Just wanted to say that again. I woke up this morning to find out that the absolute elation of a Super Bowl-winning touchdown drive in the closing seconds was no dream. Big Ben was good Big Ben in those final minutes, and Santonio came up huge, seemingly making all the tough catches look easy.
A lot of people are complaining about the lack of replay on that final Warner fumble. Sure, it could’ve been reviewed, but I still don’t think the outcome would’ve changed. Since there was no replay, the aggravated fans who didn’t have a team in the Super Bowl are all ripe for trying to discount our win. “Ooooh, Arizona would’ve gotten the ball at the 30 and Warner would complete a jump ball to Larry Fitzgerald and all would be right in the world. Screw Steelers fans. The refs give them everything!” Shut up.
Your speculation doesn’t change the outcome. Fans are almost getting to the point where they want replay after every snap, it seems like. Fumble?!?!?!?!? NO, IT CAN’T BE!?!?!?! CHECK THAT SHIT AGAIN!!!! The rule on the field was a fumble, and there was nothing to show that it was a forward pass. Inconclusive evidence? Nope. If it was an incomplete pass, why wasn’t Warner pleading that he was throwing the ball like he did on a similar play earlier in the game? I’d almost expect more outta Warner in that situation. But you know why he didn’t? Because he knew he fumbled.
So quit over-analyzing just to piss off a bunch of happy fans. Your team didn’t make it, so quit trying to bring us down with your meandering bullshit.
Now, I just spent the entire beginning of a SUPER BOWL RECAP IN WHICH MY TEAM WON discussing how obnoxious other fans can be. The Cardinals, Whis and the staff were all respectful after the game, focusing on their positives and how they can improve their team in the future. Warner wasn’t running after the officials, screaming for Goodell to fine him. These idiots fans are doing the same thing Baltimore fans did after the Santonio “was-he-over-the-line” touchdown in the regular season. How about, don’t surrender the lead on an 80+ yard drive in the closing seconds. The Cards, just like the Ravens, let that happen, and one non-replay doesn’t change the outcome.
But now that that’s outta the way, how about our team? Mike Tomlin, as improbable as it may have seemed, won a Super Bowl in his second year, easily eclipsing the time lengths set forth by legends Noll and Cowher. Ben has two rings, and must be applauded for leading a run-first team to multiple Super Bowls in which a WR wins MVP. Someone needs to throw to those wideouts, so Ben should take some sort of pride in being a part or two MVP performances in the past 3 years (4 seasons).
The run game didn’t hit like we wanted, but that’s a non-story if you hoist a trophy after the game. In my mind, the game was perfect in all aspects. If I was giving ratings like I do during the regular season, every facet of this team would get 5 of 5 motorcycle helmets. Sure, I wanted to punch Chris Kemoeatu if he false-started or held one more time, but since he just won a ring, I’ll echo Big Ben and say “Who’s laughing now, O-Line?”
Enough can’t be said about James Harrison and the defense he leads. Much was made about all the other regular-season-award-winners bowing out of the playoffs early. Manning was MVP, Ryan was RotY, and both exited early. Brees was offensive player of the year and didn’t even make the playoffs. James Harrison was the top defensive player in the league, and made the longest play, defensive OR offensive, in Super Bowl history. Backed up to his own goal line, Harrison potentially created a 14 point swing with his 100 yard INT return TD. People aren’t lying when they say defense wins championships.
There’s way too many people I’m forgetting, but you know the facts. There were no truly weak performances last night, and the end-result was the best we could’ve hoped for. Every negative from the preseason was addressed throughout these grueling past 5 months, from the O-Line, to Ben’s decision-making, to the schedule and Mike Tomlin’s justification.
At the end of the day, an inconclusive non-replay won’t take away our record 6th Lombardi Trophy, one that was earned, not given, on a legendary, game-winning drive. Party hard and burn another couch, Pittsburgh fans.
Hope you’re proud, Myron.
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