Had the strangest feeling on Sunday while watching the Ravens-Patriots game. Look, I would never say I felt like a Pittsburgh Steelers fan, but I can tell you I experienced quite a bit of empathy for all of their moaning and whining through the years about the Patriots and Tom Brady, because the personal-foul penalties that seemed to be called on the Ravens like clockwork after they had seemingly stopped the Patriots on a third down, really took an edge off of what was an otherwise tremendous NFL game.
I’ve always gotten a chuckle when my friends who are Steelers fans, particularly Tim Martin of GO 106 FM’s Martin in the Morning Show, bark and howl about Patriots coach Bill Belichick and, paticularly, quarterback Brady. I tell them they don’t wear jealousy very well, and when it comes to officiating, they have to remember, the best teams in the NFL receive the best calls from the officials whether that is the intention or not. It’s always been that way, and it will remain that way; and it applies to the Steelers as well when they’re going good, as any non-Steelers fan will tell you.
Fans of the team this directly involves, of course, are unable to see this. That’s why only a Steelers fan cannot see that Hines Ward clearly gets away with murder; although I’m here to tell you I’ve never seen Ben Roethlisberger come close to getting the roughing calls that Brady got last Sunday. And if he ever got one like the second one that Brady openly campaigned for and received, I believe Roethlisberger would ride a motorcycle without a helmet again before he would openly laugh the way Brady did once he got it.
Every NFL fan, though, is paranoid about his or her team getting the short end of the stick from the officials, and while I felt so pedestrian on Sunday as I complained about the Ravens being flagged for things that were not being called on the Patriots when they did them, I felt, and feel, somewhat vindicated that this Pampered Patriots dialogue began as soon as late Sunday afternoon and continues to be a hot topic of discussion.
I think everybody out here understands the spirit of the roughing-the-passer rules, and for the most part accepts them. You want to keep the quarterbacks healthy. It’s just good business. But when you see Ravens quarterback Joe Flacco get much worse than Brady got in the same game, and only receive one call in at least five instances; and when you see Raiders quarterback JaMarcus Russell get out-and-out mugged later in the day and not receive a roughing call, yes, you’re left with no choice than to feel Brady does receive kid-gloves treatment when he lobbies for and receives a roughing call on a play that he’s not even touched.
And then laughs.
Nor is it lost that these calls came against the Ravens, a team annually at the top of the league in personal-foul penalties. But, see, Jarrett Johnson, the chief knucklehead on the Ravens defense, wasn’t flagged once on Sunday, so the feeling here is it all had more to do with the Patriots than the Ravens.
Having said all of that, the Patriots’ 27-21 victory over the Ravens produced one of the best games of the young NFL season. It was a battle of conference heavyweights and had a little bit of everything. And, no, I don’t believe the barking you hear out of Baltimore is trying to suggest the Ravens were cheated out of winning the game. Heck, if Mark Clayton had tried to catch that last pass at the New England six with his hands rather than his body (the only good body-catcher in the NFL I can ever remember was the Redskins’ Gary Clark, and he had his share of drops too), the Ravens could have still won the game.
Sure, Ravens fans were frustrated on Sunday, but had to have come away from that game feeling pretty good about things. They shouldn’t take anything for granted this week, though, because my preseason pick for NFL Pain In The Arse Team was the Cincinnati Bengals, and now that Carson Palmer appears to be completely healthy again, they’re likely to become much more than a mere pain this season.
One good thing. You never hear a Steelers fan complain about the Bengals. So Ravens fans won’t have to worry about empathizing with the Pittsburghs anymore.
Unless, of course, the Ravens and the Patriots meet again.
Mike Burke is sports editor of the Cumberland Times-News. Contact Mike Burke at mburke@times-news.com.
Mike Burke - Sports
Not too close
- Mike Burke - Sports
-
-
Happy birthday, Brooks
Today is Brooks Robinson’s birthday. That’s right, good ol’ No. 5 is 75 years young, a term the great Chuck Thompson used all of the time, and a term that, even as a child, drove me up the wall when Chuck would use it to send birthday greetings to somebody who had just turned 100.
-
How to e-mail (or phone) us your games
It will remain one of the great mysteries of my life (until I hit the lottery, that is) that seemingly grown men and women who have the mental capacity to sit at a computer, compose an e-mail and send it, cannot look at the little league/softball game reports that appear daily in the Times-News and duplicate the format we require for publication.
-
The DH, the rook, ‘old school’ and the Codes
Baseball, to say the least, is presently buzzing in the Baltimore-Washington corridor, as the Orioles streaked to baseball’s best record through the first 29 games, while the Nationals seem to be every bit the contender they were said to have been, sitting atop the National League East as of yesterday.
-
Take me out to the coin collector’s?
You know, you try to do the right things, but sometimes it just doesn't pay off in the end. And that's fine.
-
We’d have taken Hines back, too
The Mega Millions madness is over for now, and that’s a good thing, because, frankly, I’m a little bit ashamed of all of you. Really. If you could have just seen yourselves and the way you’ve been acting these past 10 days, with nothing but greed soaring from your eyes, you’d be embarrassed, too. It’s as the great Charles E. Lattimer used to say (to me quite a bit, actually), “(Jiminy Crickets), look at yourself, son.”
-
With no rule, there is no spirit to break
Three days after paying a king’s ransom for the No. 2 pick in the NFL draft and the right to select Baylor quarterback Robert Griffin III (or, if Jim goes completely Irsay on us, Stanford quarterback Oliver Luck), the Washington Redskins were informed by Commissioner Vernon Wormer that they had violated double-secret probation, bringing to mind a piece of Redskins history that would produce one of the great lines in sports.
-
No need to wonder what ACIT means to Karcher
This weekend’s 52nd Alhambra Catholic Invitational Tournament will mean a great many things to a great many people, from the players who will be competing, to their coaches, schools, family and friends, and to the fans who come to see some of the best high school basketball in the country.
-
Shot clock should help loaded ACIT to light it up
The idea had been floating in Joe Carter’s thoughts since last year’s ACIT final between DeMatha and Benedictine, when DeMatha head coach Mike Jones, to help alleviate his team’s injury and foul issues, slowed the pace of the game in the first half of the title game his Stags would win, 53-43.
-
Senior Day honor is the least Mosley deserves
COLLEGE PARK — Sean Mosley will be honored at Comcast Center today on Senior Day prior to Maryland’s game against Virginia, and it’s difficult to believe it’s been four years since we got our first glimpse of the 6-foot-4 guard out of Baltimore’s St. Frances Academy when he was the Most Outstanding Player in the 2008 Alhambra Catholic Invitational Tournament field.
-
Somewhere over the rainbow starts here
During a break in the program Sunday night, former Pittsburgh Pirates slugger Bob Robertson sat at a table backstage sharing some stories from the day when he played some of the finest defensive first base and hit some of the longest home runs in the major leagues in helping the Bucs to the 1971 world championship.
- More Mike Burke - Sports Headlines
-


