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Dug into the VHS box--Super Bowl XL

I have every game of that season on DVD!Plus the parade!
Each game you can chose to hear the TV announcers or the radio broadcast with Hillgrove and Cope 😛
That's awesome. I'd pick Bill and Cope each time
 
The Championship game in Denver was amazing
Ben was awesome!
I'll have to admit, I really don't remember anything from that game. I remember the Colts game with no problem. I might have had a couple beers during and after that game.
 
Hasselback with the int at the goal line. Not sure who he was throwing it to..

The commercials were a lot more entertaining back then
So this was a self taped deal not a commemorative. How was the quality after 17 years?
 
Steelers did a great job chewing up the clock in the 4th..

Total dick move by Holmgren for not meeting Cowher at midfield after the game. At that point I would have been ok if his teams never won another game.
 
So this was a self taped deal not a commemorative. How was the quality after 17 years?
Yep I taped it off my DirecTV feed. It's still in ok shape. Probably not ready for prime time with today's HD quality but ok for me. 🤣
 
The Bus stops here ..Great post game podium revisit.
 
I'll have to admit, I really don't remember anything from that game. I remember the Colts game with no problem. I might have had a couple beers during and after that game.
I'll have to admit, I really don't remember anything from that game. I remember the Colts game with no problem. I might have had a couple beers during and after that game.
The Indy game was more exciting but watching Ben tear up Denver D was so enjoyable
They give him **** about the Super Bowl but he was spectacular getting us there

On the morning after the Steelers had lost the AFC Championship Game to the New England Patriots, many of their players bemoaned the opportunity they had squandered, and they talked about all the hard work required to get back to that point again.

They were back, and so the 2005 AFC Championship Game would a Denver Broncos team that was undefeated at home in 2005, a team with a homefield advantage made more daunting by the mile-high altitude, versus a Steelers team on a run that could make it the best road team in NFL playoff history.

"Throughout the course of these playoffs, with our football team we have had really great weeks of work," said Cowher. "We have been as healthy as we have been all season. We are playing our best football at the right time of year. It's a very resilient group of guys, a very grounded group of guys. We never took anything for granted, never looked beyond the next game, and all of that allowed us to have a great focus for the challenge of that particular week."

This week, the week the AFC would decide whether the Steelers or the Broncos would represent the conference in Super Bowl XL, well, it was no contest.

Due respect to the Broncos, who had finished 13-3 to earn the AFC's No. 2 seed and the bye that came with it, who had taken out the two-time defending champion New England Patriots to host this conference championship, but this game was over at halftime.


Again, it was second-year quarterback Ben Roethlisberger who led the Steelers. Apparently not convinced what they had seen him do to the Colts was real, the Broncos figured the Steelers to start by trying to run the ball and they aligned their defense accordingly. Bad move. In fashioning a 10-0 lead, Roethlisberger was 7 for 8 for 89 yards and the touchdown, and his precise play was the catalyst for a first half that all but clinched the outcome that day.

In losing the 1997 AFC Championship Game to the Broncos, the Steelers had fallen behind at the half, 24-14; in losing the 2001 AFC Championship Game to the New England Patriots, they were behind at the half, 14-3; and in the 2004 AFC Championship Game loss to those same Patriots, they had been behind at the half, 24-3.

Not this time. This time it was the Steelers who put the Broncos in a deep hole come halftime, a deep hole described by the scoreboard as 24-3.

On the Steelers' three touchdown drives of the half, Roethlisberger completed 13 of 17 for 180 yards and two scores, but it wasn't just the offense that dominated.

In helping build that 24-3 halftime lead, the defense had limited the Broncos' No. 5-ranked offense to six first downs and 38 yards rushing while forcing two turnovers; Jeff Reed's 47-yard field goal 10 minutes into the game had established a positive dynamic right off the bat for the Steelers, and the combination of his kickoffs and coverage had made Denver's average drive start its own 28-yard line.

In fact, after the game's first 30 minutes, the only statistical categories in which the Broncos had posted higher numbers were turnovers and punts.


Still, these playoff games are the times when teams truly need great quarterback play, and the Steelers got it from Roethlisberger. In the win over the Bengals, and in the first halves against Indianapolis and Denver, Roethlisberger completed 39 of 55 for 560 yards, with seven touchdowns and one interception for a passer rating of 135.6. It was a string of remarkable performances by a quarterback who outplayed the guy on the other team, head-to-head, in three straight road playoff wins, but also a guy who had finished seventh in the AFC balloting for the Pro Bowl. Yes, seventh.

"The toughest route they said to take was the scenic route, and that ended up being the best route for us," said linebacker Joey Porter. "We went to three different cities and shocked the world three different times. We weren't supposed to be in this situation, but we pulled it off. We pulled it off everywhere we went."

The Steelers were going to the Super Bowl, and the story of Jerome Bettis capping a magnificent career with a return to his hometown for a shot to go out as a champion would dominate the worldwide sporting press for the next fortnight.

But the Steelers' winning this AFC Championship Game also meant Ben Roethlisberger had kept two promises he made, promises that at the time sounded mostly like youthful bravado. On Jan. 23, he went up to Bettis on the sideline at Heinz Field as the Patriots were wrapping up the 2004 AFC Championship and promised through tears that if retirement could be postponed for another year he'd get him to that Super Bowl. And on Aug. 1, he told reporters who were asking about the possibility of a sophomore slump, "All you guys think I'm going to have it, so I'm not going to. We can still win a Super Bowl and not win 15 (regular season) games."

Now, it was on to Detroit.

"We have to go and win the game," said Cowher. "Nobody every remembers the loser in the Super Bowl."
 
I apparently switched the feed to Fox Sports Pittsburgh back in the day. The post game on field interviews with Tunch and Wolf and various players was worth the price of admission. Best one was with Larry Foote and Casey talking about the sack. Pure comedy talking about him being the sack master and how many moves he made to get to Hasselback.. 🤣🤣
 
Steelers did a great job chewing up the clock in the 4th..

Total dick move by Holmgren for not meeting Cowher at midfield after the game. At that point I would have been ok if his teams never won another game.
I looked it up. Was a logistics misunderstanding and they shook off camera. They have mutual respect.
 
I'll have to admit, I really don't remember anything from that game. I remember the Colts game with no problem. I might have had a couple beers during and after that game.
I remember Troy making a Troy play. something like running in between two guys to make the play

Seahawk fans have been to multiple Super Bowls since this game but still ***** and moan about it
 
definitely not a TD but it is to history
And, it wasn't the Steelers who called it, so not cheating. The refs did, so at best it's favoritism.
 
I guess it's why it's my second favorite SB of the Ben era. But for all the times almost too numerous to count of the Steelers getting screwed I just say it is what it is. I know if it would have went the other way I'd still be pissed. I know I'm still pissed about the bullshit personal foul on the kick return before the last Steelers drive against the Packers. Some backup linebacker gave a routine shove to a guy on the kick cover. He flopped badly and it costed half the distance or 15 to start that drive.
 
Went to the broadcast. It was Keyaron Fox. It was stupid but still a bullshit call. With the Miller catch on first down they'd have been damn near at the 50 with a couple ticks under 2 min.
 
I guess it's why it's my second favorite SB of the Ben era. But for all the times almost too numerous to count of the Steelers getting screwed I just say it is what it is. I know if it would have went the other way I'd still be pissed. I know I'm still pissed about the bullshit personal foul on the kick return before the last Steelers drive against the Packers. Some backup linebacker gave a routine shove to a guy on the kick cover. He flopped badly and it costed half the distance or 15 to start that drive.

that was on the NFL channel today. I couldn't force myself to watch the 2nd half. what could have been. Man I miss those guys. Harrison, Troy, the beard.
 
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