact, it’s likely
that they will fall behind),
but they won’t fall behind by enough to force them to abandon their
game
plan. Very likely, they’ll give up two
or three field goals, and one, possibly even two touchdowns, but the
total Pack
scoring will be relatively low, from 20 to 23 points.
The MVP of this game will very
likely be Rashard
Mendenhall. If the Steelers have success
early in the game, as they did against the Jets, the game could
conceivably get
totally out of hand. If the Packers fall
behind and get a little antsy, even an Aaron Rodgers could get picked a
couple
of times. And if they don’t get antsy,
they still won’t have much success.
It’s likely though that the Pack
will have at least some success
early. The Steelers will likely be
playing catch-up, something they’re well equipped to do.
They’ll grind it out and keep their
composure. The mistakes will be few and
far between. They’ll own the second half
and especially the fourth quarter. They
can play conservatively and win this game. The
Packers cannot.
The Packers pass the ball. That’s what they do. But
how did
they fare against the Bears, a team that plays defense much as do the
Steelers? Not too shabby really, they lost
the first
one, and then won the last two. But they
only scored ten points in their first win and 21 in the playoff
victory, in
which Cutler, the Bears QB, had to leave the game.
The Steelers are not the Bears. Their styles of defense can be compared but
the players really can’t be. The Steelers
play that defense better. The Steelers
are better offensively than the Bears too. They
can beat you with the run and they can
beat you with the pass. And if you do
manage to score, it’ll be an
aberration.
The Packers are a very good team. There can be no question about that. They actually tied the Steelers in scoring
defense this year. But they have no
running
game. The Steelers do.
That will make the difference, as it does so
often in playoff games, and especially in Steelers playoff games.
If the Packers have any
advantage, it is that they have
proven tough enough to win three playoff games on the road, at
Philadelphia, at
Atlanta and at Chicago. The road means
nothing to them, and they could consider Super Bowl site Dallas as just
another
playoffs road game. The Steelers have
been a good road team as well though, having lost only one road game
all
year. But their most recent wins were at
home.
There are always a million
intangibles of course. Turnovers should be
even. Statistically, the two teams are
very
close. The Packers are probably
healthier, especially with the question surrounding the Steelers
first-string
center Pouncey, but his replacement, Doug Legursky, has been tough,
especially
in the running game. Coaching should be
a wash. Both teams have brilliant head
coaches
and coordinators, especially on the defensive side.
Another important intangible
though is the effect that
experience will have on this game. The
Steelers have a huge edge in experience, and successful experience at
that. The Packers have a big-time
heritage for sure but their recent legacy has been pretty slim.
It’ll be 24-20 or so in favor of
the Steelers.
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