Ravens, Steelers insist no rivalry in NFL compares


Associated Press

PITTSBURGH

The Ravens-Steelers rivalry is short in length, starting only in 1996. The memories it has already created seem inordinately long, especially in the minds of those who played in compelling games that were tight and tense, absorbed hits that hurt for weeks and sustained losses that ended seasons.

The Ravens ridiculing Plaxico Burress as being “Plexiglas.” Joey Porter leveling a near-defenseless Todd Heap. Troy Polamalu running through half of Baltimore on an interception that sent the Steelers to the Super Bowl. Alleged bounties posted by the Ravens against the much-despised Hines Ward. Tons of trash talking. Ray Lewis ending Rashard Mendenhall’s rookie season with a hit that be could be heard in Heinz Field’s upper deck.

Pick any adjective: nasty, spiteful, hateful — they all apply. With apologies to the Packers-Bears, Cowboys-Redskins and Giants-Eagles, Steelers coach Mike Tomlin calls it the NFL’s best rivalry, if only because all its games are the same. They’re close and physical beyond compare, with neither team straying from a game plan that demands ultra-tight defense and a strong running game.

It’s too early for a must-win game in the AFC North, but today’s Ravens-Steelers matchup at Heinz Field is as close as it gets during the first weekend of October.

“There’s nothing like it,” said Lewis, the Ravens linebacker and longtime Pittsburgh antagonist. “There’s nothing like when they come here and we go there. We know what we’re going to get and neither side is going to disappoint each other.”

The Steelers respect the Ravens because they’re so much like them; the Ravens respect the Steelers because there never are easy games against them. Baltimore’s personality is reflected by Ray Lewis’ relentlessness, the Steelers’ by James Harrison’s nastiness.

“I hate the Ravens more than I do anybody else,” Harrison said. “I hate losing to anybody, but to them it’s a lot worse.”

The Steelers (3-0) are unexpectedly thriving rather than surviving during quarterback Ben Roethlisberger’s four-game suspension, and only the Ravens can prevent them from going undefeated during a stretch that could have derailed their season.

The Ravens (2-1) risk falling two games out of the division lead only a month into the season by losing, and with Pittsburgh about to regain its most skilled offensive player.

Still, the pregame verbiage was unusually tame, the taunting minimal, with both sides repeatedly citing the same word: respect. Lewis even acknowledged that he and Roethlisberger are regular texting buddies, a rival-befriends-enemy concept that likely surprised fans on both sides.

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