Head to Head: Ravens DE Terrell Suggs vs. Steelers RT Flozel

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  • fordfixer
    Legend
    • May 2008
    • 10922

    Head to Head: Ravens DE Terrell Suggs vs. Steelers RT Flozel

    Head to Head: Ravens DE Terrell Suggs vs. Steelers RT Flozell Adams
    A closer look at the game within the game
    Friday, January 14, 2011
    [url="http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11014/1117792-66.stm"]http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11014/1117792-66.stm[/url]

    Flozell Adams wears a size 22 shoe, which means when he goes to Heinz Field for the AFC divisional playoff game Saturday against the Baltimore Ravens his feet will arrive five minutes before he does.

    But that is not all that will precede him.

    His reputation will, too.

    Adams, 35, is known as one of the nastiest players in the National Football League, a five-time Pro Bowl offensive tackle who was penalized and fined for three separate incidents in the 2009 season. The fines were nearly as much as those levied against Steelers linebacker James Harrison this season.

    "That is pretty much his reputation," said Ravens defensive end Terrell Suggs, no altar boy himself.

    But Adams is also known as one of the most durables tackles in the league, too, and he proved it in his first season with the Steelers.

    Since he became a starter in his rookie season with the Dallas Cowboys in 1998, Adams has started every game in 11 of the next 12 NFL seasons, including all 16 this season. Rookie center Maurkice Pouncey is the only other player on the offensive line to start every game in 2010.

    In fact, Adams has missed 10 games in his 13-year career, and they all came in the 2005 season when he tore the anterior cruciate ligament in his knee. Even after he sustained a high-ankle sprain when the Steelers beat the Ravens, 13-10, Dec. 5 in Baltimore -- an injury that usually requires at least two weeks to heal --Adams played the next week against Cincinnati.

    "That's not in my resume," Adams said. "If I can go, no matter any shape or form, I go. It's just another nagging injury. That's part of football. You got to play through it."

    The Steelers are glad Adams is on their side.

    They signed him to a two-year, $10 million contract right before training camp to replace right tackle Willie Colon, who sustained a season-ending injury in July. And he is still standing, despite heat dehydration in Tennessee in Week 2, despite a couple of ankle injuries.

    His teammates said he is energized by playing on a team that has a chance to win more than one playoff game in 13 years, which is how many Adams won in six career playoff appearances with the Cowboys. They also say he is not as mean as he appears.

    "He comes across as a big, ornery guy, but, soon as he got integrated into our O-line room, he's a big goofball," said Trai Essex. "He's always sending us funny text messages."

    "I'm a fun guy," Adams said.

    That demeanor changes on the field, and the Steelers will need some of that against Suggs, a one-man wrecking crew for the Ravens in the last meeting. He was literally all over the field, registering 1 1/2 sacks, four tackles for losses and five quarterback hurries. And he kept flip-flopping sides, pressuring from the right and left, whether in the Ravens' base 4-3 defense or substitution packages.

    "He's a heckuva player," Steelers offensive coordinator Bruce Arians said of Suggs, who led the Ravens with 11 sacks in the regular season. "Whoever draws his number, you got an all-day job."

    His reputation precedes him, too.

    Read more: [url="http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11014/1117792-66.stm#ixzz1AzGkuRHb"]http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11014/11 ... z1AzGkuRHb[/url]

    Molon labe

    People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf. George Orwell

    ?We're not going to apologize for winning.?
    Mike Tomlin

    American metal pimped by asiansteel
    Only two defining forces have ever offered to die for you 1. Jesus Christ, 2.The American G.I., One died for your soul, the other for your freedom.
  • fordfixer
    Legend
    • May 2008
    • 10922

    #2
    Re: Head to Head: Ravens DE Terrell Suggs vs. Steelers RT Flozel

    Playoff Xtra: Super Safeties / The Steelers' Polamalu and the Ravens' Reed
    Divisional Round: Pittsburgh vs. Baltimore
    Friday, January 14, 2011
    [url="http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11014/1117785-66.stm"]http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11014/1117785-66.stm[/url]

    It started in the first game, this season-full of spectacular moments, and it started the way it always does with Troy Polamalu, with a play rooted in instinct but based on what he had been watching, what he had been studying, all day.

    Late in the season opener against the Atlanta Falcons, Polamalu went to defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau and asked him to call something that would allow him to make a play on wide receiver Roddy White, who had tortured the Steelers with 13 catches. Most of White's catches were to the right sideline, in the direction of cornerback Bryant McFadden.

    So, with 1:45 remaining in a game that was tied, 9-9, Polamalu struck the way he always seems to strike -- making a play in extraordinary fashion. On first-and-10 from the Atlanta 21, anticipating the same sideline throw to White, Polamalu broke from the hash marks on quarterback Matt Ryan's pass and made a lunging interception at the Falcons 30, looking more like Jerry Rice than a 215-pound safety the way he toe-tapped the turf near the sideline stripe.

    Jeff Reed missed the field goal that would have won the game in regulation, but Polamalu's interception was the first of many game-changing plays the six-time Pro Bowl safety would make in 2010 -- none bigger than the night of Dec. 5 in Baltimore. It is the reason why the Steelers, not the Ravens, are playing host to Saturday's AFC Divisional playoff game at Heinz Field as the AFC North champion.

    "I appreciate that he's really a very special player," LeBeau said. "I'm blessed to be able to coach him."
    Reed rebounds

    Ed Reed missed the first six games of the Ravens season because he was on the physically unable to perform list with a hip injury. All that did was prevent him from making, say, 20 interceptions in 2010.

    Despite playing in only 10 games Reed, a seven-time Pro Bowl safety, still led the National Football League with eight interceptions.

    One of those games was in Cleveland, a game the Ravens needed to win to remain tied with the Steelers for first place. And it was pure Reed -- studying, analyzing, always in position to make a play.

    Midway through the second quarter, leading 10-7, Reed took a look at the Browns' formation on third-and-5 and told cornerback Lardarius Webb that the play might be a quick out to receiver Mohamed Massaquoi. He instructed Webb to jump the route to prevent the quick throw.

    When Massaquoi ran a double move and headed deep down the sideline, Reed was there to intercept quarterback Colt McCoy's pass.

    "Instincts," said Ravens general manager Ozzie Newsome. "What sets him apart from good players is that he's so instinctive. But he has the preparation that goes along with instincts."
    No choice

    By now, it is almost pointless to debate which player -- Troy Polamalu or Ed Reed -- is the more dynamic safety, the bigger playmaker, the ultimate game-changer.

    Reed's 54 career interceptions and 13 career touchdowns since joining the league in 2002 are unrivaled by his peers, even Polamalu.

    But Polamalu's style, diving over the line of scrimmage to make tackles, chopping balls from a quarterback's grasp, intercepting passes that look as though they are going to fall harmlessly to the turf, cannot be duplicated by another player in the NFL, maybe even in league history.

    "They're the best two I've seen since I've been in the league," said Steelers backup quarterback Byron Leftwich, who played against both safeties when he was with the Jacksonville Jaguars. "I don't like to compare guys to older guys, but Troy and Ed, they're so instinctive and that allows them to make those plays. Those plays don't happen by accident. It's not a coincidence they happen. It's because those guys have instincts very few people have."

    It is nothing new for Reed and Polamalu to be on the field at the same time, which is what will happen at 4:30 p.m. Saturday when the Steelers (12-4) and Ravens (13-4) play at Heinz Field, their third meeting this season. But rarely have they competed for the same prize -- a spot in the AFC Championship game -- with each playing at such a high level.

    Reed had four of his league-best eight interceptions in his team's final two victories. That he also led the team with 16 passes defensed in just 10 games is another chapter in what will be a Hall of Fame career.

    Despite missing two games with an injury near his right Achilles tendon, Polamalu has five interceptions in his past five games, one a 45-yard scoring return against the Cincinnati Bengals. But included in that stretch was a series of big plays in which he dramatically shaped the outcome of three consecutive games. The biggest of them all: His sack on Ravens quarterback Joe Flacco that led to the winning touchdown in the Steelers 13-10 victory in Baltimore -- the game that gave the Steelers control of the AFC North and allowed them to apply the lockdown on one of the first-round playoff byes.

    "The one thing you notice is that they both have great hands," Ravens Coach John Harbaugh said. "They both can make spectacular plays on the football that, for a defensive back, is huge. A lot of times defensive backs are defensive backs because they don't have great hands. They have great body control and, obviously, the instincts, awareness and understanding of the game. They always seem to show up in the right place."

    Then Harbaugh added, "They're both phenomenal players."

    "At some point, those guys were very good offensive players when they went to college, but, for whatever reason, [coaches] felt they could get them on the field sooner by letting them play defense," Newsome was saying the other day on the phone. "They rank right up there with Rod Woodson, Deion Sanders, Charles Woodson, Ronnie Lott. They're in that family."
    Head to head

    Reed doesn't just intercept passes; he picks them, returns them, and, in a lot of instances, scores with them.

    He averages 26.6 yards per interception return, which ranks first in NFL history among players with at least 30 interceptions. His 1,438 return yards also ranks first in NFL history.

    But, for all his heroics, Reed has never been much of a factor against the Steelers, especially Ben Roethlisberger. In nine career games against Roethlisberger, Reed has just one interception, and that was in 2006.

    Polamalu is a different story.

    He changed the landscape of the Steelers 13-10 victory in Baltimore on Dec. 5 when, on second-and-5, he blitzed from the blind side and chopped the ball from Flacco's right hand as he was about to throw. Outside linebacker LaMarr Woodley scooped the fumble and ran 19 yards to the Ravens 9, setting up the winning touchdown.

    But his most numbing play against the Ravens came in the 2008 AFC Championship game when he picked off Flacco and returned the interception 40 yards for a touchdown, cementing a 23-14 victory that sent the Steelers on their way to an unprecedented sixth Super Bowl title.

    "Their study is part of their success," LeBeau said. "They're going to make a lot of plays because they're great football players. Troy has the ability to program off of study and apply it in games. A lot of people can assimilate knowledge from the video, but it loses something when you transfer it to the actual game. But, Troy, he usually makes more plays."

    Steelers safety Will Allen, who played six seasons with cornerback Ronde Barber with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, said he thinks Polamalu and Reed would still make those plays even if they didn't study film.

    "They have certain intangibles of the game where their instincts take over," Allen said. "They're used to making plays. They're used to being in that situation, so, if the ball is in the air or if there is a tipped ball or if they see something the offense has been doing repeatedly, they pick up on it quickly. It becomes instinctual at that point. It's something they learned at young age and developed as a professional."
    Free safeties

    Reed and Polamalu share another common trait: Each is allowed a large amount of freedom on the field.

    Earlier this season, on a goal-line sneak by Titans quarterback Kerry Collins, Polamalu dove over the line of scrimmage at the snap count and landed on Collins before he could even lunge forward. "That's Troy being Troy," linebacker James Farrior said.

    But, when he tried it again in the regular-season finale in Cleveland, Browns quarterback Colt McCoy was able to elude Polamalu's diving attempt.

    "We prefer he not quite go that far off the diving board -- literally, off the diving board," LeBeau said, referring to the freedom with which Polamalu is allowed to play.

    Said Newsome, "People say they both are gamblers and both can be out of position. But when they're doing that, it's based on film study and the tendencies they see. That's why they're able to take gambles. It's freedom within the scheme."

    And the ability to make game-changing plays.

    It started in the first game, this season-full of spectacular moments, and it started the way it always does with Troy Polamalu, with a play rooted in instinct but based on what he had been watching, what he had been studying, all day.

    Late in the season opener against the Atlanta Falcons, Polamalu went to defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau and asked him to call something that would allow him to make a play on wide receiver Roddy White, who had tortured the Steelers with 13 catches. Most of White's catches were to the right sideline, in the direction of cornerback Bryant McFadden.

    So, with 1:45 remaining in a game that was tied, 9-9, Polamalu struck the way he always seems to strike -- making a play in extraordinary fashion. On first-and-10 from the Atlanta 21, anticipating the same sideline throw to White, Polamalu broke from the hash marks on quarterback Matt Ryan's pass and made a lunging interception at the Falcons' 30, looking more like Jerry Rice than a 215-pound safety the way he toe-tapped the turf near the sideline stripe.

    Jeff Reed missed the field goal that would have won the game in regulation, but Polamalu's interception was the first of many game-changing plays the six-time Pro Bowl safety would make in 2010 -- none bigger than the night of Dec. 5 in Baltimore. It is the reason why the Steelers, not the Ravens, are playing host to the AFC Divisional playoff game Saturday at Heinz Field as the AFC North champion.

    "I appreciate that he's really a very special player," LeBeau said. "I'm blessed to be able to coach him."
    Reed rebounds

    Ed Reed missed the first six games of the Ravens' season because he was on the physically unable to perform list with a hip injury. All that did was prevent him from making, say, 20 interceptions in 2010.

    Despite playing in only 10 games Reed, a seven-time Pro Bowl safety, still led the National Football League with eight interceptions.

    One of those games was in Cleveland, a game the Ravens needed to win to remain tied with the Steelers for first place. And it was pure Reed -- studying, analyzing, always in position to make a play.

    Midway through the second quarter, leading, 10-7, Reed took a look at the Browns' formation on third and 5 and told cornerback Lardarius Webb that the play might be a quick out to receiver Mohamed Massaquoi. He instructed Webb to jump the route to prevent the quick throw.

    When Massaquoi ran a double move and headed deep down the sideline, Reed was there to intercept quarterback Colt McCoy's pass.

    "Instincts," said Ravens general manager Ozzie Newsome. "What sets him apart from good players is that he's so instinctive. But he has the preparation that goes along with instincts."
    No choice

    By now, it is almost pointless to debate which player --Troy Polamalu or Ed Reed -- is the more dynamic safety, the bigger playmaker, the ultimate game-changer.

    Reed's 54 career interceptions and 13 career touchdowns since joining the league in 2002 are unrivaled by his peers, even Polamalu.

    But Polamalu's style, diving over the line of scrimmage to make tackles, chopping balls from a quarterback's grasp, intercepting passes that look as though they are going to fall harmlessly to the turf, cannot be duplicated by another player in the NFL, maybe even in league history.

    "They're the best two I've seen since I've been in the league," said Steelers backup quarterback Byron Leftwich, who played against both safeties when he was with the Jacksonville Jaguars. "I don't like to compare guys to older guys, but Troy and Ed, they're so instinctive, and that allows them to make those plays. Those plays don't happen by accident. It's not a coincidence they happen. It's because those guys have instincts very few people have."

    It is nothing new for Reed and Polamalu to be on the field at the same time, which is what will happen at 4:30 p.m. Saturday when the Steelers (12-4) and Ravens (13-4) play at Heinz Field, their third meeting this season. But rarely have they competed for the same prize -- a spot in the AFC Championship game -- with each playing at such a high level.

    Reed had four of his league-best eight interceptions in his team's final two victories. That he also led the team with 16 passes defensed in just 10 games is another chapter in what will be a Hall-of-Fame career. Despite missing two games with an injury near his right Achilles tendon, Polamalu has five interceptions in his past five games, one a 45-yard scoring return against the Cincinnati Bengals. But included in that stretch was a series of big plays in which he dramatically shaped the outcome of three consecutive games. The biggest: His sack on Ravens quarterback Joe Flacco that led to the winning touchdown in the Steelers' 13-10win in Baltimore -- the game that gave the Steelers control of the AFC North and allowed them to apply the lockdown on a first-round playoff byes.

    "The one thing you notice is that they both have great hands," Ravens coach John Harbaugh said. "They both can make spectacular plays on the football that, for a defensive back, is huge. A lot of times defensive backs are defensive backs because they don't have great hands. They have great body control and, obviously, the instincts, awareness and understanding of the game. They always seem to show up in the right place."

    Then Harbaugh added, "They're both phenomenal players."

    "At some point, those guys were very good offensive players when they went to college, but, for whatever reason, [coaches] felt they could get them on the field sooner by letting them play defense," Newsome was saying the other day on the phone. "They rank right up there with Rod Woodson, Deion Sanders, Charles Woodson, Ronnie Lott. They're in that family."
    Head-to-head

    Reed does not just intercept passes; he picks them, returns them, and, in a lot of instances, scores with them.

    He averages 26.6 yards per interception return, which ranks first in NFL history among players with at least 30 interceptions. His 1,438 return yards also ranks first in NFL history.

    But, for all his heroics, Reed has never been much of a factor against the Steelers, especially Ben Roethlisberger. In nine career games against Roethlisberger, Reed has just one interception, and that was in 2006.

    Polamalu is a different story.

    He changed the landscape of the Steelers' 13-10 victory in Baltimore on Dec. 5 when, on second and 5, he blitzed from the blind side and chopped the ball from Flacco's right hand as he was about to throw. Outside linebacker LaMarr Woodley scooped up the fumble and ran 19 yards to the Ravens' 9, setting up the winning touchdown.

    But his most numbing play against the Ravens came in the 2008 AFC Championship game when he picked off Flacco and returned the interception 40 yards for a touchdown, cementing a 23-14 victory that sent the Steelers on their way to an unprecedented sixth Super Bowl title.

    "Their study is part of their success," LeBeau said. "They're going to make a lot of plays because they're great football players. Troy has the ability to program off of study and apply it in games. A lot of people can assimilate knowledge from the video, but it loses something when you transfer it to the actual game. But, Troy, he usually makes more plays."

    Steelers safety Will Allen, who played six seasons with cornerback Ronde Barber with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, said he thinks Polamalu and Reed would still make those plays even if they didn't study film.

    "They have certain intangibles of the game where their instincts take over," Allen said. "They're used to making plays. They're used to being in that situation, so, if the ball is in the air or if there is a tipped ball or if they see something the offense has been doing repeatedly, they pick up on it quickly. It becomes instinctual at that point. It's something they learned at young age and developed as a professional."
    Free safeties

    Reed and Polamalu share another common trait: Each is allowed a large amount of freedom on the field.

    Earlier this season, on a goal-line sneak by Titans quarterback Kerry Collins, Polamalu dove over the line of scrimmage at the snap count and landed on Collins before he could even lunge forward. "That's Troy being Troy," linebacker James Farrior said.

    But, when he tried it again in the regular-season finale in Cleveland, Browns quarterback Colt McCoy was able to elude Polamalu's diving attempt.

    "We prefer he not quite go that far off the diving board -- literally, off the diving board," LeBeau said, referring to the freedom with which Polamalu is allowed to play.

    Said Newsome, "People say they both are gamblers and both can be out of position. But when they're doing that, it's based on film study and the tendencies they see. That's why they're able to take gambles. It's freedom within the scheme."

    And the ability to make game-changing plays.

    Read more: [url="http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11014/1117785-66.stm#ixzz1AzH4vNyd"]http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11014/11 ... z1AzH4vNyd[/url]

    Molon labe

    People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf. George Orwell

    ?We're not going to apologize for winning.?
    Mike Tomlin

    American metal pimped by asiansteel
    Only two defining forces have ever offered to die for you 1. Jesus Christ, 2.The American G.I., One died for your soul, the other for your freedom.

    Comment

    • fordfixer
      Legend
      • May 2008
      • 10922

      #3
      Re: Head to Head: Ravens DE Terrell Suggs vs. Steelers RT Flozel

      Divisional Round Matchup: Steelers vs. Ravens
      Friday, January 14, 2011
      By Gerry Dulac, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
      [url="http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11014/1117793-66.stm"]http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11014/1117793-66.stm[/url]

      When the Ravens have the ball: Joe Flacco already is tied for most road playoff wins by a quarterback in a career (4), but one of his two road playoff losses was in the 2008 AFC Championship game in Heinz Field when he was sacked three times and threw three interceptions. But Flacco beat the Steelers in the regular-season meeting this season at Heinz Field when he completed all four pass attempts on the winning touchdown drive. He has become adept at reading coverage and using the whole field to run crossing routes. Flacco relies on three veteran receivers -- Anquan Boldin, Derrick Mason and T.J. Houshmandzadeh -- in addition to RB Ray Rice, who was second on the team with 63 catches. Boldin led the team with 64 catches and seven TDs in the regular season. Rice is the only running back in the past 50 games to rush for more than 100 yards against the Steelers.

      When the Steelers have the ball: The Ravens' biggest problem is QB Ben Roethlisberger, who is playoff-tested and finished the regular season with 158 consecutive passes without an interception. Roethlisberger has won his past six games against the Ravens and is 8-2 against them in his career. His nose was broken in the first quarter of the last meeting, but he made the winning plays when he had to in the final minutes. Despite the presence of S Ed Reed, Roethlisberger won't be afraid to attack deep with WR Mike Wallace, who has become the most dangerous big-play receiver in the NFL. Teams have been trying to take advantage of MLB Ray Lewis in third-down situations by isolating him in coverage with a running back or tight end. RB Rashard Mendenhall had 124 yards on 44 carries in two games against the Ravens this season, but he didn't have a run longer than 11 yards.

      TE Todd Heap ... The Ravens wanted to use him more in the game in Baltimore, but he injured his hamstring running a deep route on the first play and did not return. Heap had 10 catches for 108 yards in the wild-card victory Sunday against Kansas City, and the Ravens are hoping to get him isolated in mismatches against linebackers. The Steelers have allowed four TD passes to a tight end in 2010 -- three by New England's Rob Gronkowski.

      Intangibles ... Five of the past six regular-season meetings have been decided by three points. The other was decided by four points. ... The Steelers (8-0) have never lost to a division team in the postseason since the 1970 merger, with two of those victories coming against the Ravens in 2001 and 2008. They are 8-1 in their past nine wild-card or divisional playoff games at home. ... The Steelers were 5-3 at home this season; the Ravens were 5-3 on the road.
      To win, the Ravens must ...

      1. Have Flacco on the attack. He must spread the field and throw at least 35 times if the Ravens want to advance to the AFC Championship game.

      2. Break Ben. The Ravens don't fear any player as much as they do Roethlisberger, who beats them even when he has a broken nose.

      3. Be Bold with Anquan. Boldin had five catches for 118 yards and one touchdown against the Steelers in the previous meeting.
      To win, the Steelers must ...

      1. Fry Rice. He has nine games with 100 or more yards from scrimmage in 2010, including a career-best 233 against New Orleans in Week 15.

      2. Mug Suggs. Not only is Terrell Suggs difficult to block, he is difficult to locate because he moves around so much.

      3. Put Todd in a heap of trouble. The Steelers might have to use Polamalu to match against the Ravens' tight end.
      The Game

      Steelers (12-4) vs. Baltimore Ravens (13-4).

      When: 4:30 p.m. Saturday.

      Where: Heinz Field.

      TV: KDKA.

      Radio: WDVE-FM (102.5), WBGG-AM (970) and the Steelers Radio Network.

      Favored: Steelers by 31/2.

      Read more: [url="http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11014/1117793-66.stm#ixzz1AzHaUky5"]http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11014/11 ... z1AzHaUky5[/url]

      Molon labe

      People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf. George Orwell

      ?We're not going to apologize for winning.?
      Mike Tomlin

      American metal pimped by asiansteel
      Only two defining forces have ever offered to die for you 1. Jesus Christ, 2.The American G.I., One died for your soul, the other for your freedom.

      Comment

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