If you watched either of yesterday’s monster match-ups, you were far from disappointed!
Super Bowl XLIII (43) between the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Arizona Cardinals was an absolute nail-biter down to the wire. . .

Here’s a quick recap for those of you who missed it.
1st Quarter:
The Steelers took quick control marching down the field on their first possession of the game. The drive was capped by a Ben Roethlisberger scramble into the endzone. . .almost. Ken Whisenhunt, the Cardinals, challenged the third down play as it appeared Roethlisberger’s knee was down right before the goal line and the challenge was upheld. The Steelers had to settle for a field goal.
Steelers leads: 3-0
2nd Quarter:
The Steelers was once again worked the field and capped their drive with a Gary Russell 1-yard TD plunge.
Steelers lead: 10-0
The Cardinals starting to feel the pressure a bit, having struggled offensively up to this point, made it down field and topped the drive off by an amazing grab by Ben Patrick in the end zone. A perfectly thrown ball, Patrick leaped high (as high as a tight end can leap that is), and snatched the ball up over his head.
Steelers lead: 10-7
After the Cardinals defense halted the Steelers offensive, they received the ball with enough time left to go up before halftime. With less than 5 yards to go and only 18 seconds left in the half, the Cardinals were looking for blood. Kurt Warner threw the ball looking for a pass on a short route, but Steeler James Harrison intercepted it in the endzone. . .what happened next was Super Bowl history. Harrison bumbled, rumbled, and stumbled 100 yards coast to coast and scored on the other end with no time left on the clock. Not only was it the longest play in Super Bowl history, but it stopped the Cardinals from taking the lead and secured the Steelers the lead and momentum going into halftime.
Steelers lead: 17-7
3rd Quarter:
The Cardinals, for all their struggles and penalties in the first half, had at least realized they could pick at the middle of the field and move the ball at 6-12 yards a pop. If they were to make it, this strategy would have to continue, but it didn’t. They found some room, but again, penalties killed them. The only real scoring action was another Steeler field goal.
Steelers lead: 20-7
4th Quarter:
Backed into a corner, Kurt Warner knew it was time to mount a serious attack. If anyone could do it, he’d be one of them. The Cardinals with only one quarter left drove nearly the length of the field in less than 3 minutes, and topped the drive off with a Larry Fitzgerald acrobatic, leaping catch. Fitzgerald straight up owned Ike Taylor on this play simply jumping over him and grabbing the ball with seemingly little effort even though Taylor was in his grill. The Cardinals were back in it.
Steelers: 20-14
What started to happen next was the makings of a tension filled game - perfect Super Bowl drama. After a tremendous Cardinal punt down to the Steeler the one-yard line, they had the Steelers pinned with 3 and 20 or so to go. Roethlisberger, who had been slipping away from the Cardinals D-line all game, did it yet again and threw down field to Santonio Holmes for a critical first down, crushing the Cardinals’ hopes. . .except - FLAG! Turns out a Steeler offensive lineman was called for holding in the endzone, which automatically resulted in a safety. The Cardinals got 2 points plus the ball back!
Steelers lead: 20-16
Once again, the Cardinals under Warner’s composure maintained a steady attack, until finally, Larry Fitzgerald, who truly had seen little action up to this point barring the TD catch minutes earlier, broke free on a slant for a 64 yard rumble. Fitzgerald simply blazzed past defenders and the Cardinals were poised for the greatest Super Bowl comeback in a very long time.
Cardinals lead: 20-23
The only problem was there was still enough time on the clock for Ben Roethlisberger to mount a comeback drive, which he had done 6 times during the regular season. Sure enough the Steelers moved the ball steadily, and Santonio Holmes caught two critical passes: one was a forty yard gainer to put them on the Cardinals six yard line, and the other, after having missed a catchable touchdown in the back of the endzone, made a tremendous leaping grab and managed to keep his toes in while falling in the opposite corner of the endzone as the previous play. It was an incredible grab, and shattered the Cardinals comeback. . .but there was still 35 seconds left or so on the clock. Enough for a deadly Cardinal passing attack to make a final shot.
Steelers lead: 27-23
The final drive was crucial. Warner and company made several more quick first downs. With about 18 seconds left, Warner scrambled around in the pocket to throw a deep pass. As he cocked back, a Steeler defender knocked the ball lose and the Steelers recovered. There was no review of the play, which could have gone either way. The play stood and the Steelers ended Super Bowl 43 with a kneel down. The Steelers then became the franchise with the most Super Bowl championships in NFL history. . .
Complete Super Bowl highlights can be seen here
Here are some key points:
1. Roethlisberger proved his slipperiness and his ability to make big plays and comebacks when they count. Two Super Bowls already - he only has to maintain a solid career from on out and he has a great shot at the Hall of Fame.
2. The game was not lost because of the Arizona defensive live. They didn’t have a lot of sacks but the pressure was constantly on the Roethlisberger, including two crucial goal line stands. Cardinals secondary gave this game up.
3. The Pittsburgh offensive line deserves credit too - giving Big Ben just enough time to make the needed throws.
4. Kurt Warner, sorry you didn’t win it all bud, but you now have the top three best passing games in Super Bowl history. Also, you’ve been to 3 Super Bowls. You beat the Titans yourself with great passing, you lost to the Patriots but that was not your fault (Patriots made a comeback so charge the St. Louis Rams defense), and you lost to the Steelers but no fault of your own, again, it was the Cardinals defense. So, say what you will, but Kurt Warner still has a very respectable chance at the Hall of Fame, and he deserves to get in.
5. Its rare that a wide receiver gets the Super Bowl MVP as it usually goes to the quarterback, but Santonio Holmes deserves it. His four catches on the winning drive were incredible. Though James Harrison may feel a little short-changed for his incredible play, which could have also granted him MVP status.
In the end, the Steelers prevailed. You can say they played great, but you can also say they played poorly (even though a win is a win). Regardless, they are now a titan of franchises, and on the flipside, the Cardinals have plenty to hold their head up high about.
2009 Australian Open - Nadal vs Federer

Those who watched Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer play in the Australian Open finale weren’t disappointed either. . .
Already the best match-up currently in tennis, these two duked it out once again, going the distance in their slug match of 4 hours, 22 minutes.
Ultimately though, it was Nadal who prevailed: 7-5, 3-6, 7-6 (3), 3-6, 6-2
“Nadal has now won five of the seven Grand Slam finals he’s played against Federer and is 13-6 overall against the Swiss star.”
But, make no mistakes. . .Nadal and Federer are quickly becoming a phrase of rivalry in tennis like Sampras and Agassi. . .And considering Federer is only 27 and Nadal is even younger at 22, these two have several good years competition left for the world to witness.
Here are some of the highlights from this one - an emotional match all around.
So whatever match you watched, perhaps both, hopefully at least one, you once again witnessed the awe of the human body at work. Its an incredible thing, which has created incredible memories in sports history. . .These two match ups proved the same.
- IgniteTheMind
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