Getty ImagesARLINGTON, Texas - Aaron Rodgers grew up in Northern California watching Joe Montana and Steve Young have their best games on the biggest stage.
Welcome to the club, kid.
Rodgers carried a patchwork lineup into the Super Bowl, then kept things calm when Green Bay's depth was tested further. His most accomplished receiver and the heart-and-soul of his defense were knocked out by halftime, yet Rodgers still guided the Packers to a 31-25 victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday night.
So now the Vince Lombardi Trophy is headed back to Titletown for the first time in 14 years, and Rodgers can lead the championship parade with the shiny hardware riding shotgun in the red convertible he received as Super Bowl MVP.
Super Bowl XLV: Packers 31, Steelers 25 Lasting legacyRosenthal: Two amazing TD throws and a 'cocky throw' on 3rd-and-10 cemented Aaron Rodgers' spot in Super Bowl lore. Full story |
"It's the top of the mountain in my sport, my profession," Rodgers said. "It's what you dream about as a kid and think about in high school, junior college, D-I — getting this opportunity and what would you do?"
Here's what Rodgers did: He put his team ahead on their second drive and made sure they never trailed. He went back to receivers even after they dropped passes, sometimes on the very next snap. He threw three touchdowns and had no turnovers.
He also proved Green Bay general manager Ted Thompson was right to draft him and to trade Brett Favre so he could become the starter. Favre led the Packers to their last championship, but was never the Super Bowl MVP.
"I told Ted back in 2005 he wouldn't be sorry with this pick," Rodgers said. "I told him in '08 that I was going to repay their trust and get us this opportunity."
Thompson was right about a lot of guys.
No matter how many players the Packers lost this season — and they put 16 on injured reserve, including a half-dozen starters — someone else was always ready to step in. Holes were still being plugged in this game.
Consider these contributions by guys who weren't being counted on when the season began.
"I don't know if we're just well-coached or what it is," Zombo said. "We just make plays."
Green Bay led 21-3 with a few minutes left until halftime, but the championship-steeled guys from Pittsburgh had plenty of resolve of their own.
Multimedia 'We have the nucleus'Green Bay defensive back Charles Woodson believes the Packers will return to the Super Bowl next year. |
Roethlisberger got a quick touchdown before the intermission, then another early in the third quarter. The Steelers were driving in search of a go-ahead touchdown when Rashard Mendenhall fumbled on a hit by Clay Matthews at the start of the fourth quarter.
Rodgers marched from there to a touchdown, stretching the lead and making the Packers 3-for-3 in scoring touchdowns off turnovers.
But Roethlisberger brought Pittsburgh back again, throwing a 25-yard touchdown pass to Mike Wallace and following with a nifty 2-point conversion on an option. Green Bay's 18-point lead was down to a field goal.
Rodgers got to the Pittsburgh 5-yard line on the next series, only to see Jordy Nelson fail to make what would've been a tough catch in the end zone. Mason Crosby kicked a short field goal, but the six-point lead left the Packers and their fans uneasy, even if Roethlisberger had to go 87 yards in 1:59 with only one timeout.
Some thought about last year's game against Pittsburgh, when Roethlisberger threw a touchdown pass on the final play of the game and they lost by one point. Others thought about the Super Bowl two years ago, when Roethlisberger threw a touchdown pass in the final minute to beat Arizona.
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"This time," Packers defensive coordinator Dom Capers said, "it was our turn."
Roethlisberger got a first down on the first play, then threw three straight incompletions. His season that began with a four-game suspension for violating the NFL's personal conduct policy ended with his head down, hands on his hips, feeling something he never experienced: defeat in a Super Bowl.
"I feel like I let the city of Pittsburgh down, the fans, my coaches and my teammates and it's not a good feeling," Roethlisberger said.
Defensive Player of the Year safety Troy Polamalu and outside linebacker James Harrison rarely did anything to give a decidedly black-and-gold crowd reasons to twirl their Terrible Towels.
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"I had some opportunities to make some plays," Polamalu said. "I was just off a step here or there."
Woodson wept in the Packers' locker room at halftime. His left collarbone broken, he tried to give a motivational speech but the words couldn't come out, trapped by his pain and emotion.
Still, players got the message — just like coach Mike McCarthy's gambit of having players' ring sizes measured on Saturday night.
"Subconsciously, it motivated us," nose tackle B.J. Raji said. "Another great tactic by our head coach."
The Packers became only the second No. 6 seed to win the championship. The other was the 2005 Steelers, led by Roethlisberger. Several players kissed the Lombardi Trophy as Cowboys great Roger Staubach walked through a line of green and gold to present the prize to NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, who in turn handed it to the team.
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Rosenthal: Sometimes the Super Bowl isn’t won on the big touchdown pass. Sometimes it’s won on a third-and-10 in your own territory, with your defense falling apart, your lineman struggling to hold up, and your receivers dropping passes. And Aaron Rodgers did just that.
PFT: Aaron Rodgers tells a sold-out crowd of 56,000 fans in freezing weather that Green Bay will repeat.
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