Steelers: The NEW AFC CHAMPS!!

BrianMis

Original PIT Dweller
Original poster
Mar 29, 2005
5,898
2,903
Western PA
WOW, what a game. I knew my boys could pull it off.

This is freaking GREAT!!!!! I'm at a loss for words. :D

Now it's time to root for the Panthers! GO CAROLINA!!!!! BEAT THOSE BIRDS!
 
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It looking like seattle will be our next target...It will be tuff but the way we have been playing we are unstopable.lookout birds...
 
McKeesport


Deep inside Echostar, the technical call-in center for the Dish Network, a corporate insurgency was taking place to the tune of the Fox NFL sound track and hundreds of black and gold balloons.

The Denver-based company had found itself in the midst of a mutiny led by Steelers fans who had taken over the call center's cubicles and most of its wall space. Past the black-and-gold balloon archway lay a football field-sized testament to the intensity of Steelers fandom and disdain for anything resembling Denver's orange and blue.

The fervor ran so deep in McKeesport that a wager had been struck between the call-in center and its headquarters in Denver -- if the Steerlers won, the headquarters would be required to fly a Steelers Nation flag in the center of its office. If the Steelers lost, a Broncos flag would be hoisted in the McKeesport center.

Employees were not in this for fun and games. So, in a show of confidence in their team -- one that proved to be sweet in the end -- the call-in center sent scores of Terrible Towels and the Steelers flag via FedEx two days before the game.

"This is not just a game," said Dana Bell, an operations manager, who once lived in Denver, but never pledged allegiance to the streaking orange and blue colt of the Broncos. "This is football."

Inside the call-in center, where thousands of calls stream in on how to attach VCRs and DVDs to satellite systems, 100 yards of black and gold balloons, streamers, flags and jerseys hung from the complicated maze of cubicles.

With her little magenta CD player in hand, Michelle Sassi, approached a manager and asked if she could play her daughter's Steelers CD, which instantly began to blare "Here we go, Steelers, Here we go..."

Bodies began to emerge out of small cubicle walls and feet started tapping, sending some of the more fervent fans into a semi-touchdown celebration with their telephone head pieces still attached.

"I won't play it too loud," Ms. Sassi pleaded. She got her way.

The only setback for the 350 employees -- who might have occasionally put a customer on hold to express disgust with referees or celebrate a touchdown by waving a Terrible Towel -- seemed to be the two cubicles separated, but united with decorations in confrontational orange and blue.

Robbi Lester, the owner of one of the cubicles, is a devout Dallas Cowboys fan who had coyly dismissed colleagues threatening her with banishment.

Mrs. Lester seemed to notice a supervisor not answering her calls for help and a higher up telling her that he was going paint her car tires orange and blue. After all, what was some good natured ribbing without the occasional semi-serious threat of mutil-colored tires?

"It's all in good fun," said Mrs. Lester, who claimed to not notice putting on blue sweat pants, an orange T-shirt and a thatched hat with two orange and blue balloons attached.

The Steelers won. The call center went wild. Hugs ensued.

Mrs. Lester never came back.







Denver


Outside Invesco Field, crowding around the ramp where most of the Steelers exited to greet family and friends, roughly 1,500 Steelers fans gave the new AFC Champions a hero's welcome.

Daniel Mohan, a Sharon native living in Austin, Texas, said the excitement was a long time coming.

"I was cheering in 1995; I was there," Mr. Mohan, a software engineer, said of the last AFC Championship Game victory by the Steelers, at Three Rivers Stadium. The Steelers won so often in the 1970s, going to four Super Bowls, but losing four of five conference finals in the Bill Cowher era was growing a bit monotonous.

"It's not that strange. But it feels a little unfamiliar," said Mr. Mohan, clad in a white Rocky Bleier No. 20 jersey.

Next to Mr. Mohan at the top of the ramp stood Rob Asbjornsen, 36, of Phoenix, along with his son, Jake, 10. They were among the many fans getting autographs, snapping photos or holding cell phones to allow friends to hear the cacophony.

"Happy to see these guys finally make it," said Asbjornsen, a member of what he calls the second-largest Steelers club outside Pittsburgh, with 2,000 or so Arizona-based fans who convene at a tavern in the north-Phoenix suburb of Cave Creek.











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(Staff writers Chuck Finder and Ann Rodgers contributed to this story. Moustafa Ayad can be reached at mayad@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1731.)



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Pitt is the home team, and as bad as their Black is (1-4 conf champ / 0-1 SB) under Cowher - Seattle did poorly in their white going 5-3 and beating nobody with a winning record. Could go either way.
 
CPanther95 said:
Pitt is the home team, and as bad as their Black is (1-4 conf champ / 0-1 SB) under Cowher - Seattle did poorly in their white going 5-3 and beating nobody with a winning record. Could go either way.

What the hell was I thinking? :rolleyes:

You have a point.
 
There are certain seasons that have an impact so large that they define an era. We are in the midst of one of those right now.

They come unexpectedly, stemming from a team that begins as an afterthought but busts into the American psyche like a shoulder through a bolted door.

It was the New York Jets in 1969; the San Francisco 49ers in '82; and most recently, the '02 New England Patriots.

All were met begrudgingly because they defy what was supposed to happen: No AFC team is supposed to win the title; no one is supposed to outshine America's team; no team could put restrictor plates on the "Greatest Show on Turf."


All were intruders before finally earning the title of icons.

This season, no one was supposed to oust the Indianapolis Colts. With rested bodies, motivation to triumph for their wounded coach and finally a stout defense in place, this was to be the year that Indy tore down the Patriots' flag and planted its own atop the AFC. It was to be the year that Peyton Manning swung back in his until now one-sided fight with Tom Brady.

It would set up a rivalry for the ages.

Instead, Pittsburgh rode into Indianapolis and tore up the script, using force and intelligence to make up for inferior talent.

The following week, Ben Roethlisberger went into the most daunting venue in sports and coolly maneuvered past both history and the Denver Broncos to establish himself as one of the most accomplished young signal-callers of all time.

There are several storylines that the media will roll off to garner attention for an unexpected if not unspectacular Super Bowl: Jerome Bettis returning to his hometown to play for a title in his final game; the Steelers being the only No. 6 seed to ever reach the big dance; Seattle making its first Super Bowl appearance and trying to end a city-wide drought.

Eventually, though, this game and this season will be remembered for a different reason. It will be the year that Roethlisberger supplanted Manning as Brady's main challenger; the year that Pittsburgh took over the mountain top, with the hopes of defending it for the remainder of the decade.

It is the start of something historic.

FROM THE LIP

"Our defense just persevered, and that's what great teams do," said safety Troy Polamalu. "We still have one more step to go, but we'll enjoy this. We're a road team. We're the Pittsburgh Steelers, it doesn't matter (where we play). We have fans everywhere."

FROM THE LIP II

"Jerome, he has affected, in some way, everybody on that team," said wideout Hines Ward. "Someone you can count on. I think more players were more trying to rally behind them, and make sure they did their job to get him back to Detroit.

Like I said earlier, what a better way, if this is his last year, to finish his career off where it started in Detroit. We're happy to be going to the Super Bowl, but we want to win. We want to go there and win the whole thing and give him that ring, and it would be a book in the making of the Jerome Bettis story."

UP NEXT

Super Bowl XL, February 5, Detroit.

The Steelers will square off against a Seattle team that, despite going 13-3 during the regular season to capture the NFC's top seed, has been met with skepticism at every turn. Perhaps it was the fact that they hadn't won a playoff game since 1984 or their sometimes shaky play against quality opponents in the regular season, but something undoubtedly scared most fans and analysts away from the Seahawks. Seattle, though, battled past Washington without the services of league MVP Shaun Alexander for most of the game in the divisional round before pounding Carolina this past Sunday, 34-14, in the NFC Championship Game.

Even so, they enter the title bout as underdogs to a No. 6 seed. But perhaps with good reason.

Like Pittsburgh, Seattle is solid in all phases of the game. And, like the Steelers, the Seahawks have a budding star quarterback that seems comfortable in the middle of the madness. But unlike their counterpart, the NFC champs have no Super Bowl history to draw from, and have yet to experience this postseason outside of their friendly confines.

Those two factors will likely be the difference.
 
'Butt-Ugly' Columnist Inundated By E-Mails From Angry Steelers Fans

POSTED: 4:05 pm EST January 25, 2006
UPDATED: 5:37 pm EST January 25, 2006

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DENVER -- Butt-ugly.

That's how one Denver columnist chose to describe Pittsburgh before last Sunday's AFC Championship game.

And now, he's paying for it -- not just because his team lost, but because angry Steelers fans sent him hundreds of e-mails.


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Channel 4 Action News anchor Scott Baker got revenge when he went to Denver for the AFC Championship game. Read his blog from Denver about his attempted ambush of Bill Johnson and the gifts he left behind.
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In his latest column for Denver's Rocky Mountain News, Bill Johnson wrote, "I did call Pittsburgh a bad name. It was hardly by accident, and I will accept the opprobrium. People there truly love their town. And they absolutely love Steelers football."

Johnson, however, did not say he was sorry.
 
A poem by Harvey Aronson

Living in Black and Gold

The meaning of being a Pittsburgh Steelers fan?
What does it all mean?
What makes us a Steelers fan?
It’s loyalty, love, dedication and philosophies,
All rolled into one.

One belief that we stand out from the rest.
Who’s the best?
Steelers fans believe they’ve passed that test.
Through thick and thin, winning and losing,
The passion always remains.

We love...we hate...
Sometimes we debate.
If you are of the Black and Gold,
There’s a cliché that has taken hold.
It goes “Once a Steelers fan…always a Steelers fan”,
And that’s how it is man.

Around the world let it be said,
That Pittsburgh Steelers fans are born not bred.
We’re loud, we’re proud, we have tradition.
Steelers fan have been through many a strife,
But most importantly, a true Steelers fan is just that…for life