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Headed to Tampa: Cards, Steelers have history

By Staff | Jan 20, 2009

Arizona and Pittsburgh will play a historic Super Bowl in Tampa in two weeks: a team with a history as bad as any in the NFL against one that will try to win a record sixth title.

Pittsburgh opens as a 6 1/2-point favorite.

That’s fine with the Cardinals, who have been laughingstocks forever and won all three playoff games as underdogs, including Sunday’s 32-25 thumping of the Philadelphia Eagles for the NFC title.

Arizona hasn’t won a title since the NFL championship in 1947 and has had only 10 postseason games since meandering from Chicago to St. Louis and finally to the desert 21 seasons ago.

Still, it is impossible to write them off, mainly because of quarterback, Kurt Warner, 37, who owns two MVP awards and was the Super Bowl MVP with the Rams in 2000.

“I want to say Arizona Cardinals and Super Bowl in the same sentence,” a jubilant Warner said. “The Arizona Cardinals in the Super Bowl. How about it?”

Then there is Larry Fitzgerald, who used to practice in the same facility as the Steelers when he played at Pitt. In just three games, he has emerged as the best receiver ever in the postseason – with 419 yards, he broke the great Jerry Rice’s record with the final game still to come.

“He’s been here before,” Fitzgerald said, referring to Warner. “He’s been where we’re all trying to go. He’s held that trophy up and we’ve leaned on him this whole postseason.”

Many of Pittsburgh’s stars have been through this before, including Hines Ward, the MVP of the 2006 Super Bowl win over Seattle.

The Steelers’ defense carried them past Baltimore 23-14 in the AFC title game. That’s what it’s been doing all season. The latest version of the storied Steel Curtain was the best statistically in the NFL and the most consistent.

Led by James Harrison, the defensive player of the year and another all-Pro, safety Troy Polamalu, it puts constant pressure on the quarterback. That is where Warner is sometimes vulnerable. Injuries and turnovers cost him his job in St. Louis in 2002 and 2003 before he was shuffled off to the New York Giants and then to Arizona.

The Steelers have four title victories in six years during the 1970s and their fifth three years ago. No team has ever won six.

In an odd little twist, Arizona coach Ken Whisenhunt has his roots with the Steelers, serving as offensive coordinator from 2004-2006, including the Super Bowl-winning team.

He was expected to get the Pittsburgh job when Bill Cowher stepped down two seasons ago. So was another Steelers coach, Russ Grimm, now Whisenhunt’s right-hand in Arizona.

Instead, the job went to Mike Tomlin, who returns to Tampa, the city where he began his coaching career.

One other bit of cross-pollination.

In 1944, the Steelers and Cardinals were the same team – Card-Pit, combined into one because of World War II, when there weren’t enough able-bodied men to fill out both rosters.

They finished 0-10.

They will finish a lot better this season, no matter what happens in Tampa.

McGahee sent home: Ravens running back Willis McGahee is expected to make a “complete recovery” from a fierce helmet-to-helmet hit in the AFC championship game that saw him carted off the field.

McGahee returned to his Baltimore home Monday after spending the night in a Pittsburgh hospital recovering from Sunday’s collision with Steelers safety Ryan Clark.

The play occurred in the fourth quarter. McGahee was carted from the field on a stretcher.

“It is expected that Willis will have a complete recovery from the head and neck injuries he suffered last night,” Ravens spokesman Kevin Byrne said Monday.

Although McGahee had significant neck pain, he had movement in his arms and legs after the hit. He was taken to UPMC Presbyterian Hospital and held overnight for observation. He was released early Monday morning and back home by early afternoon.

Street name: A northwest Ohio community has named a street block after a man who retired after having produced every football used in the first 41 Super Bowls.

Charles Moore worked at the Wilson Football Factory in the Village of Ada for 44 years and produced more than five million footballs.

The NFL joined Ada and Wilson Sporting Goods Co. Monday to dedicate a block of the street in front of the factory as “Charles Moore Turn.”

Chicago-based Wilson also started turning out game balls for Super Bowl XLIII Monday.

Moore worked on an assembly line using steam and strength to turn inside-out leather footballs.

He has been featured in “Sports Illustrated” and in Wilson ads and seen eight live Super Bowls courtesy of the company.

His late wife also worked at the plant, for 25 years.

Jets hire Ryan: Baltimore defensive coordinator Rex Ryan was hired as the coach of the New York Jets Monday, a day after the Ravens lost in the AFC championship.

Ryan, 46, replaces the fired Eric Mangini, taking over a team that started last season 8-3, but missed the playoffs with quarterback Brett Favre after losing four of its last five games.

The Jets announced the hiring, but released no other details. The contract is for four years, a person with knowledge of the deal told The Associated Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity earlier Monday because the deal had not been announced.

Ryan, the son of former NFL coach Buddy Ryan, will be formally introduced at a news conference Wednesday.