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Originally published Monday, January 19, 2009 at 12:00 AM

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Troy Polamalu's pick assures Pittsburgh another Super Bowl appearance

Nothing in this city's rich football heritage ever will replace the Immaculate Reception, the nickname given Franco Harris' great catch to win a 1972 AFC playoff game against the Raiders in the final seconds.

Chicago Tribune

PITTSBURGH — Nothing in this city's rich football heritage ever will replace the Immaculate Reception, the nickname given Franco Harris' great catch to win a 1972 AFC playoff game against the Raiders in the final seconds.

Now the Steelers have an interception that deserves a title.

Safety Troy Polamalu picked off Baltimore quarterback Joe Flacco and returned it 40 yards for a touchdown and a play for the ages in the Steelers' 23-14 victory over the Ravens in the AFC Championship Game Sunday at Heinz Field.

On third-and-13 at the Baltimore 29 with 4 minutes, 24 seconds left and the Steelers clinging to a 16-14 lead, Polamalu read Flacco's eyes and followed them all the way to Tampa, Fla.

Polamalu stepped under the route run by intended receiver Derrick Mason, caught the ball and returned it to the end zone to set off a celebration as wild as his flowing hair.

"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."

Thousands of the yellow "Terrible Towels" that waved as Steelers coach Mike Tomlin accepted the AFC championship trophy during a postgame celebration can be packed for Florida.

The Steelers will play Arizona, coached by the man who called plays in Pittsburgh's last Super Bowl victory in 2006, Ken Whisenhunt, on Feb. 1 in Super Bowl XLIII.

"They did it tonight the way we did it all year," Tomlin said. "It's a humble group, a selfless group, and because of that we're very opportunistic."

The Steelers took advantage of the opportunities but never really took control of a game so physical it could have been played in the 1960s. In a manner people in this town respect, the Steelers got to the Super Bowl the hard way — with a defense that held the Ravens to 198 total yards and an offense that overcame itself.

But in the end, besides the violent nature of the collisions, the game came down to Ben Roethlisberger making plays that Flacco couldn't. Flacco looked much like the rookie he is, completing 13 of 30 passes for 141 yards and three interceptions. Meanwhile, "Big Game Ben" survived by going 16 of 33 for 255 yards and a touchdown.

Said Roethlisberger: "He [Flacco] went against the No. 1 defense in the world."

Flacco eventually developed confidence and a rhythm in the second half that kept the Ravens in it until the interception that will haunt him all offseason. Polamalu's pick was more costly but no less careless than Flacco's first interception.

It came on Flacco's sixth snap of the day. Facing pressure from LaMarr Woodley, Flacco forced a throw to favorite target Mason. Cornerback DeShea Townsend jumped the route and easily intercepted Flacco at the Baltimore 29 for the rookie's first postseason pick in 50 passes.

The mistake set up the Steelers' second field goal, but even with a 6-0 lead Pittsburgh couldn't relax.

Late in the first quarter, Roethlisberger absorbed a blow to the upper back and ribs from safety Haruki Nakamura after he threw. No flag was thrown, but it was the kind of contact that often has resulted in roughing-the-passer penalties.

Television cameras caught Roethlisberger retreating to a spot inside Heinz Field where he was examined. The Steelers were concerned enough that backup Byron Leftwich started warming up on the sidelines. But a moment before the starting offense returned to the field, Roethlisberger jogged back out — to cheers.

Good thing for the Steelers he did.

On the next series, Roethlisberger stepped up on third-and-nine to avoid the rush, threw a wobbler off his front foot and let Santonio Holmes do the rest. Holmes took advantage of Ravens defensive back Fabian Washington, who had slipped, and weaved into the open field for a 65-yard TD pass to make it 13-0, a lead they would need.

Nothing summed up the vicious nature of the hitting more than the sight of Ravens running back Willis McGahee being wheeled off on a stretcher with 3:39 left in the game. Steelers safety Ryan Clark uncorked the blow that left McGahee down, motionless for several minutes.

Players from both teams gathered on the field out of concern for their teammates, and only Clark got up.

McGahee left the field wearing a neck brace and lying on a stretcher. He was moving his arms and legs but complained of significant neck pain, according to Ravens personnel.

"We hope that Willis is OK," Roethlisberger said. "We're keeping him in our prayers. I know how scary that is. I started getting a little emotional when I saw him down there and the cart was coming out. That's the nature of this rivalry."

Copyright © 2009 The Seattle Times Company

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