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They spent the game pressuring Flacco, who was outplayed as badly as Roethlisberger was by the Patriots' Tom Brady in his first AFC title game four years ago, and the mismatch at QB may have made the difference.
Down 16-14, Flacco tried to rally the Ravens in the closing minutes. That's when Polamalu stepped in.
"I think Troy was probably just able to read my eyes," Flacco said. "I think he was just able to jump over there, read a little bit and he made a nice play."
Said Roethlisberger: "He went against the No. 1 defense in the world."
Ravens teammate Terrell Suggs said, "I don't think he struggled. They just made plays. When you got a defense that can make plays like that, I don't think he was placing the ball where he wanted to but this was just their night."
Still, Roethlisberger cautioned, "You can't make mistakes and win a big game."
Maybe it helped that the two athletes largely responsible for Pittsburgh's last two major sports championships -- former Steelers running back Jerome Bettis and Penguins co-owner and Hall of Famer Mario Lemieux -- were among the record crowd of 65,350 in Heinz Field.
The franchise, for all of the success it has enjoyed while playing in a record-tying 14 AFC title games, had lost an unprecedented four of its five most recent conference championship games in Pittsburgh. The run of losses almost made the Steelers glad to go on the road for the entire Super Bowl run-up to their last title.
The Ravens and Steelers own the NFL's nastiest ongoing rivalry. This game was expected to be low-scoring, physical and tense and it was, especially after Baltimore came back from an early 13-0 deficit to get to within 16-14 on McGahee's second short touchdown run of the game, a 1-yarder with 9:32 remaining.
"We were up 13-0 and then we're up 13-7 then we're up 13-whatever, it was like, 'Man, this game is going slow,' " the Steelers' Deshea Townsend said. "But then Troy steps up and makes a huge play and kind of seals the game for us."
Another such play -- Roethlisberger's 45-yard completion to Hines Ward on third-and-12 play -- led to the first of Jeff Reed's field goals, a 34-yarder, in the first quarter.
On the Ravens' second possession, Flacco made the kind of mistake he didn't make in playoff wins over the Dolphins and top-seeded Titans, throwing the ball into the hands of nickel back Townsend for the rookie's first interception in 98 passes. Ward kept the ensuing Steelers drive going with an 11-yard catch on third-and-10, leading to Reed's 42-yard field goal, but hurt his knee while landing.
Now, the Steelers can't wait to see some old friends.
"We got our old coaches. We all won a Super Bowl here with the Steelers together," linebacker James Farrior said. "I'm sure they're going to be coming after us to get this one."
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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