The Steelers - or whoever won this year - were well set up to walk through a pretty weak NFL.
That could be the least intelligent post I've ever read on this board. The cumulative record of the 6 AFC teams in the playoffs was 71-25 (.740 win pct.), that has got to be the best in recent history. Only the two-time defending champion Patriots dragged that down with a 10-6 record. Teams like KC and SD at 10-6 and 9-7 didn't even get into the playoffs. The NFC Super Bowl rep, Seattle, was 15-3 just as good as the Eagles the year before. The road to the Super Bowl was never more difficult for an AFC team.
Actually, a year there there are nine teams in the AFC with winning seasons can only mean one thing: Cleveland Browns 6 10 0 232 301
Baltimore Ravens 6 10 0 265 299
Buffalo Bills 5 11 0 271 367
Tennessee Titans 4 12 0 299 421
New York Jets 4 12 0 240 355
Oakland Raiders 4 12 0 290 383
Houston Texans 2 14 0 260 431
That's seven teams with 10 or more losses that these so called great AFC teams beat up on, and four with 12 or more.
In 2004, there were four ten loss teams, only two with twelve, and none with more than 12 losses.
In 2003, there were eight ten loss teams, but only two twelve loss teams and none with more than 12.
In 2002, there were only three teams with ten losses, and only two with twelve or more.
In 2001, there were only five, and only one with twelve or more.
In 2000, there were only five, but three with twelve or more.
This year, there were more weak teams than ever in the AFC, and the Steelers got to play them. The Titans, Texans, Ravens, Packers, Browns, Browns and Lions went 33-79, and provided the Steelers with 7 of their 11 regular season wins.
So as much as there were some good teams in the AFC, it was hardly a dominant field that the Steelers beat en route to the playoffs.
The Steelers then went into the playoffs and faced a Bengals team where they took out the quarterback on the first passing play.
They dodged the Patriots, who had beaten the Steelers earlier in the season and who many Steelers fans said they didn't want to face, and watched the Broncos and Patriots play a physical game in Denver while they celebrated Manning's annual return to Chokesville.
The Broncos game was tough, although they had a far more physical opponent the previous week than the Steelers, who faced the Colts, and when they met, the Steelers hit them hard (as they always do). Playing a physical game against the Broncos coming off a bye week is a lot different than playing a physical game against the Broncos the week after they play another physical team.
And the Seahawks were a good team, but they were hardly dominant. They just played in an even weaker NFC.
The other teams they could have faced were an injured Jaguars team, a dinged up Patriots team that was just starting to peak when they got knocked down by the Broncos, a Chargers team that fizzled at the end, or maybe a Chiefs team that was relying on Larry Johnson to cover up the 30th passing D in the NFL and the 20th run D in terms of yards per carry (but 7th in terms of yards allowed). This was not a very strong playoff field.
I'm not trying to discredit the Steelers. You have to play the schedule they put in front of you, and the Steelers did that. But I stand behind the comment that this was a good year for any team to try to take a shot at the Superbowl because the field wasn't particularly strong, and most of the playoff teams cooled off or got injured towards the end.