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Titans vs Steelers used to be special rivalry
Thought you Stillers fans would enjoy this article (3 days and counting)
Titans revved up about ‘Steelers week’
Time was when “Steelers week†was a special time for the Tennessee Titans franchise.
For decades in the old AFC Central, even dating back to the team’s Houston Oilers days, it was the Steelers who set the pace in the division and the other teams who were forced to keep pace.
In some ways, Sunday will be a like a step back in time when these two old foes square off against each other again with home-field advantage hanging in the balance for the AFC playoffs.
“We’ve got a show of hands of how many of the guys that have played the Steelers before and then when those hands go up, you ask them how many of them have beat the Steelers and there was a few scattered hands in the building, and that’s what gets their attention,†Titans coach Jeff Fisher said.
It is the first meeting between the teams since 2005. And for those who didn’t know what they missed, Sunday’s game could provide a little glimpse into the past.
“I just remember we hated them and they hated us,†defensive end Jevon Kearse said. “At one point, I can remember their players taunting our sideline and when we got the chance, we taunted their sideline. It just got really heated.â€
The rivalry’s heyday stems back to the late 1970s when Pittsburgh’s Steel Curtain ruled the NFL and often found their most serious challenger right in their own division with Bum Phillips, Earl Campbell and the “Luv Ya Blue†Oilers.
Titans general manager Mike Reinfeldt was a starting safety on those Oiler teams that came up one step short of the Super Bowl twice, courtesy of the Steelers.
“They were such a dominant team and had so many good players, it was such an uphill battle. We gave it our best shot. We just couldn’t get over the hump†Reinfeldt recalled. “It was frustrating, because at that point in time, the AFC Championship Game maybe should have been the Super Bowl. People felt those were the two best teams. I think the one thing I learned was to play those games at home. Those games were all in Pittsburgh … Hence the importance of this week.â€
The rivalry continued when the Oilers were transplanted to Tennessee in 1997, and the Steelers continued to be the main benchmark inside the AFC Central. There was Steve McNair, sternum injury and all, coming off the bench after his replacement Neil O’Donnell had been knocked out of the game with a concussion, and rallying the Titans to a 23-20 win with a fourth-quarter touchdown throw to Erron Kinney in 2000 at Three Rivers Stadium.
There was a 34-7 Monday night shellacking the Titans took at then-brand new Heinz Field the following year.
Then in 2002, immediately after divisional realignment sent Pittsburgh north and Tennessee south, the Titans and Steelers engaged in two memorable games — one regular season and one in the playoffs in early 2003.
The regular season game, won by the Titans 31-23, was memorable for two reasons. First, then-Steelers linebacker Joey Porter accused Titans strength and conditioning coach Steve Watterson of dumping hot chicken broth on him after a play on the Titans sideline. Replays later showed the accusation to be correct.
Then, at the end of the third quarter, Titans linebacker Keith Bulluck leveled Steelers quarterback Tommy Maddox with a hit that left him motionless and landed him in a Nashville hospital overnight.
“I remember all that stuff, knocking Maddox out of the game, Watterson pouring hot chicken broth on Joey. I remember all the games, even when Kordell Stewart was their quarterback,†Bulluck recalled. “I guess I have been around this rivalry for a long time. We haven’t really matched up in a few years, but this one is a big one. It's for home-field playoff advantage, and overall it’s two of the best teams in the league playing against each other.â€
Sunday’s game is arguably one of the most important games at LP Field since the Titans won a playoff game 34-31 in overtime, thanks in part to a controversial penalty on the Steelers’ Dwayne Washington for running into kicker Tennessee kicker Joe Nedney.
Nedney had made a 31-yarder in overtime, but it was waved off by a Steelers timeout, even though the fireworks went off after it went through. Then, Nedney missed on the rekick, only to have the penalty move him five yards closer where he made the kick from 26 yards.
It moved the Titans to the AFC Championship Game and stuck with the Steelers players for sometime after.
“Of course, it was an acting job,†Steelers receiver Hines Ward said. “You guys know it was an acting job, but within the rules. … It stayed with me for a while. It was a great ballgame. It came down to the wire and fortunately he missed the field goal and Dewayne kind of held up, and [Nedney] flopped.â€
Bulluck debated Ward’s view on the kick … somewhat.
“I don't know if he flopped. I know it was good, and they lost and had to go home and we went out to Oakland,†Bulluck said.
Titans safety Chris Hope, who was a Steelers rookie then, remembered it somewhat differently, of course.
“All I can remember is being cheated,†Hope said, perhaps only half-kidding. “We played a great game and it came down to that field goal, and we know how that turned out.â€
The sideshow in that game came not from any poured chicken broth but a sideline shouting match between Maddox and the Titans’ bench. The shouting appeared to include Fisher, though the Titans coach denied even this week saying a single word to the Steelers’ quarterback, who threw for 266 yards and two scores in rallying Pittsburgh from a 14-point deficit to a late lead before the Titans forced OT.
“I remember their quarterback was Maddox that year, and he was saying something to somebody on our sideline,†Kearse recalled. “I don't know, but it was something he shouldn't have said, and we did knock him out of that game earlier that season, so he had no room to be talking because he didn't even make it out of the last game on his two feet.â€
Oh, and for good measure in that game, Titans quarterback Steve McNair passed for 338 yards and two touchdowns, all the while missing a chunk of skin from the thumb on his throwing hand.
Such was the competitiveness in a rivalry with playoff ramifications sprinkled in. Could Sunday’s game rekindle the sparks that used to fly with regularity between the Titans and Steelers? This game will determine seeding, and there is always the possibility they could meet again in the AFC Championship Game.
“You've just got to be prepared for whatever. I'm sure it will. It definitely means a lot when it comes time for the playoffs. So, it's going to be a real heated game,†said Kearse.
Bulluck is looking forward to Sunday, in part because of what is at stake, but also because of the old rivalries that existed in those days.
“It was real intense. I remember the playoff game. I remember before the conferences got realigned, kind of like one of those Jacksonville weeks or Baltimore weeks, they were all pretty much the same,†Bulluck said. “They were all physical teams that liked to play defense and liked to run the ball. That always makes for a great football game late in December.
“That's my type of football. Those are the types of games you like to play when you get a chance to play against teams with history, especially the Pittsburgh Steelers.â€
Titans revved up about ‘Steelers week’
Time was when “Steelers week†was a special time for the Tennessee Titans franchise.
For decades in the old AFC Central, even dating back to the team’s Houston Oilers days, it was the Steelers who set the pace in the division and the other teams who were forced to keep pace.
In some ways, Sunday will be a like a step back in time when these two old foes square off against each other again with home-field advantage hanging in the balance for the AFC playoffs.
“We’ve got a show of hands of how many of the guys that have played the Steelers before and then when those hands go up, you ask them how many of them have beat the Steelers and there was a few scattered hands in the building, and that’s what gets their attention,†Titans coach Jeff Fisher said.
It is the first meeting between the teams since 2005. And for those who didn’t know what they missed, Sunday’s game could provide a little glimpse into the past.
“I just remember we hated them and they hated us,†defensive end Jevon Kearse said. “At one point, I can remember their players taunting our sideline and when we got the chance, we taunted their sideline. It just got really heated.â€
The rivalry’s heyday stems back to the late 1970s when Pittsburgh’s Steel Curtain ruled the NFL and often found their most serious challenger right in their own division with Bum Phillips, Earl Campbell and the “Luv Ya Blue†Oilers.
Titans general manager Mike Reinfeldt was a starting safety on those Oiler teams that came up one step short of the Super Bowl twice, courtesy of the Steelers.
“They were such a dominant team and had so many good players, it was such an uphill battle. We gave it our best shot. We just couldn’t get over the hump†Reinfeldt recalled. “It was frustrating, because at that point in time, the AFC Championship Game maybe should have been the Super Bowl. People felt those were the two best teams. I think the one thing I learned was to play those games at home. Those games were all in Pittsburgh … Hence the importance of this week.â€
The rivalry continued when the Oilers were transplanted to Tennessee in 1997, and the Steelers continued to be the main benchmark inside the AFC Central. There was Steve McNair, sternum injury and all, coming off the bench after his replacement Neil O’Donnell had been knocked out of the game with a concussion, and rallying the Titans to a 23-20 win with a fourth-quarter touchdown throw to Erron Kinney in 2000 at Three Rivers Stadium.
There was a 34-7 Monday night shellacking the Titans took at then-brand new Heinz Field the following year.
Then in 2002, immediately after divisional realignment sent Pittsburgh north and Tennessee south, the Titans and Steelers engaged in two memorable games — one regular season and one in the playoffs in early 2003.
The regular season game, won by the Titans 31-23, was memorable for two reasons. First, then-Steelers linebacker Joey Porter accused Titans strength and conditioning coach Steve Watterson of dumping hot chicken broth on him after a play on the Titans sideline. Replays later showed the accusation to be correct.
Then, at the end of the third quarter, Titans linebacker Keith Bulluck leveled Steelers quarterback Tommy Maddox with a hit that left him motionless and landed him in a Nashville hospital overnight.
“I remember all that stuff, knocking Maddox out of the game, Watterson pouring hot chicken broth on Joey. I remember all the games, even when Kordell Stewart was their quarterback,†Bulluck recalled. “I guess I have been around this rivalry for a long time. We haven’t really matched up in a few years, but this one is a big one. It's for home-field playoff advantage, and overall it’s two of the best teams in the league playing against each other.â€
Sunday’s game is arguably one of the most important games at LP Field since the Titans won a playoff game 34-31 in overtime, thanks in part to a controversial penalty on the Steelers’ Dwayne Washington for running into kicker Tennessee kicker Joe Nedney.
Nedney had made a 31-yarder in overtime, but it was waved off by a Steelers timeout, even though the fireworks went off after it went through. Then, Nedney missed on the rekick, only to have the penalty move him five yards closer where he made the kick from 26 yards.
It moved the Titans to the AFC Championship Game and stuck with the Steelers players for sometime after.
“Of course, it was an acting job,†Steelers receiver Hines Ward said. “You guys know it was an acting job, but within the rules. … It stayed with me for a while. It was a great ballgame. It came down to the wire and fortunately he missed the field goal and Dewayne kind of held up, and [Nedney] flopped.â€
Bulluck debated Ward’s view on the kick … somewhat.
“I don't know if he flopped. I know it was good, and they lost and had to go home and we went out to Oakland,†Bulluck said.
Titans safety Chris Hope, who was a Steelers rookie then, remembered it somewhat differently, of course.
“All I can remember is being cheated,†Hope said, perhaps only half-kidding. “We played a great game and it came down to that field goal, and we know how that turned out.â€
The sideshow in that game came not from any poured chicken broth but a sideline shouting match between Maddox and the Titans’ bench. The shouting appeared to include Fisher, though the Titans coach denied even this week saying a single word to the Steelers’ quarterback, who threw for 266 yards and two scores in rallying Pittsburgh from a 14-point deficit to a late lead before the Titans forced OT.
“I remember their quarterback was Maddox that year, and he was saying something to somebody on our sideline,†Kearse recalled. “I don't know, but it was something he shouldn't have said, and we did knock him out of that game earlier that season, so he had no room to be talking because he didn't even make it out of the last game on his two feet.â€
Oh, and for good measure in that game, Titans quarterback Steve McNair passed for 338 yards and two touchdowns, all the while missing a chunk of skin from the thumb on his throwing hand.
Such was the competitiveness in a rivalry with playoff ramifications sprinkled in. Could Sunday’s game rekindle the sparks that used to fly with regularity between the Titans and Steelers? This game will determine seeding, and there is always the possibility they could meet again in the AFC Championship Game.
“You've just got to be prepared for whatever. I'm sure it will. It definitely means a lot when it comes time for the playoffs. So, it's going to be a real heated game,†said Kearse.
Bulluck is looking forward to Sunday, in part because of what is at stake, but also because of the old rivalries that existed in those days.
“It was real intense. I remember the playoff game. I remember before the conferences got realigned, kind of like one of those Jacksonville weeks or Baltimore weeks, they were all pretty much the same,†Bulluck said. “They were all physical teams that liked to play defense and liked to run the ball. That always makes for a great football game late in December.
“That's my type of football. Those are the types of games you like to play when you get a chance to play against teams with history, especially the Pittsburgh Steelers.â€
- Field General Ben
- Seasoned Veteran
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- Joined: Wed Jul 30, 2008 4:34 pm
Re: Titans vs Steelers used to be special rivalry
To be honest Voltan, I don't miss the Titans in our division anymore. McNair got the better of the Steelers too many times. But then again, those were the Cowher years. There's a new sheriff in town now...
- Bomberman
- Greenhorned Rookie
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- Location: Heinz Field interviewing for the Offensive Coordinator position!
Re: Titans vs Steelers used to be special rivalry
I remember watching the "chicken broth" and "kicker flopping" games...and Maddox getting knocked out. Those were some serious games. Thanks for the refresh...let's hope the one on Sunday is another game worth remembering and that no-one gets injured...on either team.
Go Steelers!
Go Steelers!
Bomberman
Any problem can be solved with the correct application of explosives!
Any problem can be solved with the correct application of explosives!
Re: Titans vs Steelers used to be special rivalry
Field General Ben wrote:To be honest Voltan, I don't miss the Titans in our division anymore. McNair got the better of the Steelers too many times. But then again, those were the Cowher years. There's a new sheriff in town now...
Field General Ben,
I gotta be honest and say I do. Being from Nashville, I didn't become a fan til they were in Tennessee. Back then, the Steelers were the team that Jeff Fisher strived to match. I always loved watching George and McNair against the Steelers defense.
Since the change of division, I have seen a switch from more smashmouth, to a little finesse to match the style of the Colts. I know the Titans are still capable to play that game, but again this game will fall on Collins shoulders and he will have to perform...or we will lose.
Re: Titans vs Steelers used to be special rivalry
Bomberman wrote:I remember watching the "chicken broth" and "kicker flopping" games...and Maddox getting knocked out. Those were some serious games. Thanks for the refresh...let's hope the one on Sunday is another game worth remembering and that no-one gets injured...on either team.
Go Steelers!
Glad I help with a little "extra" incentive Bomberman.
Same to ya! Go Titans!
Re: Titans vs Steelers used to be special rivalry
i still have a dislike for the titans because of how harsh the past rivalry was. not a burning hatred like for the pats or ravens, but still, they're always gonna be the oilers to me
Re: Titans vs Steelers used to be special rivalry
Field General Ben wrote:To be honest Voltan, I don't miss the Titans in our division anymore. McNair got the better of the Steelers too many times. But then again, those were the Cowher years. There's a new sheriff in town now...
you are exactly right - they owned us under Cowher
- SteelerPride51
- Practice Squad
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Re: Titans vs Steelers used to be special rivalry
I have a BAD feeling about this game.
- StainlessStill
- Seasoned Veteran
- Posts: 195
- Joined: Thu May 22, 2008 10:56 pm
Re: Titans vs Steelers used to be special rivalry
I HATED... HATTTTTTTTTTTED Tennessee during those years of the rivalries, and that's exactly what they were.. heated... hated.. rivarly.. but well respected. McNair and his offense got the best of many Steelers teams, especially against a re-building Steelers teams, mainly after the '97 seasons up until the '01 season. After that, it was back to back and forth. Very good games.. games that were meant for football.
I expect the same come Sunday.
I expect the same come Sunday.
Re: Titans vs Steelers used to be special rivalry
SteelerPride51 wrote:I have a BAD feeling about this game.
I don't. But I expect it to be a close game. Neither team gives up points easily (Steelers #1 in scoring defense, Titans #2 in the same category, only behind by 5 pts). It's going to be another 13-10 game, i'd be surprised if either team goes 20 points or above, and if it happens, it's probably going to be the result of a defensive score.
key to stopping these guys is gonna be our run defense. if we can stop johnson and white, we have a great shot at winning this. maybe having polamalu in the box often for run support, i'm more worried about johnson getting out in the open.
- Steel Holiday
- Grizzled Veteran
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- Joined: Fri Dec 19, 2008 2:53 pm
Re: Titans vs Steelers used to be special rivalry
Johnson has foot speed on his side.
Last time these two teams played Willie Parker was in the paper cause the Titans got body rocked for 150+
Last time these two teams played Willie Parker was in the paper cause the Titans got body rocked for 150+
Re: Titans vs Steelers used to be special rivalry
El Nino wrote:key to stopping these guys is gonna be our run defense.
...not to mention the lack of theirs due to key injuries. With Haynesworth and Bosch on the mend and out of the game, and Willie healthier than he has been for a while, I suspect we'll have a much bigger day running the ball than we have for some time.
Wha make you tink I won cutchu, mang?!?
Re: Titans vs Steelers used to be special rivalry
Thanks Voltan that was a very good read.
May the best team win
May the best team win
- stillDrink
- Greenhorned Rookie
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Re: Titans vs Steelers used to be special rivalry
fine article, but I'm guessing it's not from a pittsburgh paper. it's probably a TN paper. Most teams do not have the lore and history the steelers have and love to latch on when they can.
Last week the Balls-n-more papers were saying the Ravens and the Steelers are of the same mold...Jacksonville writers like to point to their running game and defense is similar to the Steelers.
Crappy franchises who have little to no history (particularly ones that relocate or are new) would love to have the kind of aura the Steelers have.
But they never will...
Last week the Balls-n-more papers were saying the Ravens and the Steelers are of the same mold...Jacksonville writers like to point to their running game and defense is similar to the Steelers.
Crappy franchises who have little to no history (particularly ones that relocate or are new) would love to have the kind of aura the Steelers have.
But they never will...
- KYSteelersFan
- Practice Squad
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- Joined: Sun Nov 30, 2008 8:18 pm
Re: Titans vs Steelers used to be special rivalry
Last week the Balls-n-more papers were saying the Ravens and the Steelers are of the same mold...
I know I will take some flack, but Baltimore is close. Our D is better, but not as much better than the rest of the NFL. Their running game is better. But I think we have better recievers and a much better QB. I say that about Ben because their is something about his attitude I havent felt since Bradshaw. This guy was born to be the QB of the Pittsburgh Steelers. He refuses to give up and refuses to accept defeat.
But I digress, I hope Jacksonville takes out Baltimore because I would hate to play them a 3rd time.
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