Packers Beat Turnover Plagued Steelers In Super Bowl Xlv

By Daniel Scott


Aaron Rodgers passed for three touchdowns and the Green Bay Packers took advantage of three Pittsburgh Steelers' turnovers to win Super Bowl XLV 31-25. Rodgers for 304 yards without an interception and was named the game MVP, significant vindication for a quarterback that spent three years as backup to former Packers' starter Brett Favre. Steelers' quarterback Ben Roethlisberger answered with two touchdown passes and 263 yards passing, though threw two costly interceptions that had his team playing from behind from early in the contest.

NFL betting enthusiasts who backed the Green Bay Packers as -2' point favorites were rewarded by the Super Bowl victory. The cover improved the Packers ATS record on the season to 13-7, while the Steelers finished with a 12-7 record against the pointspread. The 56 combined points went OVER the posted total of 46. Despite their reputation as a high scoring team, the Packers went UNDER in 12 of their 20 games this season.

Rodgers' teammates were quick to praise their quarterback after the contest counting veteran wide receiver Donald Driver:

"You can stop it now. Aaron's proved that he's one of the best, if not the greatest, quarterback in this game today."

Receiver Greg Jennings declared that the Packers had overcome difficulty all season to win the championship:

"We've been a team that's overcome adversity all year. Our principal captain goes down, touching in the locker room. Our No. 1 receiver goes down, more emotions are going, flying in the locker room. But we discover a way to bottle it up and exert it all out here on the field."

Head coach Mike McCarthy made his own unique contribution to the win with an unprecedented motivational ploy-he had his team fitted for their Super Bowl rings the night before the game. Packers' Charles Woodson said it made an impact:

"That was just a vote of intimacy for us. Get fitted for your ring. I don't know when we'll get them, but it'll fit."

Steelers' quarterback Ben Roethlisberger took the loss firm:

"I feel like I let the city of Pittsburgh down, the fans, my trainers and my teammates and it's not a good emotion."

Green Bay linebacker Clay Matthews summed up the victory and the period:

"You play to be world champions and that's what we are today."

Supposing that a labor disagreement doesn't delay or stop the 2011 NFL season, the Packers will be looking to be first team to defend their Super Bowl title since the New England Patriots won the 2004 and 2005 games.




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