The Westin said:
In regards to his first Super Bowl...you're making excuses for the guy's poor play. This is where I have a problem. You make excuses for his poor play in the game (his age), while at the same time using that same game as evidence of his greatness....soley based on the fact that it makes his number of Super Bowl wins higher. You ignore his play, and instead focus on the result. The result was a win for the Pittsburgh Steelers, not Ben Roethlisberger.
The second Superbowl...he was outplayed by Kurt Warner. The fumble was already explained by another poster. The interception was a poor throw in an otherwise great day against the best defense in the NFL. Warner didn't have the luxury of having to manage the game to win like Ben did. Warner had to win it. Roethlisberger, for his entire career, has had the luxury and comfort of always being able to fall back on having the best defense in the league.
I won't address the first point. Ben had a bad game in SB XL, there's no denying that. He did, however, carry the team on his back in the playoffs to get to the SB, is all I'll say.To the second point "he was outplayed by Kurt Warner." Is only QB allowed to play well in the SB? Jake Delhomme outplayed Brady in SB XXXVIII, does that de-value that SB as one of Brady's accomplishments? You could actually make the argument that Brady was outplayed by his QB counterpart in ALL 4 SBs he's played in. (I'm not saying I'd buy that argument, but that you could make it) Does that mean that Brady's SB wins don't count?
And as for Roethlisberger being able to manage the game, and not having to win it. Are you serious? Roethlisberger had to drive his team 88 yards with under 2.5 minutes left to WIN THE GAME. No running plays, no Steelers defense on the field. How exactly did Ben only have to "manage the game," and not win it?
Finally, you said "Roethlisberger, for his entire career, has had the luxury and comfort of always being able to fall back on having the best defense in the league." Football is a team game, and every QB who wins a SB does so with a great supporting cast. Maybe it's a great offense, maybe it's a great defense, but no QB does it alone. Joe Montana had a great offense AND great defense; does that diminish his legacy? Troy Aikman had a great offensive line, one of the best RBs to ever play the game, a HOF WR, and a great defense; do his SBs not count? Tom Brady, in all 3 SBs, had the luxury and comfort of being able to rely on the solid play of his veteran defense; do his SBs stand invalidated?
The only legitimate point you made was about Roethlisberger's poor play in SB XL, but your other points are either weak or flat out wrong.
You're just supporting my point further. Superbowls are not the only measuring stick when talking about QB's, I've been making that point in almost every post I made. There are 53 players on a team. Aikman, Montana, Brady....none of them do it alone. That's my whole point in this thread. I don't think Brady is great just because of the Superbowls, he and Manning are on a completely different level than every other quarterback in the league and have been for quite some time. We are talking about Roethlisberger in here like he's on the same level and I don't see it. Yes he had a good drive in the Superbowl, I get it. That doesn't make him the quarterback of the decade, that doesn't make him surpass Brady as Quarterback of this generation. What about Manning? I understand the article leaves a lot open. But most people would agree that there is Manning and Brady. Right now, no, one drive does not make Roethlisberger in the same league as Manning and Brady. Nobody playing today is. Every quarterback in the league has A LOT more to prove before being in the discussin.
Wait, I'm proving your point by showing that your reasoning for downplaying Roethlisberger's play in the playoffs/SB were almostly completely without merit or supported by reality? OK

You say that SBs aren't the only measuring stick when talking about QBs, so what are?
Wins
Brady through age 28: 58
Roethlisberger currently: 69
Winning percentage
Brady through age 28: .744
Roethlisberger currently: .704
Touchdowns
Brady through age 28: 123+3 rushing TDs
Roethlisberger currently: 144+14 rushing TDs
TD %
Brady through age 28: 4.8
Roethlisberger currently: 5.1
Pass yards
Brady through age 28: 18035 yards
Roethlisberger currently: 22505 yards
YPA
Brady through age 28: 7.1 YPA
Roethlisberger currently: 8.0 YPA
Completion %
Brady through age 28: 62%
Roethlisberger currently: 63%
Interceptions
Brady through age 28: 66
Roethlisberger currently: 86
INT %
Brady through age 28: 2.6
Roethlisberger currently: 3.1
4th Quarter comebacks/Game winning drives
Brady through age 28: 21 (including playoffs)
Roethlisberger currently: 24 (including playoffs)
Playoff record
Brady through age 28: 10-1
Roethlisberger currently: 8.2
SBs won
Brady through age 28: 3
Roethlisberger currently: 2
So, please show me how, exactly, Brady was so vastly superior (at 28) to where Roethlisberger now is?
Roethlisberger has more wins, Brady had a higher winning percentage.
Roethlisberger has more TDs, a higher TD %, more pass yards, a higher YPA, & higher completion %.
Brady had fewer INTs, and a lower INT %.
Roethlisberger has more comebacks/game-winning drives.
Brady had a 91% winning percentage in the playoffs, Roethlisberger has a 80% winning percentage in the playoffs.
Brady had 3 SBs, Roethlisberger has 2 (& a shot at 1 more this year).
I don't see either QB being vastly superior, as you seem to believe. Rather I see 2 QBs who have produced very similar stats, wins, and championships for their teams.