Comparing Super Bowl Six Seeds
In the first tens days of pre-Super Bowl hype I've noticed that
a central theme seems to be a perceived lack of respect for the
Seattle Seahawks. I don't much disagree however I think that
little has been made of the Steelers march to to the AFC title.
Lets remember that the Steelers were the sixth and final seed in
the tougher of the NFL's two conferences. Pittsburg then went on
the road and beat Cincinnati, Indianapolis, and Denver, the top
three seeds in the AFC. Taking into account some horrific
officiating, they did so in dominating fashion! Only one other
six seed has ever advanced to the Super Bowl and that was the
1985 New England Patriots in Super Bowl XX.
Like this year's Steelers, the '85 Pats finished their season at
11-5, good enough for third in the AFC East. The Pats then went
to the Meadowlands and beat the Jets 26-14 in the Wildcard and
then on to the LA Coliseum where they downed the Las Angeles
Raiders 27-20 in their Divisional game. New England then went to
Miami as overwhelming underdogs and dispatched the Dolphins
31-14 to punch their ticket to New Orleans and a date with the
Bears in Super Bowl XX
That '85 Pat team started with veteran Steve Grogan at the
controls but he went down with a severe injury in Game Seven and
was replaced by Tony Eason. The Pats finished 21st in passing,
4th in rushing, 10th in points, and 9th in total offense.
Eason's abysmal 11/17 TD/INT ratio made the run all the more
improbable.
Craig James had his best year as a pro rushing for 1225 yard at
4.7 yard per carry with Tony Collins 657 yards at 4.0 ypc as the
changeup. Irving Fryar and Stanley Morgan both had 39 catches
for 695 yard and 760 yards respectively. Tony Franklin connected
on 24 of 30 FG attempts for 80% and 112 total points. HOFer John
Hannah was the anchor of a pretty good offensive line.
No doubt that Roethlisberger stirs the drink in Pittsburg. Two
of the five Steeler losses can be summed up in two words - Tommy
Maddux. In the others, one could argue that Big Ben eas less
than 100%. Roethlisberger's 2385 yards, 17/9 ratio and 98.0 QB
rating put him third in the NFL amoung starters trailing only
Peyton Manning and Carson Palmer.
Wicked fast and shifty Willie Parker burst on the scene with
1202 yards at 4.7 ypc. The Bus, Jerome Bettis got the tough
inside yardage and nine touchdowns. Vernon Hayes and Deuce
Staley would both start on other teams. Heinz Ward had a so/so
year in catches and yardage but did get his 11 scores. Every
Steeler wideout blocks and Heath Miller has it all over '85 Pat
TE Lin Dawson. The Steelers finished 3rd in rushing, 4th in
passing, and 3rd overall.
Edge: '05 Pittsburg
The '85 Pat defense was a wrecking crew that always seemed to
come up big in it's biggest games. DL Julius Adams and LB
triplets Andre Tippett, Steve Nelson, and Johnny Rembert
anchored the #4 defense against the rush and all went to the Pro
Bowl. Fred Marion and Ray Clayborn played corner and center
field on the 6th rated pass defense. The Patriot defense was
ranked the overall #4 stop unit in the NFL in 1985.
The Steeler defense in a group effort where everyone is good but
nobody is arguably outstanding. Joey Porter (10.5) and Cliff
Haggans (9.0) own half the Steelers sacks and Chris Hope leads
the secondary with three picks, only Porter and Troy Polamalu
even have two. The Steelers were #2 against the rush, #10
against the pass and #8 overall.
Edge: '85 New England
In 1985 the New England Patriots marched through the AFC
playoffs as the 6th seed to eventually be mauled by the Chicago
Bears 46-10 as 10 1/2 point underdogs. In 2005 the Pittsburg
Steelers marched through the AFC playoffs as the 6th seed and
are favored in their matchup with Seattle by four points. Win or
lose, the 2005 Seattle Seahawks will never be mentioned in the
same breath as that great Chicago Bear team. On Sunday we'll see
if they've even been given their proper respect.