primetime said:
Jackson's pass intereference was LEGIT. watch the play again and again and again. the key is the defensive back's feet. how can the defensive back "hop backwards" if he wasnt pushed. you do not "hop" backwards naturally when you are playing corner in the endzone. look at Jackson's arm. he extended it to get separation. they key is the defender's feet. the call is LEGIT.
It's called acting, and every NFL player who can do it to get a flag thrown when they know they have been burned will try and pull it off. Kickers, punters especially and yes QB's if they get a roughing call in their favor. And yes especially wide receivers and defensive backs. Remember the famous Lynn Swann tripping call in Super Bowl 13? Trust me, the defensive back in this play knew EXACTLY what he was doing. He got his flag to prove it.
This wasn't just a simple play and one you throw away. It was a touchdown play - in the biggest game of the year. It completely demoralized and crushed the Seahawks and took away any momentum they might have had at that point. It wasn't 'just another play'.
Every Steeler player to date has avoided the issue of the calls and hidden behind the refs did what they had to do. That alone says something. On the other hand, Seattle and their coaches looked like immature children blaming the refs for the loss. Fans? Yes we can do it and get by with it. But players and coaches look totally unprofessional and immature doing it.
The biggest thing I give credit to Pittsburgh for is yes, they did plain out defeat the mighty Colts. No if, ands, or buts about it, the Colts got their butts kicked that day.
They purposely took out Palmer and everyone knows it. It almost assured them a spot to play the Colts. Say what you about it takes a team to win, offense, defense, blah blah, blah.. we all know that. But most ANY TEAM in the league will crumble without their starting QB. That's a freebie. There's a reason he's the starting QB and the other guy sits the bench. The win over Seattle was marred with murky calls and was simply an ugly Super Bowl. Nowhere near the caliber of past Super Bowls involving the Steelers.
And yes, to this day I STILL say someone or some organization paid off O'Donnel. Either that or he thought Larry Brown was wearing a black jersey that day, considering that last interception he made there wasn't a Steeler jersey within 15 yards.
And really I don't give a crap about the dirty Steelers, the Seattle Seagulls or whatever crappy bird they are, the Bungals or the Manning horseshoes. I just want to see a good, clean game with a decisive winner. But in any sport that's pretty hard to find these days.