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by Ramona Dye
In a season full of bad play calls and injuries, The Cleveland Browns finall beat our Steelers after a 12 game losing streak.
Joshua Cribbs and the Browns defense were able to stop our Steelers. Cribbs had 87 yards rushing, 104 yards on kickoff and punt returns and 9 yards receiving.
The Browns defense brought down Roethlisberger eight times, including five times on third down.
The game was over when Ben Roethlisberger's pass on fourth and 6 was batted away with 1:48 remaining and our Steelers trailing 13-6. The Browns were then able to run out nearly the rest of the clock en route to an upset win.
Our Steelers have lost five straight games for the first time since 2003.
As always, here We Go!!!
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Snoop Dogg, the pot-smoking, one-time famous rapper and a self-proclaimed die-hard Steelers fan was seen in "da" house at Ravens camp on Thursday watching from the sidelines.
At the end of practice, Snoop went on the field to leading the Ravens in a chant borrowed from long-time friend Ray Lewis, called "Dogs in the House".
After posing for pictures with several Ravens, Ray Lewis introduced the turncoat Snoop to reporters.
"We got a new coach out here today. We called him in last night. We been good friends for a long time, and now we decided try to work together," said Lewis.
Snoop Dogg told reporters, "This like heavyweight boxing match whenever I see them play, and I wanted to come see it up close and personal, live and in high definition. I wanted to look at them and see what it feels like before they take battle. It's real cool to come out and see them go to war."
Gushing over Steelers nemesis and misdemeanor obstuction of justice convicted criminal Ray Lewis, Snoop said "Ray Lewis is one of the greatest linebackers ever to play the game. A personal friend of mine. I love his story, I love his hustle, I love his attitude, his enthusiasm, his whole git-down."
Making sure to kick dirt into the faces of us in Steelers Nation, Snoop went further and said, "It's inspirational to see how he can inspire his whole team, how he can turn the level up and how they go out there and just become dogs. They're just nasty on the field. Ah, I love it."
The only thing I am seeing as a Steelers fan is the Dogg bite in the face. Weird, I thought Snoop Dogg was an avid Steelers fan. After all, he showed up at our last two Super Bowls. Here you can see The Dogg sporting our Steelers Black 'n Gold.


For all that has been said about Snoop Dogg being a fan of the Pittsburgh Steelers, Snoop Dogg is nothing more than a bandwagoner who jumps from one winning team to another.
Check out Snoop Dogg backing the Cheatriots and sporting other NFL team colors.



Was Snoop at Ravens' camp to support his friend Ray Lewis or was Snoop there playing spygate for AFC North rival Pittsburgh Steelers?
In all fairness, Mr. Dogg and Mr. Lewis have something in common: "legal issues".
What are Snoop Doggs true colors? Maybe he is showing them for what they truly are!
What do you say?
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By Ramona Dye
The 2009-10 season hasn't started yet and already the Steelers-Ravens rivalry has heated up.
Check out Terrell Suggs heading into training camp wearing an "I hate the Steelers" shirt.
Suggs saw the shirt in a store and thought, "oh, that's nice for camp." My thoughts? Yeah, we already know how you want to be a Steelers, too bad!
Naturally, Suggs, his teammates and Ravens fans would hate our Steelers and be jealous as well. We have had more success, both historical and recent, including our three wins over the Ratbirds last year than any other franchise in the NFL since 1970. In short, our Steelers set the standard for franchises in the NFL. Most importantly, we don't make our home in Baltimore.
The feelings of dislike are mutual in Pittsburgh. It's not that our Steelers and us of the Steelers Nation don't hate the Ravens, but some of you may get the sense that Baltimoreans have much stronger feelings about the rivalry. Could it be Ravens' fans have a deep-seated jealousy over a losing record to our wonderful Black n Gold (Steelers 18 Ravens 10 out of 28 games)?
NO! Steelers fans have the same hatred for the Ratbirds of Baltimore and those gay fans who wear purple and black. The rivalry comes from defensive battles often that result with injured players on both sides as well as fights on the. Some say that the rivalry between the Ravens and our Steelers is the best in the NFL.
Seeing Suggs wearing that t-shirt, we can see that players take seriously this great rivalry. It's no secret that the players from these teams don't like each other. Even the soft spoken, always smiling Hines Ward has been vocal about his hate for the Ravens, especially after several Ratbird players hinted about bounties on the heads of certain Steelers.
It's a dirty, nasty, sometimes violent rivalry. That's what's so great about it.The truth is it's the most heated rivalry in sports. Here's why.
Suggs t-shirt is a topic of discussion among players at Steelers camp as well. Here's what some of our Steelers have said.
I'd hate us too. How about that? It doesn't matter. That's not the only team we play. We know every game is going to be a physical game. We know they're going to play very good, sound football. We're going to try to do the same. If that's the only two games we win this year, we won't be a very good football team. -- Ryan Clark.
I don't even pay attention to it. That just goes to show that they're worried about us. We're worried about our first game and that's the Tennessee Titans. We're not worried about playing Baltimore right now. When you focus on teams down the road, that's when the teams you're playing right ahead knock you around. --LaMarr Woodley
Last season, our Steelers won all three games against the Ratbirds, including the AFC championship game at Heinz Field.
Most NFL fans do not understand our rivalry. However, if you are a part of it you understand it, If you don't most like you are wishing you were a part of it. Maybe though, you are a fan of the cheating Patriots.
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By Ramona Dye
Ravens fans and coaches seem to be pleased with their quarterback Joe Flacco and his play last season as a rookie. With the 2009 season upon us, Ravens fans expect an increase in their passing game.
Can Flacco become a sophomore sensation like Ben when he led our Steelers to a wild card playoff and Super Bowl win? pffft!
Sure, Flacco has the arm to air the ball out. However, lacking speedy receivers, Flacco must become a better at throwing shorter pass routes. Yet, if something were to happen to Joe Flacco such as "sophmore slump" then he Ravens would be forced to play unknown back-up Troy Smith.
Receivers, Where Are You?
Earlier this month, wide receiver Derrick Mason surprised and shocked Ravensland with his unexpected retirement. To replace Mason, the Ravens signed 30-year old Drew Bennet to a 1-year deal worth $745,000. Two days later, Bennet retired blaming a nagging injury.
Bennett's decision not to play and Mason's retirement have left the Ravens lacking a threat at wide out .
The Ravens fans and coaches believe Mason's retirement is a ploy to get more money since Mason had asked to renegotiate his deal earlier this offseason.
Now that the Raven's receiving core is looking thin, the Ravens may be setting sights on Broncos' receiver Brandon Marshall. NFL sources say the Ravens might try to trade for the disgruntled Denver Broncos receiver, if veteran Derrick Mason doesn't return to the fold from his sudden retirement.
The Ravens have dire need for a real receiver. The Ravens slipped by last season with Mason and Mark Clayton because their running game was good and their #2 NFL ranked defense. Now they must get a receiver for Flacco ball to before the end of the Ray Lewis Era.
Looking back at Ravens' team history, they are not likely to make the deal for Marshall. GM Ozzie Newsome does not like to give up high draft picks, not to mention the Ravens should be a little more concerned with Marshall's history of off-field problems and the amount of money they would have to come across with to satisfy a Marshall contract signing.
Ravens Running Game
Already deep with running backs, the Ravens drafted running back Cedric Peerman of Virginia known as a special teams stand-out.
Ravens Defense, Never More?
Along with defensive coordinator Rex Ryan, the Ravens lost play-making safety Jim Leonhard and linebacker Bart Scott to the New York Jets through free agency. Ryan becomes the latest head coach in New York.
Ryan joined the Ravens as a defensive line coach in 1999, earning a Super Bowl XXXV ring with the 2000 team. He was promoted to defensive coordinator in 2005.
Can Greg Mattison, the newly hired defensive coordinator, make the jump from college to NFL play? Most of us Steelers' fans have our doubts as to how well this replacement can be after fighting Ryan's defense twice a year.
The Ravens have acquired Tavares Gooden. Although Gooden has received the most publicity for filling the starting role of departed Bart Scott, Jameel McClain, the last season back-up to Scott, figures to be a key contributor. An undrafted rookie last year, McClain beat the odds and made the fifty-three-man roster as a special teams contributor. He played his way into spot pass rushing duty on defense, and ended up with two and a half sacks and two safeties.
One of the the Ravens' best pass rushers, Terrell Suggs has been still absent from off-season workouts as the Ravens try to work out a long-term contract with him before the season begins. No doubt that Suggs will report to the team as soon as he has a new deal. How much second-round draft pick Paul Kruger can offer the rush?
Defensive tackle Haloti Ngata didn't attend any voluntary OTAs until last Wednesday. There might be a little rust on Ngata as he gets back into shape.
Baltimore started the 2008 season with Dawan Landry at safety opposite Ed Reed, not the little-known Leonhard. Landry took a crushing shot to the top of his helmet in Week Two and had to be removed from the field due to a spinal cord concussion. Landry missed the rest of the 2008-09 season.
Landry will be back in his starting position and playing with confidence. Landry's size and hitting ability lets him help against the run and take on tight ends in coverage, thus allowing Ed Reed to roam the field like a center fielder.
Aside from Domonique Foxworth, the Ravens top cornerbacks have not been able to practice.
All in all, Greg Mattison's performance as he steps into the shoes of Ryan as the Ravens defensive coordinator will be under intense scrutiny throughout the season.
Should Ravens fans be worried? Can Mattison get the respect of his players like Rex Ryan had?
Our Steelers do not face the Ravens until late in the season -- November 29 and December 27. By then the AFC North title could be on the line.
Stay tuned as I track what happens with the Ravens in the build up to November.
As always, Here We Go!!!
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by Ramona Dye
Division Rivalries are born of experience. Our Steelers, the Browns, Bengals and Ravens face each other two times a season in pursuit of the AFC North title. Fans, Players and coaches draw on the memories of past games as the look forward to each game against their rivals.
Every game adds another chapter to the rivalry. Heart breaking losses, last minute drives, trash-talking, bone crushing hits, fights on the field -- all these things factor into another reason to hate your rival.
While the Browns-Steelers rivalry is the only AFC North rivalry that predates the AFC Central, two old AFC Central rivals deserve mention -- Houston Oilers and the Jacksonville Jaguars.
The Houston Oilers were one of the AFL's founding franchises. In 1970, they joined the AFC Central along with the Steelers, Browns, and Bengals, and soon developed heated rivalries with all three (especially our Steelers).
Known as the "House of Pain," the Houston Astrodome became one of the toughest places in the NFL to play for any road team.
During the 1979-1980 AFC Championship game, our Steelers faced the Oilers.
The Oilers jumped to an early 7-0 lead when Vernon Perry of the Oilers picked Terry Bradshaw returing the pick 75 yards for the score. After the teams traded ield goals, our Steelers took the lead with two Bradshaw TD passes, a 16-yarder to tight end Bennie Cunningham and a 20-yard one to wide receiver John Stallworth.
Late in the third quarter, with the Steelers leading 17-10, Oilers quarterback Dan Pastorini threw a pass to Mike Renfro at the back of the end zone. Renfro caught the ball with both feet in bounds before he fell out of the end zone.
However, officials claimed to not have seen the catch and ruled that Renfro lacked control of the ball before going out of bounds. The Oilers settled for a 23-yard field goal.
Our Steelers would go on to win 27-13, with another Matt Bahr field goal and a Rocky Bleier 4-yard rushing touchdown.
While our Franco Harris rushed for 85 yards and caught 6 passes for 50 yards, our defense shutdown Oilers running back Earl Campbell, the NFL's leading rusher during the season, with a mere 15 yards on 17 carries.
An estimated 70,000 Texans turned out to commiserate with the Oilers in the dead of a January night in Houston after that 27-13 AFC championship loss in Pittsburgh.
In 1995, the Jacksonville Jaguars were an expansion team added to the AFC Central division. Off to a great start, the Jaguars became instant rivals with our Steelers. This division rivalry lasted only seven years. In 2002, the NFL moved the Jags to the AFC South.
The division rivalry that began in a nearly new Astrodome and a brand-new Three Rivers Stadium would wind up in a nearly new Adelphia Coliseum and a brand-new Heinz Field more than 30 years later. It wasn't just the venues that changed as the 1970s gave way to the '80s, the '90s and, finally, a new century that the cities changed as well. The Houston Oilers shifted to Memphis in 1997 and then to Nashville a year later, becoming the Tennessee Titans. In 2002 the NFL re-aligned the league, moving the Tennessee Titans to the AFC South.
Even as coaches and players, the nicknames and the locales changed, the division rivalry between the Titans/Oilers and our Steelers has lived on.
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Watch Ray Lewis in his cartoon debut.
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by Ramona Dye
Trash-talking, big games, crushing hits, games with playoff implications -- all of these factors have helped in making Steelers-Ravens into one of the fiercest rivalries in the NFL.
Most times, team rivalries fuels fans. Yet, the rivalry between the Baltimore Ratbirds and Baltimore Ratbirds pushes the players to the extreme.
"The coaches hate each other, the players hate each other... There's no calling each other after the game and inviting each other out to dinner. But the feeling's mutual, they don't like us, and we don't like them. There's no need to hide it, they know it, and we know it. It's going to be one of those black and blue games." -- Steelers WR Hines Ward
Art Modell moved his Cleveland Browns to Baltimore at the end of the 1995 season. This move caused legal action between the City of Cleveland and the NFL. This action resulted with the City of Cleveland retaining the Browns' name, colors, uniform design, franchise records, franchise history Browns club records and connections with Pro Football Hall of Fame players. Also, the City would get a new team regarded as the "reactivated" Cleveland Browns to begin play for the 1999 season.
Modell's Baltimore team, while retaining all current player contracts, would officially be the expansion team, a "new franchise" named the Baltimore Ravens.
Even with all of the changes our Steelers still remembered the Browns-Steelers rivalry. It was reason enough for the us Steeler fans to want to beat them. We still held a resentment towards Art Modell for ending Pittsburgh's greatest division rivalry.
You could tell our Steelers and the Ravens did not like each other by the way in which most plays ended. The nasty bone crushing hits could have faded away but instead it has become more intense.
When Steelers management snubbed one-time Steelers Rod Woodson after he expressed interest in returning to the Steelers from the 49ers, Woodson signed with the Ravens. The 2009 Hall of Fame Enshrinee would go on to pick apart the Steelers front office claiming they allowed too many talented players to go to other teams instead of making any effort to keep them.
Our Steelers had missed the playoffs three years in a row while at the same time, the Ravens were building their own identity as a physical, hard hitting football team. Most of us could see that Ratbirds were trying to copy our success formula of the 1970's Steel Curtain defense.
Our Steelers suffered a shutout loss to the Ravens with the opening game in the 2000 season. After the game, the Ravens' tight end Shannon Sharpe commented, "The Steelers have some real problems that they need to have addressed. That's probably the worst in my 11 years I've seen a Steelers team look. And I'm sure Bill Cowher is very disappointed, because they've got a lot of internal turmoil."
After the second game that season in which our Steelers won 9-6, passed the Ratbirds for second place in the AFC Central and ruined the Ravens streak of games without a touchdown to five, a seething Cowher had a request for the reporters, "Can you guys please go tell Shannon Sharpe that our problems here are fine? And I appreciate his concern after the first game about all the internal problems we had. Tell him we're fine. Thanks."
Our Steelers finished the season with a winning record, falling short of the playoffs. Yet, for the first time in a few years, they seemed to be getting back to Steelers football.
Lacking an offense, the Ratbirds rode on the backs of a defense that allowed the fewest points in NFL history for a 16-game season. Our rivals continued their dominance all the way to a win over the Giants in Super Bowl XXXV.
The championship talk created even more fuel for the rivalry. Was the Ravens defense the best ever, even better than our Steel Curtain defense of the 70's? And what would happen in the 2001 season?
When the Ravens came to Pittsburgh in November, the Steelers felt they had to prove something to the defending champions. Steelers players believed their defense was ever bit as good as the Ravens. This game was suppose to settle the score but our Steelers suffered a 13-10 loss.
After the game, linebacker Joey Porter stoked the rivalry more when he said, "They won the game, but they definitely know how good our defense is."
Trash-talking from both side filled the week leading up to the 2001 rematch in Baltimore. The AFC Central title hung in the balance that Sunday night and ESPN used every audio clip they could find to fuel this rematch.
The players continued to trash-talk, Our own Plaxico Burress proclaimed that the Steelers had "physically beat" the Ravens in the earlier game that season to which Shannon Sharpe replied, "If Hines Ward would have said that, as physical as he plays the game, OK, I could lend some credence to that. But 'Plexiglass? No."
There were rumors that the dirty Ratbirds had placed a bounty on our Steelers' top two receivers, pooling money to give as a reward to the defender who was able to knock out either Burress or Ward from the game. NFL policy forbids such cash rewards, though no proof materialized that the bounty was nothing more than talk .
Tony Siragusa, then the Ravens defensive tackle dared Steelers fans to follow him into a bathroom after the game, to which Steelers defensive back Lee Flowers responded, "We don't have no wimpy fans. Make sure his big butt shows up on the field Sunday."
The 2001 rematch game did not disappoint as the game turned into a hard-hitting physical battle with much trash-talking during the game. The game turning play happened when Kordell Stewart threw a 90-yard touchdown pass to Bobby Shaw after a Ravens punt had put our Steelers deep into our own territory.
Our Steelers won the contest 26-21 to clinch the AFC Central division title. The win gave our Steelers our fifth consecutive win in Baltimore.
The win had our Steelers going to the playoffs for the first time since 1997 but our battle with the Ratbirds was far from over. The Ravens made it back to the wild card playoffs for the second time in two years. Baltimore linebacker Jamie Sharper had a warning specifically for the Steelers running back Jerome Bettis. "Everybody said they're the best team... We'll see. If the Bus is smart, he won't play."
Bettis did not play in the game due to a mishap of a painkiller shot into his leg which hit a nerve leaving his leg numb. But our Steelers defense prevailed, keeping the Ravens offense to under 150 yards and only 20 minutes of possession in the Ravens first playoff loss in their history. Sharpe admitted that at times the Steelers were a better team.
Although the 2001 season was over for both teams, the deep seeded rivalry had taken hold for good, among players and fans alike. It now seemed natural for the teams to remain rivals under the 2002 realignment into four-team divisions.
The Steelers-Ravens games have become synonymous with hard-hitting, physical, trash-talking football, to the point where NFL fans outside of the AFC North look forward to watching the games.
In 2008, our Steelers and the Ravens boasted #1 and #2 defenses. Although our Steelers sometimes struggled to keep drives going, our Steelers defense looked to be Super Bowl-worthy, impressively outpacing the rest of the NFL in allowing the fewest yards per play. While the Ravens had found their franchise quarterback in Joe Flacco who made Baltimore, Super Bowl contenders again.
Only one of these two teams could possibly move on to the Super Bowl.
Our Steelers won both regular season games. The Ravens controlled much of the game at Heinz Field holding a 13-3 lead through the third quarter. Big Ben would thread a touchdown pass to Santonio Holmes on a third and long. Linebackers Lamar Woodley and James Harrison forced a fumble from Flacco that would be returned for a touchdown putting the Steelers ahead. Our Steelers would win the game with a Jeff Reed field goal in overtime.
During the Week 15 rematch at M&T Bank Stadium, the Ravens clung to a 9-6 lead with the Steelers four yards away from a winning touchdown. Our Steelers had driven from their own 8 yard line and now faced a third and goal with about 50 seconds left on the clock. Roethlisberger scrambled almost to the left sideline and then back to the middle before finding Santonio Holmes standing just inside the end zone. Holmes caught the ball but the Ravens defense forced him to lunge back onto the field of play as he caught the ball.
On the field, the officials ruled that Holmes had caught the ball just outside of the end zone, which would have set up a fourth and inches play with everything on the line. However, the replay booth official called for a review of the play. Referee Walt Coleman reversed the call, signaling a Steelers touchdown!
Ravens fans could not believe the call. Later, the NFL would review the play and rule that it had been a correct call, that Holmes had possessed the ball inside of the end zone with about three inches. Those three inches clinched the AFC North title for our Steelers and forced the Ravens to win the remaining two games in order to make the playoffs as a wild card team. The Ravens ripped up their next four opponents, defeating the top-seeded Titans in their own stadium to advance to the AFC Championship.
Our Steelers and the Ravens were on yet another collision course for the biggest game in the history of their rivalry, the first all-AFC North AFC Conference championship.
"Us and the Ravens. It'd be a big game if it was only a scrimmage. It just happens to be the AFC Championship Game. -- Mike Tomlin, Steelers Head Coach
Our Steelers would go on to win the AFC Championship and send the Ratbirds back to Baltimore. A sweep in the regular season and beating them again in the playoffs to dash their dreams. Advancing to the 2009 Super Bowl our Steelers went on to win our sixth Lombardi.
Listed are a few of the highlights over the years.
SWEEPS
Pittsburgh has 4 sweeps-
1997 (Pitt 42, Bal 34) 2002 (Pitt 31, Bal 18)
(Pitt 37, Bal 00) (Pitt 34, Bal 31)
1998 (Pitt 20, Bal 13) 2008 (Pitt 23, Bal 20) OT
(Pitt 16, Bal 13) (Pitt 13, Bal 09)
(Pitt 23, Bal 14)
Baltimore has 1 2006
(Bal 27, Pitt 00)
(Bal 31, Pitt 07)
Longest Streak
Pittsburgh:
1997 2001
( PIT 42, BAL 34) (PIT 26, BAL 21)
( PIT 37, BAL 20) (PIT 27, BAL 10)
1998 2002
( PIT 20, BAL 13) (PIT 31, BAL 18)
( PIT 16, BAL 13) (PIT 34, BAL 31)
1999 2003
(PIT 23, BAL 20) (PIT 34, BAL 15)
Baltimore:
2005
( BAL 16, PIT 13) OT
2006
( BAL 27, PIT 0)
( BAL 31, PIT 7)
As Always, Here We Go!