Monday, January 24, 2011

AFC/NFC Championship Sunday

There are many words that can be used to describe the emotions that ran through the 4 teams in the AFC/NFC Championships and their fans: excitement, heartbreak, defeat, anxiousness, anger, nervousness, joy, frustration. God knows what else. At the end of the day only two teams could prevail. For the NFC Championship it would either be the Chicago Bears or the Green Bay Packers, the oldest rivalry in the NFL. And for the AFC Championship the Pittsburgh Steelers or the New York Jets, a newly formed rivalry.

Sunday started off with the Packers at the Bears. A game that I think even some Steelers and Jets fans were more excited about. The oldest rivalry in football. Haven't played each other in the playoffs since 1941 (where the Bears won) so we were long overdue for a rematch. The hype leading up to the game didn't disappoint. Active players, retired Hall of Famers, and fans alike took sides. Even former pro wrestler Triple H endorsed the Packers and praised Aaron Rodgers for his "title belt" TD celebration. Both teams had played great games the week before, the Packers more-so than the Bears with their stomping of the Falcons, 48-21. For the 2 p.m. kick-off, the temperature in the teens with a wind-chill in the single digits, it's this generations "Ice Bowl". From the beginning the Packers seemed to be in control of it all. On their first drive, Rodgers was perfect closing with his own 1-yd TD run. 7-0 Packers. Jay Cutler and the Bears just couldn't get their offense going relying heavily on their defense. The next thing they know, they're down 14-0 after a Starks TD run. Halftime. Going into the lockerroom GB is more than pumped up, but the Bears needed to figure something out. Rodgers had cooled off after the opening drive and the game wasn't going exactly as many thought it would after the first quarter. Coming back onto the field for the start of the 3rd quarter, Cutler didn't last. With an injured knee he was benched, back-up QB Collins was put in but brought out almost as fast after 2 near INTs. Now things relied on 3rd string QB Hanie and to everyone's surprise, he played extremely well. The Bears made things interesting with two TDs in the 4th quarter, but the 2nd one just too late. Like many people said beforehand, it was going to be a defensive game, and that's exactly what it was. The Packers sealed their ticket to Dallas on two defensive plays. First, BJ Raji, 338 lb D-Lineman, intercepted Hanie and ran it 19 yds for the TD. Second, Sam Shields, an undrafted player, closed the door on the Bears with his interception during one of the Bears last plays with 1:00 left in the game. That was it, the Green Bay Packers are going to the Superbowl.

After the game, speculation started to come out about Cutler leaving the game. People were questioning whether he just quit on the team or was truly injured (Turns out he tore his MCL). In the Packers lockerroom, Terry Bradshaw asked Clay Matthews if he was surprised that Cutler left the game. His response: "well yeah, you expect 4 quarters out of him. We hit him pretty hard, I guess hard enough to knock him out". Its hard as a fan and a player not to question when your starting QB, or anyone for that matter, leaves the game seemingly hurt, but appears to be okay on the sidelines. Especially when he's not playing well and your team is losing in the final game before the Super Bowl. Brian Urlacher defended him like any teammate should saying that if he could have played he would have, no questions, but clearly he wasn't 100% so he had to sit.

Moving on to the evening game, NY Jets at Pittsburgh Steelers. While it may not have been hyped up like the Packers/Bears game, it still had a lot of nervous fans biting their nails through the whole game. Like the NFC championship, the Steelers seemed in control of the game from the start. They took the lead 10-0, far from being over but then things took a turn for the worse for the Jets. In :47 seconds they were suddenly down 24-0. Big Ben's 2-yd TD run then a fumble recovery for a TD surged the Steelers into the lead. Going into the half the Jets were at least on the board, 24-3. Halftime. Something kickstarted the Jets, and 3 minutes into the 3rd quarter they were only down 14, 24-10 with a lot of football left to play. 4th quarter starts and many fans on both sides thought the game was over, but we've seen crazier things happen. A safety and a TD brought the Jets within in striking distance, 24-19. Was the unthinkable about to happen? Were the Steelers going to crumble like the Ravens did the week before? Were we going to see two 6 seeded teams in the Superbowl? As much as Jets fans would have liked, no, it didn't happen. Steeler Nation prevailed. Time ran out on the Jets hopeful comeback and their season was over.

So now we have it. Superbowl XLV (45 for those of you who don't pay attention). Green Bay Packers vs. Pittsburgh Steelers. The two nations going head to head. There may not be bigger fan bases in the NFL, and not to mention, fan bases that travel extremely well. All Cowboys fans in the greater Dallas/Ft. Worth area should probably refrain from leaving their houses and wearing any Cowboys gear is pretty much asking for it. 2 weeks from today one team will be returning back to their respective city with the Lombardi Trophy in hand. Who will you root for? We all know my allegiance.

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