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Against top-seeded Atlanta, Rodgers dropped back, zigzagged up the middle, pump faked and dove into the end zone for a touchdown that put Green Bay up 35-14 midway through the third quarter. In the NFC championship against Chicago, he ran seven times, picking up four first downs, including the touchdown that put the Packers ahead 7-0 on their way to a 21-14 victory.
"He's like a very good scorer in basketball -- you know he's going to get points," Steelers defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau said. "From a defensive standpoint, you've got to keep him from controlling the game and monopolizing the game. That's what we have to try and do with Rodgers. He's a great player. He can create, improvise with his feet, go to his second and third choice in the route because he has such a quick release."
The 6-foot-5, 241-pound Roethlisberger isn't as speedy as Rodgers or Vick nor as statuesque as Tom Brady and Peyton Manning; he just makes it work.
This season, 15 of his 34 rushes produced first downs, a rate of 44 percent that was best in the league among quarterbacks who ran more than five times.
"Even if you took the number and name off his jersey, you could watch the film and still know it's Ben," said his backup, Byron Leftwich. "It's never going to be pretty. If you watch his college films, he was making the same kind of plays. I'm quite sure he was doing it in high school and junior high. That's just the type of player he is. It allows him to win a lot of games."
It turns out the formula for slowing scrambling quarterbacks starts with good tackling.
"You've got to come in under control," Steelers nose tackle Casey Hampton said. "If you are out of control, he's going to slip you and get away."
A single player probably isn't enough, either.
"Once you see one guy going back there, you can't just assume he's going to bring him down," Packers defensive end Cullen Jenkins said. "You've got to try to bring in other guys to help."
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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