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steveironcity
09-10-2006, 01:42 PM
Cook: Steelers' Porter, Ward immune to Sports Illustrated cover jinx
Sunday, September 10, 2006

By Ron Cook, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Can we finally put that silly Sports Illustrated cover jinx to rest?

Wasn't it just last week that Steelers linebacker Joey Porter decorated the magazine, scowling, heavily tattooed, half-naked and carrying the burdensome tag of "Most feared player in the NFL"? A lot of other players were offended, but it didn't seem to bother Porter much when he picked off that Daunte Culpepper pass Thursday night and took it to the house to clinch the 28-17 win against the Miami Dolphins. Now Bill Cowher might have felt cursed when Porter planted a big kiss on him on the Steelers' sideline afterward, but that had nothing to do with SI.

Then, there's Hines Ward. He was the Sports Illustrated cover choice after the Steelers won Super Bowl XL in February, a game in which he was MVP. The fabulous photograph of him grinning ear-to-ear and skipping into the end zone with the clinching 43-yard touchdown catch against the Seattle Seahawks will go down as a franchise classic, right there with a falling Lynn Swann pulling in a Terry Bradshaw pass over Dallas cornerback Mark Washington in Super Bowl X, and John Stallworth's over-the-shoulder catch of Bradshaw's 73-yard touchdown pass against the Los Angeles Rams in Super Bowl XIV.

That Ward cover might have given you reason for pause. Early in training camp, Ward pulled a hamstring and had to sit out all four exhibition games. He was questionable for Miami until just a few days before the game. But the most amazing thing happened when they turned on the bright lights at Heinz Field. Ward was there for the Steelers, pulling in a 7-yard touchdown pass from Charlie Batch and making three other third-down catches that went for critical first downs.

"That's why they pay you the big bucks," Ward said, shrugging.

"Big-time players make big plays in big games," Porter said, also shrugging.

Did you really think some mythical jinx was going to stop those guys? Or even a bad knee, in Porter's case? Or Ward's bad hammy?

"You know me. I'm not going to miss anything. Not when the games count," Ward said.

He has missed just one game in his NFL career, now pushing hard toward nine years. So what if he had to pop Tylenol before and during the game Thursday night and ride the stationary bike on the sideline to stay loose? Those were minor inconveniences compared to the payoff of his catches and the Steelers' win.

"Everybody was talking about the Dolphins, about how this was going to be their year," Ward said, sniffing. "Well, don't forget. We're the champions."

Ward finished with five catches for 53 yards, numbers that don't fully do justice to his value to the Steelers. He drew double coverage much of the night, including the fourth-quarter play that turned the game. That attention from the Dolphins' secondary left tight end Heath Miller open for his 87-yard touchdown catch.

"I wasn't 100 percent, but I probably was 90 percent," Ward said. "I just wanted to get through this game. Now, we have a long time before the next game [in Jacksonville Sept. 18]. I'll be fine."

Ward paused, then grinned.

"Who needs training camp anyway?"

Porter got more work during the preseason but not much. His knee surgery in the spring was only part of his tumultuous offseason. There was his tiff with President Bush, which was much ado about nothing. There also was his unhappiness with his contract, which was anything but overhyped. He thought seriously of boycotting training camp even though he has two years left on his contract.

Just say Porter probably won't be kissing Dan Rooney or Art Rooney II any time soon.

Hey, maybe it's good that Porter is angry. He took it out on the Dolphins. He shrugged off a lame block by fullback Darian Barnes to sack Culpepper early in the game -- setting a nice tone for the Steelers' defense -- and later sacked Culpepper in the fourth quarter.

"Sacks are what I do," Porter said.

All Porter wanted to talk about was his interception and 42-yard return for a touchdown with 2:59 left.

"I love having the ball in my hands. I'm glad I could show these guys what I can do with it. I've been bugging for some tight end play, but they keep me on defense."

All everyone else wanted to talk about was Porter's kiss. His affection for Cowher has long been known. It was Cowher who convinced Porter he shouldn't take that ugly contract holdout route.

"You guys will make a big deal out of it because it's me who did it, but it's no big deal to me," Porter said of his peck on Cowher's neck. "That's the love I have for coach Cowher. That means more than you'll ever know."

Don't expect to see another kiss, though.

Porter put on the same scowl he had for the Sports Illustrated cameras when asked if kissing Cowher could become a regular part of the Steelers' victory celebrations, right there with the "Who ride?" chant that Porter leads in the locker room after wins.

"I wouldn't count on that," he said. "I'm not a kissy guy."

What Porter is is a big-time player who makes big plays and big bucks.

Maybe the bucks aren't big enough to suit him, but the plays were big enough to fillet the Dolphins.

SI cover jinx?

What cover jinx?

http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/06253/720599-87.stm

Hawaiin Lion
10-17-2006, 06:26 PM
Its just us two Steeler fans here on this site i guess... It's lonley... :(

Hawaiin Lion
10-17-2006, 06:30 PM
http://espn.starwave.com/i/nfl/profiles/players/65x90/6770.jpg
"News Report"

Scouts Inc.'s take ...
The Pittsburgh Steelers were a desperate football team and they channeled that desperation in the right direction as they trounced the Kansas City Chiefs. Ben Roethlisberger got in a nice rhythm early and by the time it was said and done, he announced that he is officially back. The passing game eventually opened up the run game as Pittsburgh basically did whatever it wanted against a Kansas City defense that whiffed on tackle after tackle. For the Chiefs, Larry Johnson was a non-factor. That forced them to become one-dimensional and any time you take that route against Pittsburgh, it is going to be a long day.



"They're back: Steel Curtain drops on Kansas City"

The Pittsburgh Steelers (http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/clubhouse?team=pit) and Ben Roethlisberger (http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/players/profile?statsId=6770) couldn't have played any worse for a month. The NFL now must be wondering how much better the Super Bowl champions can be after a convincing all-is-well performance.
The Steelers revived everything they displayed in winning the championship as Roethlisberger threw his first two touchdown passes since the AFC Championship Game in a 45-7 rout of the Chiefs on Sunday.

Despite not starting three injured regulars -- one of whom, guard Kendall Simmons (http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/players/profile?statsId=5916), fell asleep with an ice pack on his leg and suffered frostbite -- the Steelers never resembled the team that could barely gain a first down in a 9-0 loss to Jacksonville, or ran only 18 plays in the second half of last week's 23-13 loss at San Diego.
Maybe it was watching AFC North leaders Baltimore (4-2) and Cincinnati (3-2) lose earlier in the afternoon, tightening up the division race. But the Steelers (2-3) played with the confidence and composure they lacked while losing three in a row.
"We started fast -- we started real fast," said coach Bill Cowher, who admittedly didn't see this coming during a week in which his team had some "soul searching to do."
"They had to start showing they were that Super Bowl team again," Chiefs defensive end Tamba Hali (http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/players/profile?statsId=7769) said. "That's how they played."
Roethlisberger was among the NFL's lowest-rated quarterbacks with no touchdown passes and seven interceptions, while Kansas City's Damon Huard (http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/players/profile?statsId=4180) was highly rated with five touchdowns and no interceptions. All that changed in a momentum-shifting few hours in which Roethlisberger could again do little wrong and Huard, a longtime backup, could do little right while completing only 16 of 32 passes for 162 yards and an interception.
"I tried throwing to the guys in the black shirts rather than the guys in the white shirts," Roethlisberger said.
Roethlisberger had no touchdown passes and nine interceptions in his last four starts, counting the Super Bowl. Questions were raised if he was fully healed from his violent June motorcycle crash and his appendectomy last month.
But he was as sharp and polished as in the playoffs, going 16-of-19 for 238 yards and TDs of 47 yards to Nate Washington (http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/players/profile?statsId=7492) and 13 yards to Hines Ward (http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/players/profile?statsId=4323). He constantly exploited the Chiefs' not-too-successful man coverage as the Steelers outgained the Chiefs 372-47 while opening a 31-0 lead at halftime. They ended with a 457-213 edge in yardage.

"They were saying he can't throw and there was all that motorcycle jazz. But he played awesome, he played the way Ben can play," defensive end Brett Keisel (http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/players/profile?statsId=6101) said.
Roethlisberger got the Steelers going on the third play of the game, hitting rookie Santonio Holmes (http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/players/profile?statsId=7774) for 50 yards after defender Ty Law (http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/players/profile?statsId=3188) slipped. Holmes would have scored if he hadn't fallen in the open field, but Willie Parker (http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/players/profile?statsId=7073) scored several plays later from the 3.
"I looked Ty Law in the eye before the play and said, 'I've got to make a play right here,' " Holmes said.
Roethlisberger found a wide-open Washington for a touchdown on Pittsburgh's next possession, and the Chiefs (2-3) couldn't come back from this 14-0 deficit like they did last week in rallying to beat Arizona 23-20. Not with Parker running for 109 yards while repeatedly finding the big holes and running lanes that last year's AFC rushing leader, Larry Johnson (http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/players/profile?statsId=6363), couldn't locate.
"We got beat, we got embarrassed and we got to learn from it," coach Herm Edwards said. "We've got to regroup."
Johnson followed a 36-yard effort against Arizona with 26 yards on 15 carries and a touchdown. Johnson stood out only once, in the unaccustomed role of tackler.
He ran down Troy Polamalu (http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/players/profile?statsId=6352) on a 49-yard interception return in the third quarter by grabbing the All-Pro safety by his long hair. Johnson whipped Polamalu to the ground out of bounds along the Chiefs' sideline, drawing a 15-yard unsportsmanlike conduct penalty and touching off a brief skirmish.
"The dude had hair, what was I going to do?" said Johnson, whose neck was injured last week by Arizona defensive back Antrel Rolle's horsecollar tackle. "That was the only thing I could get my hands on."
Polamalu said, "It doesn't matter to me if he tackles me by my hair or my ankles."

Hawaiin Lion
10-17-2006, 06:39 PM
Game Notes
The Steelers have never started 1-4 since Cowher was hired in 1992. ... Second-year LB Rian Wallace, playing because of injuries to Joey Porter and James Harrison, had a 30-yard interception return TD. ... Former Pro Bowl LB Chad Brown, signed last week, had his 31st career sack with the Steelers in his first game for them in nine years. ... The Chiefs hadn't played in Pittsburgh since 1989. ... A team that opened 1-3 has made the NFL playoffs 13 times in the last 16 years.