Super Bowl XLIII
AFC:
NFC:
Date: February 1, 2009
Scoring:
Team 1 2 3 4 Final
PIT 3 14 3 7 27
ARI 0 7 0 16 23
AFC playmakers:
G. Russell, J. Harrison, Santonio Holmes
NFC playmakers:
B. Patrick, WR Larry Fitzgerald,
Network:
Announcers:
Pregame:
Halftime:
Postgame:
Commercials: Yes
Grade:
Notes: The winning
play in Super Bowl XLIII was right out of a schoolyard.
Scamble right, scramble left, find
someone open.
The perfect unscripted ending to a game of
improbable swings.
Their Steel Curtain shredded, Ben Roethlisberger and
Santonio Holmes improvised the 6-yard touchdown pass with 35 seconds left to
give the Pittsburgh Steelers a record-setting sixth Super Bowl victory, 27-23
over the Arizona Cardinals on Sunday night.
"Great players step up in big-time games to make
plays," said Holmes, the game's MVP. He said he told Roethlisberger that
he "wanted to be the guy to make the plays for this team."
And he was.
Holmes grabbed the ball with both arms stretched fully above
his head in the back right corner of the end zone, his toes barely dragging
inbounds. He fell, sat up and cradled the ball like the prize it was.
This thriller certainly matched last year's Super Bowl,
which ended with New York Giants wide receiver Plaxico Burress' TD catch --
with 35 seconds left, too.
But this one was even wilder. With the last tension-packed
seconds ticking away, a kneeling Roethlisberger held Steelers coach Mike
Tomlin's hand as Cardinals quarterback Kurt Warner led one last, but futile,
drive.
"These guys just don't blink," Tomlin said.
"They deliver. It's never going to be pretty or perfect, if you will, but
they have a great deal of resolve."
The Steelers (15-4), who won their second Super Bowl title
in the last four seasons, led 20-7 in the fourth quarter, only to see Warner
and the Cardinals stage a remarkable rally to go in front 23-20 with 2:37
remaining.
Warner hit Pro Bowl wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald in stride
for a 64-yard touchdown pass with 2:37 left. Already owning a slew of playoff
receiving marks this year, Fitzgerald sped down the middle of the field,
watching himself outrun the Steelers' defense on the
huge video screen.
But Fitzgerald could only watch from the sideline as
Roethlisberger engineered a 78-yard drive to win the Super Bowl in what
resembled Heinz Field South. With waves of twirling Terrible Towels turning
Raymond James Stadium into a black-and-gold tableau -- Steelers fans supporting
their beloved team, the economy be damned --
"I knew it was a touchdown 100 percent," Holmes
said, even though the play had to withstand a video review. "My feet never
left the ground. All I did was stand up on my toes and extended my hands."
And hauled in the pass that punctuated
another
The stunning swings overshadowed Steelers linebacker James
Harrison's Super Bowl-record 100-yard interception return for a touchdown to
end the first half. That looked like the game's signature play until the final
quarter, when both teams shook off apparent knockout punches to throw haymakers
of their own.
Roethlisberger and Holmes struck the last blow, and when
Warner fumbled the ball away in the final seconds, the Cardinals' dream of
winning their first NFL championship since 1947 was gone.
"I said it's now or never. I told the guys all the film
study you put in doesn't matter unless you do it now," Roethlisberger
said. "I'm really proud of the way they responded."
The Cardinals (12-8), playing in their first Super Bowl ever
and first championship game of any kind since 1948, lost their composure after
Harrison's heroics. They had three penalties to keep
And
Fitzgerald, who already had set a postseason record for
receiving yards and had five touchdowns in the playoffs, was a nonentity until
an 87-yard fourth-quarter drive he capped with a leaping 1-yard touchdown catch
over Pittsburgh cornerback Ike Taylor. Fitzgerald made four receptions on that
series, on which Warner hit all eight passes for all the yards.
And then Fitzgerald struck swiftly for the 64-yard touchdown
catch that put the Cardinals within minutes of a remarkable victory -- a
victory that never came because of the resilience of this Steelers team.
"I'm disappointed for our team," said
"We learned a lot about our team. It's just unfortunate
it had to come out that way."
It looked like it had when Roethlisberger's short run was
ruled a TD. but Whisenhunt
challenged the play, and the score was overturned, leaving Tomlin his first
difficult decision.
He took the points, Reed's 18-yard field goal, the shortest in a Super Bowl since 1976.
After forcing a punt, the Steelers kept the ball the
remainder of the first quarter -- 11:28 in all, outgaining
When
Warner, handed the Walter Payton
NFL Man of the Year trophy just before kickoff, then hit Anquan Boldin
streaking from left to right. Boldin was upended at the
Harrison, the NFL Defensive Player of the Year, stepped in
front of Boldin at the goal line, picked off Warner's throw and began a journey
down the right sideline that ended as the longest play in Super Bowl history.
"Those last couple of yards were
probably tougher than anything I've done in my life, but probably more
gratifying than anything I've done in football,"
Said Warner: "I didn't see him around
my offensive line. He made a great play and a great run to get them a
touchdown."
The previous longest play in Super Bowl history was Desmond
Howard's 99-yard kickoff return for a touchdown for the Green Bay Packers in
Super Bowl XXXI.
» The AFC has won nine of the past 12 Super Bowls to trim
the NFC's overall lead to 22-21.
»
» Cardinals QB Kurt Warner has the three highest
passing-yardage totals in Super Bowl history.
» Cardinals WR Larry Fitzgerald set the record for
receptions, yards and touchdowns in a single postseason.
Running time: 4:40 (3 discs)