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  • Feb
    27
    In this Sept. 14, 2008 photo, Cleveland Browns tight end Kellen Winslow watches from the sidelines during an NFL football game against the Pittsburgh Steelers in Cleveland.

    CLEVELAND – The Cleveland Browns have traded talented but troublesome tight end Kellen Winslow to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers for undisclosed draft picks.

    Winslow’s five years in Cleveland were marked by injuries and controversy. He missed most of his first two seasons with injuries, but made the Pro Bowl in 2007 after making 82 catches for 1,106 yards. He demanded a new contract after the ’07 season.

    Last season, he was briefly suspended by the Browns after being hospitalized with a staph infection.

    Winslow was the sixth overall pick in the 2004 draft. The son of Hall of Famer Kellen Winslow Sr., he had 219 receptions for 2,459 yards and 11 touchdowns in 44 games.

    While there is no denying Winslow’s talent or toughness, his injuries prevented the outspoken former University of Miami All-American from fulfilling his immense potential in Cleveland. He missed the entire 2005 season with a knee injury after he crashed his motorcycle while doing stunts in a parking lot.

    Winslow then contracted a staph infection in the knee and had to undergo several clean-out procedures. He came back and caught 89 passes in 2006 and followed that up with a Pro Bowl appearance. But Cleveland’s drafting of Missouri’s Martin Rucker in the fourth round last season was a sign the Browns were preparing for a future without Winslow.

    And on the first day of free agency, new coach Eric Mangini and general manager George Kokinis decided to cut ties with the 25-year-old.

    “The Cleveland Browns thank Kellen for his contributions to this organization over the past five years,” Kokinis said in a statement. “We appreciate his passion for the game and wish him success in Tampa Bay. The draft picks we have obtained through this deal will give us greater flexibility as we look to infuse more talent and create competition and depth on this football team.”

    Before making the deal, the Browns only had four picks in April’s draft.


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  • Feb
    2

    Steelers survive Cardinals’ rally for record sixth Super Bowl title

    TAMPA — Steelers wide receiver Santonio Holmes caught a six-yard touchdown pass with 35 seconds to play to give the Steelers a thrilling 27-23 victory over the Cardinals in Super Bowl XLIII in Raymond James Stadium.

    The world title is an NFL-record sixth for the Steelers, who had to go 88 yards in the final two-and-a-half minutes after being called for holding on first down. It was a fitting end to arguably the greatest Super Bowl ever.

    pittsburg2The Steelers appeared to be in control with a 13-point fourth-quarter lead, but the Cardinals used two touchdown catches by Larry Fitzgerald, including a 64-yard catch-and-run, and a safety to take a 23-20 lead with 2:37 to play. That set the stage for Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger, who played horribly in his previous Super Bowl appearance (nine completions, two interceptions and no touchdowns).

    There would be no repeat performance.

    “I said [in the huddle] ‘It’s now or never,’” Roethlisberger said. “I had a lot of fun, and I’m really proud of the way they responded.”

    Roethlisberger calmly drove the Steelers down the field, with Holmes accounting for 74 of the 88 yards. His touchdown catch was one for the ages, as he stood with both toes just inside the corner of the end zone while pulling down a ball that got through several defenders.

    “When they called that play for me, I wanted to be the guy,” Holmes said. “I knew 100 percent that I got my feet down.”

    With only 29 seconds to play, the Cardinals were unable to make another march, the game ending on a fumble by Kurt Warner, who became the first quarterback to surpass 300 yards passing in three Super Bowls.

    That the Cardinals were even in the game was a minor miracle considering they committed 11 penalties for a Super Bowl-record 106 yards, faced two goal-to-go situations and got only one catch from Fitzgerald through the first three-plus quarters. Fitzgerald finished as the first player with seven touchdown catches in a single postseason and the first to surpass 100 yards receiving in four consecutive playoff games.

    The first half ended with Steelers linebacker James Harrison flat on his back, but it was the Cardinals who looked to be down and out.

    Instead of heading to the locker room with a 14-10 lead, the Cardinals trailed 17-7 after Harrison stepped in front of a Warner pass intended for Anquan Boldin and returned it 100 yards for a score as time expired. On the runback, Harrison evaded Warner along the sideline, accelerated as running back Tim Hightower was blocked, then powered through wide receivers Steve Breaston and Fitzgerald at the goal line.

    Fitzgerald came from out of bounds and grabbed at the ball from behind, trying to stall Harrison by extending his body as if going down a water slide. But the ball crossed the goal line just as Harrison fell head-first. He remained on the ground for a few minutes, more from fatigue than injury.

    It was a stunning turnaround in a game that had its share of momentum shifts. The Steelers scored the first 10 points on an 18-yard field goal by Jeff Reed and a 1-yard run by Gary Russell, and appeared to be in control after limiting Arizona to five offensive plays in the first quarter. But the Cardinals responded with a nine-play, 83-yard drive that was capped with a 1-yard pass to tight end Ben Patrick.

    Suddenly the Cardinals had life. Their defense, which couldn’t get off the field in the first quarter, allowed only one first down in the final 14 minutes of the first half and even set up the offense for a go-ahead score when linebacker Karlos Dansby intercepted a tipped pass and returned it to the Pittsburgh 34 with two minutes to go.

    Warner then used completions of 10 yards to Hightower, 12 to Fitzgerald, and 7 and 4 to Boldin to reach the 1. After a timeout with 18 seconds remaining, Arizona split Boldin and Fitzgerald out to the left, with Boldin on the outside shoulder of Fitzgerald, who was in the slot. Warner anticipated an open window for Boldin after he ran a quick slant under Fitzgerald, who was supposed to clear out the coverage with a corner route.

    But Harrison, after showing blitz, dropped to his right — directly into the area Warner delivered the ball. Harrison’s return was the longest play in Super Bowl history and might go down as the greatest single play in title-game annals, finding a spot alongside the helmet catch by Giants receiver David Tyree last year.

    To that point, the story of the first half was the play of Roethlisberger and the absence of Fitzgerald, whose first catch didn’t come until 1:49 remained in the half. It was only the second ball thrown in his direction. That was in stark contrast to his previous three playoff games, where he caught passes for a playoff single-season record 419 yards and five touchdowns. Each of the scores were in the first half, including three in the NFC Championship Game against the Eagles.

    But the Steelers made a point of taking him away. They mixed their coverages and were always cognizant of where he was on the field. Sometimes they put safety Troy Polamalu in his face to jam and re-route him at the line of scrimmage; other times they played Polamalu over the top or rolled coverage in Fitzgerald’s direction.

    Warner capitalized by going to his other receivers and by using running back Edgerrin James out of the backfield. He completed 12 of 18 passes, including three each to Boldin, Breaston and James. Most of the completions were in the flat or along the sideline, which, in light of the Harrison interception, was much safer territory than the interior.

    When the Steelers weren’t hurting the Cardinals, the Cardinals were hurting themselves. They repeatedly made their lives more difficult with penalties, including a facemask penalty on rookie corner Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie on a short completion on second-and-13 from the Steelers 15. A few plays later Dansby was called for roughing the passer. And on a short field-goal attempt to end the possession, Adrian Wilson was called for unnecessary roughness for running through the holder, although Wilson appeared to have lost his balance and stumbled.

    That gave the Steelers a first down at the Cardinals 4. Even so, Pittsburgh could not get into the end zone and was forced to kick a 21-yard field goal that made it 20-7 — and set the stage for a wild ending.

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  • Feb
    1

    One Super Bowl play can make or break a player’s career

    superTAMPA – Most longtime Washington Redskins followers have the image either framed on a wall if not burned forever into their memories: Running back John Riggins took a fourth-and-one handoff, raced through an attempted tackle by Miami Dolphins defensive back Don McNeal and dashed 43 yards to the end zone for the go-ahead touchdown in the fourth quarter of a victory in Super Bowl XVII.

    Riggins knows what the moment meant.

    “Clearly,” he said here this week, “that changed my life.”

    The Pittsburgh Steelers and Arizona Cardinals will play in Super Bowl XLIII on Sunday before a crowd of more than 72,000 at Raymond James Stadium and a nationwide television audience of about 100 million. NBC, which is broadcasting the game, sold 30-second ad spots during its telecast for a record $3 million each, even amid an economic crisis.

    The stakes are high in many ways.

    Super Bowl Sunday is a day of myth-making. It is a day when reputations are made and broken, when lasting images are created.

    “There’s no other way around it,” Riggins said as he sat in a room at the Tampa Convention Center last week. “If something else happens in that situation, say you don’t make the yardage and they take over, they win the game, you become an afterthought because there’s nothing really worse … than being the team that loses.

    “I would guess if Don McNeal had been able to come up and stick his helmet in my chest and drive me backwards and make the stop, I’d be the one that would be the afterthought, I guess. That’s the nature of a sport, the moment that something happens that perhaps changes the outcome of a game. You’re either the hero, or you’re the goat.”

    Riggins defended McNeal, saying McNeal didn’t have a clean shot at him and other defenders could have made the play. He’s not calling McNeal the goat of that game, he added. But that doesn’t change the image captured in the photographs, and in the mind’s eye.

    In Detroit three years ago, when the Steelers won their fifth Super Bowl title, the focal point was running back Jerome Bettis, who was playing his final NFL game.

    “It is enormous,” Bettis said this week. “To get the brunt of the Super Bowl attention pointed at you, it’s a lot of heat. Win, lose or draw, it changes your life. For a lot of people in the country, it’s the one time they pay attention to sports and the coverage of sports, the one time they watch it on TV or read the stories or watch the interviews. If you’re the focal point in this game, everyone will remember you. Sometimes it’s not for the right reason, but they will remember you.”

    The Buffalo Bills reached four straight Super Bowls in the early 1990s, a remarkable achievement. But they lost all four. So they are remembered by many for those losses, not as teams that came close to being one of the all-time dynasties.

    “I don’t know which one of those they remember,” said Marv Levy, who coached those Bills teams. “Maybe some focus on one aspect of it, and some focus on the other aspect. When you lose it, yes, you have a period of mourning. You beat your mattress at night. You’ve got to get over it. Let it last 10 days. Then recognize the good. Then do something about it. Go back to work. Achieve something else.

    “So I’ll remember the good. I’m glad we made it. There’s one way I can guarantee you’ll never lose a Super Bowl game: Don’t go to it.”

    Former Denver Broncos quarterback John Elway had the same stigma as a Super Bowl loser until finishing his career with consecutive triumphs in the big game. Doug Williams will be forever remembered as the first African American quarterback to win a Super Bowl, and Tony Dungy as the first African American coach to win one.

    There are one-hit wonders like former Redskins running back and Super Bowl hero Timmy Smith, and all-time blunders like former Dallas Cowboys defensive lineman Leon Lett losing a fumble and a touchdown because he showboated in a blowout victory over the Bills and had the ball stripped by Don Beebe.

    Would Joe Namath remain such a legendary figure to this day without his prescient victory guarantee before Super Bowl III?

    Last year was the Super Bowl of New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning proving his championship mettle and the New England Patriots failing to complete a perfect season. But it also was the Super Bowl of David Tyree, a little-known wide receiver for the Giants who made a play for the ages by trapping the ball against the top of his helmet for a catch that set up the game-winning touchdown.

    Tyree, to that point, was known mostly for his ability to play on special teams, racing downfield to make tackles on punts and kickoffs, not for his pass-catching contributions on offense. This season, he didn’t even play because of injuries. But he always will have a place in NFL lore, thanks to that catch. He wrote a book; not many wide receivers with 54 regular season catches on their NFL résumés get to be authors.

    For Tyree, his greatest moment professionally came at a time of personal grief. Late in the 2007 regular season, he was pulled out of a team meeting and told his mother had died of a heart attack. The two events will be forever linked in his memories.

    “There was a lot of trial there,” Tyree said this week. “It couldn’t have ended up better for me in terms of what happened on the football field. But you miss those moments with your mother. That’s who you want to share it with.”

    He was back in the Super Bowl environment this week, leaving behind the snow in New Jersey to travel Wednesday to Tampa. He spent part of his day Thursday speaking emotionally of his mother at an event promoting heart health for women, then made the rounds on radio row at the Super Bowl media center. All anyone wanted to talk about was his catch.

    “It wasn’t me that changed,” Tyree said. “It’s how people perceived me. I still take it all in. It’s a very humbling experience. It was such a big thing in the NFL and in the history of the NFL, if you listen to the way people talked about it. I’m just trying to be a good steward of it. It’s a blessing that was given to me.

    “I want to go forth and do greater things in my life. But as far as the way people remember me, I’m sure it’s gonna be for a ball stuck to my head.”

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