Posts Tagged ‘SPORTS’

SPORTS – Pettitte to announce retirement at Yankee Stadium (AP)


Andy Pettitte


AP – FILE – In this Oct. 18, 2010, file photo, New York Yankees’ Andy Pettitte pitches against the Texas Rangers …

NEW YORK – Andy Pettitte will announce his retirement Friday morning at a Yankee Stadium news conference. A five-time World Series champion, Pettitte had been telling the Yankees since the end of the season that it was likely he wouldn’t play in 2011. He became a free agent and has not attempted to negotiate a contract.

The 38-year-old left-hander is 240-138 with a 3.88 ERA n 16 major league seasons. He excelled in the postseason, setting a major league record for wins by going 19-10 with a 3.83 ERA.

Pettitte’s departure leaving a huge hole in the Yankees’ rotation, with no proven starters behind CC Sabathia, Phil Hughes and A.J. Burnett.

Having failed to sign free agent Cliff Lee, New York has agreed to minor league contracts with Bartolo Colon and Freddy Garcia in recent weeks, trying to find more options for a fourth and fifth starter in addition to youngster Ivan Nova and Sergio Mitre.

Pettitte spent 13 seasons with the Yankees, interrupting his career in New York to play for his hometown Houston Astros from 2004-06. He was a three-time All-Star, earning the honor in 1996, 2001 and last year, and was a 20-game winner in 1996 and 2003 when he twice went 21-8.

He was 11-3 with a 3.28 ERA in 21 starts last season. His season was limited by a strained left groin that caused him to go on the disabled list from July 19 to Sept. 19.

Pettitte had said that he increasingly felt the tug to return to Texas and his family. Once the school year ended, his family traveled to New York where they could be together during homestands, but the distance from his loved ones now has trumped whatever desire he had to climb higher in the Yankees record book.

Pettitte’s 203 wins with the Yankees are the third-most in franchise history, trailing only Whitey Ford (236) and Red Ruffing (231).

He is expected to be a witness this summer at the trial of former teammate Roger Clemens, indicted on charges he lied to a congressional committee when he denied using performance-enhancing drugs.

Pettitte admitted using human growth hormone and said Clemens told him he had used HGH. Clemens testified Pettitte didn’t remember the conversation correctly.

SPORTS – AP-KN Poll: 18 NFL games fails to excite fans (AP)


In a photo taken with a fisheye lens, a layer of ice is seen outside Cowboys Stadium during preperations for NFL football Super Bowl XLV Tuesday, Feb.


AP – In a photo taken with a fisheye lens, a layer of ice is seen outside Cowboys Stadium during preperations …

DALLAS – Even though Americans like watching football far more than any other sport, they don’t necessarily want a longer NFL season.

An Associated Press-Knowledge Networks poll released Thursday shows only lukewarm backing at best for a switch from 16 to 18 regular-season games, one of the NFL’s key — and easiest-to-understand — proposals in its labor negotiations with the players’ union.

Of everyone surveyed, 27 percent strongly favor or somewhat favor adding two regular-season games and dropping two preseason games. When the group is narrowed to those identifying themselves as NFL fans, support for the change rises to a total of 45 percent — yet only 18 percent who strongly favor it.

And that’s despite data that shows football clearly is king: 41 percent of everyone surveyed called it their favorite sport to watch, more than tripling the 13 percent who chose baseball. Basketball was nearly as popular as baseball, with 12 percent.

The NFL says its data shows fans like the idea of expanding the regular season. But Steven Keller, a 43-year-old from Crystal Lake, Ill., was among the 9 percent of football fans in the AP-Knowledge Networks survey who strongly oppose an 18-game schedule.

“There’s plenty enough football as it is,” Keller said. “Eighteen games is too many for the players. … Those guys get beat up.”

Two players for the Pittsburgh Steelers — who face the Green Bay Packers in the Super Bowl on Sunday — were vocal this week in their opposition to changing the current schedule format.

“No player wants to play 18 games,” receiver Hines Ward said. “You’re not thinking about the players’ safety if you’re trying to add two more games.”

Linebacker James Harrison echoed that sentiment, saying: “You talk about adding two games, it’s going to be a far cry to get a guy through a whole season healthy.”

Among football fans, nearly four in 10 think the game has gotten more dangerous over the past five years.

Yet 31 percent of fans, and more than half of all the people polled, said they have heard nothing at all about the labor dispute between NFL owners and players, whose collective bargaining agreement expires in early March. There will be a formal bargaining session in the Dallas area on Saturday.

If a new deal can’t be reached in time, owners could lock out the players, and it’s possible next season could be affected.

“I am afraid,” Steelers safety Ryan Clark said, “that games will be missed.”

About three-quarters of those surveyed don’t sympathize with either the NFL or players in the labor dispute. But those who were willing to choose sides were twice as likely to back the union over the owners.

“A work stoppage is not going to help anyone,” said Packers president and CEO Mark Murphy, who was a vice president of the union in the 1980s while playing for the Washington Redskins. “I also realize when you get into a work stoppage situation, I think the fans don’t like either side. It’s kind of a pox on both sides. They just want to see football.”

In other poll findings released Thursday:

• 72 percent of all those surveyed — and 64 percent of NFL fans — think players’ salaries are too high;

• 59 percent of fans think the NFL is doing the right amount to prevent concussions;

• 53 percent of men who were surveyed, and 34 percent of women, consider themselves NFL fans;

• about a third of NFL fans say their interest in pro football has increased over the last five years.

The AP-Knowledge Networks Poll on football was conducted Jan. 21-26. It involved online interviews with 1,125 adults, including 482 who consider themselves fans of professional football. The survey has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.6 percentage points for all adults, 5.5 percentage points for football fans.

Respondents to the survey were first selected randomly using phone or mail survey methods. People selected who didn’t otherwise have access to the Internet were provided with the ability to access it at no cost to them.

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AP Deputy Director of Polling Jennifer Agiesta contributed to this report.

SPORTS – Steelers LB Harrison turns up criticism of NFL (AP)


James Harrison


AP – FILE – This Oct. 17, 2010, file photo, Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker James Harrison lines up against …

FORT WORTH, Texas – James Harrison took a few more hard shots at the NFL.

A day after sarcastically suggesting a pillow could be used to soften blows he delivers to opposing players, the Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker called the league’s talk about wanting to protect players “a show.”

Harrison said before Wednesday’s practice leading up to Sunday’s Super Bowl that the owners’ push for an 18-game regular season and the possibility of a lockout prove the NFL is more interested in maximizing revenue than the health of its players.

“It’s not about player safety,” Harrison said. “It’s about them making money.”

Among key issues the NFL and union are expected to discuss over the next several weeks include the league’s push to extend the regular season from 16 games to 18; a rookie wage scale; benefits for retired players; and the owners wanting players to cede an additional $ 1 billion of the gross revenues up front.

“I don’t think it’s a good thing if you’re so worried about player safety,” Harrison said of an 18-game season, calling it “crazy.”

“You don’t go and lock your players out and take away the health insurance from people that have wives and kids on the way,” he added. “You lock us out and health insurance is gone.”

The NFL declined comment on Harrison’s remarks.

Steelers owner Dan Rooney recently came out against the idea of an extended season, something Harrison believes will hurt the owners’ cause.

“He’s the main voice,” Harrison said. “He’s the most respected voice, I believe. He came out and said it, exactly what it was, what it is. It’s about them making money. It’s not about us, them talking about player safety. They’re doing all this fine stuff. That’s a show, something to give the people to look at.”

Harrison was fined $ 100,000 by the NFL for illegal hits this season, and even briefly went so far as to threaten to retire because he said it was too difficult to adjust to the new way rules were being enforced.

“It was a hotheaded decision,” he said. “You can sit back and look at it for what it was. And when I sat back, there are some things you can’t control and everything happens for a reason. Looking at the fines, I feel most of them were not justified. Seems like they needed somebody to be the poster guy for their rule and I seemed to be the biggest name out there at the time. So, they chose me, I guess.”

The league and the players’ union face an early March deadline for trying to negotiate a new labor agreement.

“It’s no doubt to me,” said Harrison, whose Steelers play the Green Bay Packers for the NFL championship Sunday. “I believe they’re going to lock us out.”

And, Harrison insisted it won’t just affect the players and teams.

“I think if they lock us out, they’ll lose a lot of fans,” he said. “To be honest, it’s not going to kill us. It’s going to kill those people that rely on that year-in and year-out seasonal income, those bars and restaurants, mom-and-pop shops.”

At Tuesday’s media day at Cowboys Stadium, Harrison said he feels as if the league was “looking for a poster boy” when it started fining him.

In a deadpan delivery, Harrison said: “I don’t want to hurt nobody. I don’t want to step on nobody’s foot or hurt their toe. I don’t want to have no dirt or none of this rubber on this field fly into their eye and make their eye hurt.

“I just want to tackle them softly on the ground and, if y’all can, we’ll lay a pillow down where I’m going to tackle them, so they don’t hit the ground too hard, Mr. Goodell.”

Asked on Wednesday whether he’s worried about the dangers of concussions from violent hits on the field, he was defiant, as expected.

“My style of play is how you’re supposed to play the game,” he said. “It’s no more dangerous for me than it is for anybody else. That’s part of the risk you take. There’s risks with everything you do. You’ve just got to try and minimize the risk and if something happens, it happens. Everything happens for a reason. Like everything else that you can’t control, it’s in God’s hands. … Since I was knee-high to a grasshopper, that’s how you play the game.”

Someone wondered if the league might be trying to eliminate the violent hits Harrison has become known for.

“If you want to get it totally out of the game, put flags on us,” he said. “We’ll tag off and pull flags off each other and we’ll see how popular the game is then and how many people come to watch it.”

Speaking of watching, Harrison isn’t concerned that officials will be following his every move — and hard hit.

“If I’m worried about officiating, I’m not going to be able to focus on what I do,” he said. “I’ll just play the game out and if they make calls that are questionable, it’s just something you’ve got to live with.”

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AP Sports Writers Jim Litke and Howard Fendrich contributed to this report.

SPORTS – Super Bowl QBs tough to tackle in different ways (AP)


Ben Roethlisberger, Byron Leftwich


AP – Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger (7) stretches next to Byron Leftwich, left, during …

ARLINGTON, Texas – Dropping back to pass, eyes aimed downfield, Pittsburgh’s Ben Roethlisberger seems to have radar scanning the area around him.

Without even looking, he knows when defenders are closing in and from which direction. Once he “feels” their presence, Roethlisberger takes off — not sprinting, more like getting out of their way. He buys enough time to complete a pass or simply avoid a sack. Even if someone hits him, he’s so big that defenders tend to bounce off.

Green Bay’s Aaron Rodgers relies on “feel,” too. But when his intuition tells him to get moving, he’s looking for somewhere to go.

Swift and agile, Rodgers turns into a running back in the open field. He’ll juke would-be tacklers and set up blocks that might spring him for a first down or a touchdown, lunging toward contact if it means gaining that pivotal final yard or two.

When it comes to scrambling, the only similarity between these Super Bowl quarterbacks is that they’re very good at how they do it. It’s such a big part of their success that the championship could be decided Sunday by which defense does the best job of putting the quarterback on the ground once he gets moving.

“Both defenses have their work cut out for them trying to get to those guys,” said John Kuhn, a running back who broke into the NFL taking handoffs from Roethlisberger, but now plays behind Rodgers.

“When defenses get to them, it’s not over. They’ve got to get them to the ground. Against Atlanta, Aaron made like four or five guys miss in the pocket on several different plays. He’s phenomenal. He’s playing at a high level right now. But with Ben, you can’t tackle him. He’s a beast back there. I think people underestimate how big and strong he actually is.”

Mobile quarterbacks were commonplace in Super Bowls during the 1970s, the heyday of Roger Staubach, Fran Tarkenton, Bob Griese and a young Terry Bradshaw. But since the 1980s, it’s hard to find a single matchup that pits a pair of guys who scoot around as well as these two.

The 6-foot-2, 225-pound Rodgers ran for 23.8 yards per game this season, the most among all quarterbacks other than Michael Vick. It’s almost double Rodgers’ number for 2008, his first season as a full-time starter.

That’s an interesting change because as quarterbacks mature and get more comfortable, they tend to understand the intricacies of the passing game more and settle into the pocket. They no longer have “happy feet.”

Rodgers runs about as often as he did in ‘08. The spike in production shows that he’s become a smarter runner. Another improvement is understanding how to use his feet to avoid sacks. He took 50 last season, 31 this season.

“I think I’ve done a better job over the last season of knowing when to get out and when to hang in there,” Rodgers said. “Now, when you’re playing a team like Pittsburgh, I think your reactions have to be on point, your decision-making needs to be quick and instinctive. But every time I see an opportunity to extend the play and get outside the pocket, that’s definitely what I’m going to look for.”

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.”

SPORTS – Belichick wins 3rd Coach of Year honor (AP)


Bill Belichick


AP – FILE – In this Nov. 25, 2010, file photo, New England Patriots head coach Bill Belichick speaks into …

DALLAS – Bill Belichick is closing in on Don Shula.

The New England coach Bill Belichick won The Associated Press 2010 NFL Coach of the Year award on Wednesday, the third time Belichick has earned the honor. Belichick, who also won in 2003 and 2007, now trails only Don Shula, a four-time winner of the award.

For leading the Patriots to a 14-2 record, the best in the league, Belichick received 30 votes from a nationwide panel of 50 media members who regularly cover the NFL. That easily beat Raheem Morris, who led a turnaround in Tampa Bay and got 11 1/2 votes.

Belichick has overseen a transition in New England to a younger team, particularly on defense. Of course, he still has Offensive Player of the Year Tom Brady at quarterback.

“I will say the foundation of the Patriots organization, which starts with Mr. Kraft and Coach Belichick, has not changed since the day I arrived,” Brady said. “They have and will always do what is in the best interest of the team, and they will continue to find selfless players that love to work hard, compete and strive to be the best they can possibly be.”

Then Belichick makes them even better.

“He really stays on top of us,” wide receiver Wes Welker said. “He makes sure that we’re not getting overconfident or believing in the noise outside the locker room and understand that every game’s tough in the NFL.”

Belichick’s record with the Patriots is 126-50, plus a 14-5 mark in the postseason, with losses in the last three tries with teams that went a collective 40-8. His career winning percentage of .716 ranks eighth, tied with Hall of Famer Paul Brown, and no other coach has four 14-victory regular seasons.

This might have been Belichick’s most impressive work as the Patriots retooled much of the roster, yet had a dominant regular season in which they won their final eight games.

“When you have so many things that go into a team, so many things that go into what’s happened over the last decade, which ones do you point to?” he said. “You can make an argument for a lot of different things. In the end, it’s each individual team and that collection of players that particular year and that particular time during the season or whatever it is, that was able to go out there and be successful.”

Belichick basically rebuilt the defense, particularly the secondary, where rookie Devin McCourty made the Pro Bowl.

He showed confidence in BenJarvus Green-Ellis as his main running back, and Green-Ellis rushed for 1,008 yards. Belichick claimed Danny Woodhead when the Jets cut him, and Woodhead was a dynamic piece of the offense and special teams.

Then there was the Randy Moss case.

Eager to remove the recalcitrant receiver, Belichick stole a third-round draft pick from Minnesota in early October for Moss, who lasted a month with the Vikings, then was cut.

Meanwhile, Belichick traded with Seattle for Deion Branch, the 2005 Super Bowl MVP with the Patriots. Branch had a rebirth in New England, making the Moss deal look even better.

And making the Patriots a better team — typical of what Belichick has done since getting his second chance to be a head coach. The first was a flop with the Browns, where he went 37-45 in four seasons and alienated nearly everyone in Cleveland.

“When I chose him, people at the league office, people in this town, sent me tapes of him in Cleveland and said, `You don’t want to hire this guy,’ ” Patriots owner Robert Kraft said. “And, remember, he went 5-11 (in his first year with Patriots) and we gave up a No. 1 draft choice (to the Jets to get him). People thought we were nuts.

“So I think that probably was one of the best decisions I’ve made in football.”

Belichick is a disciple of Bill Parcells, the only other New England coach to win the award.

Morris lifted the Buccaneers from 3-13 in his first season to 10-6 in 2010 and in playoffs contention until the final week. He did it with the league’s youngest roster.

“We put a lot on his plate,” Bucs general manager Mark Dominik said, “and he has absolutely handled it all. We all see where this ship is headed.”

Also receiving votes were Kansas City’s Todd Haley (4 1/2), whose team went 11-5 and won the AFC West; and four coaches with one selection apiece: Atlanta’s Mike Smith, Philadelphia’s Andy Reid, Chicago’s Lovie Smith, and St. Louis’ Steve Spagnuolo.

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AP Sports Writer Howard Ulman in Boston contributed to this story.

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SPORTS – Harrison: Use a pillow to soften hits (AP)


James Harrison


AP – FILE – This Oct. 17, 2010, file photo, Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker James Harrison lines up against …

ARLINGTON, Texas – James Harrison has sarcastically offered a solution to NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell for their disagreement over hard hits: Use a pillow to soften the blows delivered by the Steelers linebacker.

Harrison was fined 0,000 for illegal hits this season by the NFL. He says he feels as if the league was “looking for a poster boy.”

In a deadpan delivery at Tuesday’s media day, Harrison said: “I don’t want to hurt nobody. I don’t want to step on nobody’s foot or hurt their toe. I don’t want to have no dirt or none of this rubber on this field fly into their eye and make their eye hurt.

“I just want to tackle them softly on the ground and, if y’all can, we’ll lay a pillow down where I’m going to tackle them, so they don’t hit the ground too hard, Mr. Goodell.”

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SPORTS – Brady wins top offensive player award (AP)


OFF PLAYER OF YR


AP – Graphic profiles AP NFL Offensive Player of the Year; includes voting

DALLAS – Tom Brady tore up the NFL with his precision passing and dynamic guidance of the New England Patriots’ offense.

That was in 2007, when he ran away with The Associated Press NFL Offensive Player of the Year award.

Ditto for 2010.

Brady won the honor Tuesday for the second time in four seasons. The record-setting quarterback, who had a string of 355 passes without being intercepted, received 21 votes from a nationwide panel of 50 media members who regularly cover the league. He easily beat Philadelphia quarterback Michael Vick, who got 11 votes.

“To me it comes down to the mental toughness and determination of the players and coaches,” Brady said.

A unanimous choice for the All-Pro team, Brady threw for 36 touchdowns while being picked off just four times. When he won the award in 2007, Brady set an NFL mark with 50 touchdowns passes as New England went undefeated in the regular season.

Oddly, the Patriots did not win the championship in either of those seasons, but have won it three other times.

Brady doesn’t sense much difference in the guy who took New England to a 16-0 mark back then and a league-best 14-2 this season.

“I feel our team really grew together over the course of the season. It was a privilege to be a part of this team,” he said. “My only disappointment is that we couldn’t take advantage of our opportunity in the playoffs, but hopefully we learn from that and use it as motivation toward accomplishing our goals for next season.”

What Brady is doing isn’t much different: He’s winning, and he’s piling up dominant stats.

Brady led the NFL with a 111 passer rating. His 65.9 completion percentage was second to Philip Rivers of San Diego — by .1. Nobody came close to his touchdown to interception differential: nearest was Matt Cassel at plus-20.

When not crediting everyone else, from coach Bill Belichick to his teammates to wife Giselle or his hair stylist, Brady explains his success as a matter of experience.

“I’ve been here for a while, so I’ve seen our offense evolve,” the 11-year veteran said. “We do some different things now than we’ve done in the past. Ultimately we’re still trying to do the same thing, which is be productive and win games.”

Receiver Deion Branch, the MVP of the 2005 Super Bowl who returned to the Patriots from Seattle in midseason, believes Brady gets his edge because he can be a nerd.

“Tom studies a lot,” Branch said late in the season. “We get the bulk of it in the meeting rooms with just the players when we sit down to go over the things that he’s been looking at. It carries over to the practice field as well. Tom is a dork when it comes to that, so I’m going to leave that alone, but Tom is a dork in that meeting room.”

A dork? Hardly a description often associated with a three-time champion quarterback married to a super model.

“Maybe, yeah,” Brady said. “I could see that, you know? I’m flattered.”

Also flattering: Brady is the only quarterback and the only active player to win the award twice.

Vick’s comeback season led him to the Pro Bowl. After missing two seasons while serving a federal sentence for dogfighting, then sitting as a backup for the Eagles last season, Vick has a sensational year. He finished fourth in passer rating with a career-best 100.2, had 21 TD passes and just six interceptions. Using his unequaled skills as a running QB, Vick rushed for 676 yards and nine TDs. The nearest quarterback in that area was Josh Freeman of Tampa Bay with 364 yards.

Also receiving votes were Houston running back Arian Foster with seven; Rivers with five; Atlanta receiver Roddy White, Green Bay quarterback Aaron Rodgers, and Philadelphia receiver DeSean Jackson with two each.

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SPORTS – Super Bowl week off to freezing start in Texas (AP)


Yvette Hamby braves freezing temperatures as she works to clear a path into Cowboys Stadium for media day for NFL football Super Bowl XLV Tuesday, Feb


AP – Yvette Hamby braves freezing temperatures as she works to clear a path into Cowboys Stadium for media …

FORT WORTH, Texas – Super Bowl week is too cold so far for “The Freezer.”

B.J. Raji, the 337-pound nose tackle for the Packers who’s drawn comparisons to former Bears standout William “The Fridge” Perry, made that clear Tuesday at media day.

“Too cold,” Raji said. “Feels like the AC is on.”

While the rest of the Dallas area slipped and slid through a miserable morning of ice, bone-chilling winds and light snow, the NFL stuck to its Super Bowl schedule. League spokesman Greg Aiello sent out a Twitter message saying media activities at Cowboys Stadium in suburban Arlington would go on as planned — and they did, with the roof thankfully closed high above the Packers, Pittsburgh Steelers and hundreds of reporters in town for Sunday’s game.

“The show goes on,” Aiello wrote. “Media day is on schedule. Drive carefully.”

The news was a little more tenuous for travelers: Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport was closed for about an hour due to the storm, and primary tenant American Airlines canceled 800 flights — about half its daily service.

The wintry blast of ice, blustery winds and plummeting temperatures also closed schools and snarled traffic. Walkways outside Cowboys Stadium in Arlington were a sheet of ice and a temporary building set up on the grounds had a hole in it, curtains flapping in the stiff wind.

The Packers might even practice indoors this week if the weather doesn’t improve — just like they do at home.

“It’s a little too cold for me,” linebacker Clay Matthews said. “Texas is supposed to be hot and humid. I was looking forward to that. I am a California guy.”

Then again, receiver Greg Jennings said it felt like home.

“We’re in Green Bay right now,” he said. “We’re the home team and we’re at home with this weather.”

The storm was expected to dump more than a foot of snow on parts of the Midwest, and it covered roads all over North Texas with layers of freezing rain. The commuting crowd was much lighter, though, because schools were closed and many people simply stayed home.

The Super Bowl next year is slated for Indianapolis and the year after in the open-air New Meadowlands Stadium in New Jersey, raising the possibility of more chilly stories in the week before the game.

Michael Morris, director of transportation for the North Central Texas Council of Governments, said sand trucks gave the “bad storm” everything they had to keep roads clear.

“We’ll see what the NFL thinks of our response,” he said. “I don’t think the question is we will never have a Super Bowl again in a town that has had weather or the potential for bad weather because I think they want to showcase the investment they’ve made in their stadiums. I think the judgment will be how was our response. And I’m proud of our response.”

The National Weather Service says freezing temperatures will stick around at least through Thursday. There’s a chance of light snow as late as Friday.

The forecast for Sunday is much better — highs in the 50s — but Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers didn’t want to take any chances. He said he hoped the roof of Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, the billion-dollar showplace of Jerry Jones, would be closed for the game. The NFL decided a long time ago that it will be.

“I’m hoping they put the top on Jerry World, and I think they will,” Rodgers said.

The National Weather Service advised Wisconsin travelers bound for Texas to wait until Wednesday evening, with up to 20 inches of snow forecast for the Milwaukee area.

Don Zuidmulder of Green Bay said he wasn’t worried about weather affecting his flight Thursday.

“As long as I have 18 hours I’m going to get there,” said Zuidmulder, 68, undaunted by the 950-mile trip. “I’ll crawl if I have to.”

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Associated Press writers Carrie Antlfinger in Milwaukee, Dinesh Ramde in Green Bay, Wis., Patrick Walters in Philadelphia and AP Sports Writers Eddie Pells, Barry Wilner and Dennis Waszak Jr. in Arlington, Texas, contributed to this report.

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SPORTS – Steelers arrive in playful mood (AP)


Mike Tomlin


AP – Pittsburgh Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin listens to a question during a news conference on Monday, …

FORT WORTH, Texas – The big rodeo is in town. It’s called the Super Bowl.

If Monday is a fair indication, this could be a wild week in Big D.

Video cameras and cowboy hats were in order for the Pittsburgh Steelers and Green Bay Packers when they arrived six days before they’ll face off for the NFL championship.

With dozens of fans chanting “Go Pack Go,” the Packers witnessed Super Bowl frenzy for the first time in 13 years. Many of the players carried video cameras or aimed their cell phones at the crowd to take pictures before heading to news conferences.

A few of them wore cowboy hats, but none went so far as Steelers veteran receiver Hines Ward. He took the “True Grit” route, decked out in black cowboy hat, black shirt, Texas-sized belt buckle and jeans.

“I’m in Dallas, Texas,” Ward said, smiling as if he’d just won the Super Bowl MVP trophy, something he did in the 2006 game. “I wanted to put on my whole cowboy outfit and enjoy it. No nerves.”

Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger held his mobile phone high, taking photos of the six-deep pack of reporters at his podium.

“Just taking it in stride, enjoying this opportunity regardless of what comes or how it comes,” Roethlisberger said. “Take it all in.”

Taking it all in were the big guys who block for him. They paid tribute to tackle Flozell Adams, who spent a dozen seasons as a Dallas Cowboy before joining this Pittsburgh team, by wearing his No. 76 Michigan State shirt as they deplaned.

“It’s special to bring back the throwbacks, for all the guys to wear them,” Adams said. “They’re all still walking around with them on. … I’m grateful for it.”

There were plenty of fans in black and gold outside the Steelers’ hotel, some carrying the obligatory Terrible Towels. But they were far outnumbered at the Packers’ hotel in Irving a few hours later when the NFC champions pulled in.

Maybe that has something to do with Pittsburgh making its third Super Bowl appearance in six years. Not that the players are blase about it.

“It’s always exciting for the opportunity to close up the season by playing in the Super Bowl,” Roethlisberger said. “I don’t think you ever get tired of this, so take as much video and pictures as you can.”

Clearly, the first day of Super Bowl week was not about blocking blitzers or sidestepping tacklers. Confronting anything more pressurized than answering questions from the media was not a consideration.

“It definitely sets in today, but guys that have been here before, they understand what it’s going to be like,” said linebacker James Farrior, the most experienced Steeler with 14 years in the NFL. “We just tell the young guys, `Just do what we do. Just take it all in. Enjoy the moment. Enjoy this time.’ It’s supposed to be a fun time for everybody this whole week.”

Ward got a kick out of how some teammates who haven’t traveled this far into the postseason handled the trip from Steel City to Big D.

“I think a lot of guys kind of overpacked, really not knowing,” he said. “They were just excited to be here. For a lot of guys, some anxiety. When you get here, you get the police escort and the helicopter following you and all the guys have the cameras and whatnot. It’s still fun to see the younger guys and also fun to see the veteran guys. I still enjoy it.”

With neither team practicing until Wednesday, there’s one more day of frivolity: media day. This should send a jolt — or at least a shudder — through the Packers, who have just three players with Super Bowl experience. Charles Woodson and Ryan Pickett, both lost in the big game, and John Kuhn was on the 2008 Steelers’ practice squad and watched them win from the sideline.

“Maybe ignorance is bliss for us,” quarterback Aaron Rodgers cracked.

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SPORTS – Ohio State a unanimous No. 1 in AP poll (AP)

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