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Sunday, February 6, 2011

The founding sons




Sunday 06 February 2011
By Tariq Alhomayed

After both the Jordanian King and the Yemeni President announced steps towards reform in their respective countries, the U.S. President rushed to congratulate the two leaders. Why did Obama do that? Did he play a role in what happened?
Of course Washington did not play a role in what happened. It is true that the Americans have a stake in the stability of the region, including Egypt, and this is for matters relating to both peace and war. However, it is also true that the U.S. Administration wants to endorse what happened in Tunisia and Egypt, and the reformative measures in Jordan and Yemen, to add to its list of foreign policy achievements. This would gain further internal American support for Obama, and show he has been able to spread democracy in our region [Middle East] more effectively than the Bush Administration. Yet [when America takes credit for such events], this is not the reality. For example, what happened in Tunisia was not initiated by the Americans, and they did not expect such results. When the U.S. Secretary of State was speaking during the Tunisian protests, before Ben Ali was ousted, she said she was waiting for the crisis to end, in order to continue talks with the Tunisian President!
What Americans do not want to understand, or believe, is that those who launched the reformative movement in Egypt are the sons of Egypt themselves, rather than the “Founding Fathers” - an expression used in America to describe the generation who founded the American state, including George Washington, Thomas Jefferson and so on. In fact, those who came to lead the reformative movement in Egypt are the “Founding Sons”, i.e. Egypt’s youth, the ones that if an Egyptian politician was asked about before the evening of the 24th of January, they responded in a sarcastic tone, saying “the kids have grown up”, citing the name of a famous Egyptian comedy play.
It is true that Egypt’s kids grew up, yet they became the Founding Children. As for America’s experiments in our region, with its “Founding Fathers”, they remain at a standstill, whether in Iraq or Afghanistan. Washington is still heavily involved in Afghanistan today, and carries out superficial activities in Iraq from time to time. Meanwhile, if the rational Egyptians are successful in disposing of their government, we will see a significant transformation in the future of Egypt, and the region, at the hands of the Founding Children.
Therefore, the best thing that the Americans can do for us is to leave the countries of the region to choose their own path, and choose what they consider to be a national, conscientious, legitimate government. I am not making a stand here against democracy, quite the contrary in fact, but it is necessary that democracy is not imposed upon each country in the region. It is important that there is an agreement on a general democratic framework, as is found in the developed world. However, it must be left to states and their people to determine what they adopt, based on the principles of human rights, upholding the state’s prestige, the peaceful rotation of power, fighting against corruption, and greater freedoms, in accordance with the individual components of each country. Take the states of Europe for example; they are not all the same, although they are all democratic. Even the largest European country’s concept of democracy is not the same as America’s concept; however there is a universal, broad framework.
The best thing the Americans can do for the Middle East is to find a practical solution to the Arab-Israeli conflict, which puts our region at risk. This would also prevent Iranian expansion in our region. This is what Washington is capable of achieving, but as for what happened in Egypt, this was achieved by the Founding Children, not the Americans.




Previous Articles
After Egypt's political earthquake
Egypt: The Camels vs. Facebook
Arab Leaders…Reset the Clock!
The Egyptian youth party
A conversation with a young man in Tahrir Square
Is it a crisis for the Egyptian regime alone?
The Egyptian Lesson…The state is prestigious
Egypt: Our fears are great
A message to Hariri
Has Abbas sold out the Palestinian Cause?

Live Analysis: Super Bowl XLV, Packers Beat Steelers, 31-25



Kool as beans.  The game was awesome. Too bad Steelers lost, they just didn't try as hard as the Packers.....To the winners goes the spoils and the Lombardi trophy,
February 6, 2011, 3:27 PM


Players take the field in Dallas.Rob Carr/Getty ImagesPlayers take the field in Dallas.
The Times’s staff provides analysis, pithy commentary and on-the-scene commentary from Super Bowl XLV between the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Green Bay Packers in Arlington, Tex.
11:20 P.M. Postgame Quotes
Jordy Nelson, Packers Wide Receiver: "It's a game of momentum. We had it in the beginning. They came out in the second half and got it. That fumble was key. It got us some momentum back and we were able to make enough plays to win this game."
Troy Polamalu, Steelers Safety, On Loss: "Toughest one I've ever had in my life."
Mike McCarthy, Packers Coach: " We just kept battling. We had some adversity, we lost some guys to injury and we had some rough plays there... Our guys just kept fighting. I can't say enough about them."
Mike Tomlin, Steelers Coach: "We're not into moral victories. We came here to win the football game, of course, and we didn't do that, Green Bay did and we congratulate them."
Art Rooney, Steelers President: "We'll go into next year feeling like we'll take another shot at it. It takes a few days to recover from this game, so we'll lick our wounds for a couple of days and then get back to work next year"
10:27 P.M. More Coverage Coming
That's going to do it for our live analysis, but there is much more to come onnytimes.com. Feel free to carry on the conversation in the comments sections.
10:20 P.M. Dose of Reality
With the confetti still falling, Judy Battista poses this question on Twitter:
This seems like a fabulous time for a lockout, no?
10:18 P.M. More on Rodgers
Rodgers will always be linked with Favre, but this victory shows that their connection will be far from the defining aspect of his career. But it should be noted that Favre and Rodgers now each have the same number of Super Bowl victories.
10:12 P.M. He Knew It All Along
Green Bay General Manager Ted Thompson is not one to brag, as Greg Bishop told us. But it had to be gratifying for him to watch the performance by Rodgers tonight. He put his faith in Rodgers when almost every Green Bay fan in Cheesehead land wanted the team to hold on to Brett Favre. Thompson's decision was shown to be the right one long before tonight, but this victory is the culmination of Thompson's pivot away from the Favre era in Green Bay.
10:10 P.M. M.V.P. for Rodgers
Rodgers has been named the game's most valuable player.
10:08 P.M. Game to Remember for Rodgers
Here are the numbers for Aaron Rodgers: 24 of 39 for 304 yards, 3 touchdowns and, most importantly, no interceptions. Ben Roethlisberger was 25 of 40 for 263 yards and 2 touchdowns, but he also threw 2 interceptions that the Packers converted to 14 points.
10:04 P.M. Packers Win!
Considering the situation, a bit of an anti-climatic ending. After a 15-yard completion, the Steelers are stopped on their next four downs, the last an incomplete pass. That means the Packers are Super Bowl champions! When will they name a street after Aaron Rodgers in Green Bay?
9:59 P.M. Here We Go
The Packers were held to 3 and now the Steelers have a shot. Greg Bishop is right, one amazing Super Bowl after another. This goes without saying but I'll say it anyway, this is exactly the situation the fans want to see at a two-minute warning of a Super Bowl. But for Steelers fans, you want those two timeouts back, eh? -- Justin Sablich
9:58 P.M. Been Here Before
From Greg Bedard of The Boston Globe, via Twtter:
This is almost the same situation as the GB-Pitt game in '09. Steelers down 6. TD and XP win it. Where's Josh Bell?
9:56 P.M. Packers 31, Steelers 25
After a Rodgers pass is just out of the reach of Jordy Nelson, Mason Crosby kicked a 23-yard field goal to extend the Packers' lead to 31-25. That leaves the door open for a possible Roethlisberger-led comeback.
9:56 P.M. Just Like the 2nd Quarter
Greg Jennings caught a touchdown pass in the fourth quarter.Barton Silverman/The New York TimesGreg Jennings caught a touchdown pass in the fourth quarter.
The Packers are back to being aggressively effective on offense. Rodgers nailed Jennings for a 33-yard reception, Starks ran it for 12 yards and then Rodgers hit Jones for 21 yards. Packers are threatening to put the Steelers away. -- Justin Sablich
9:52 P.M. Overtime Rules
Just in case, here are the new overtime rules.
9:51 P.M. Another Classic
From Greg Bishop, via Twitter:
Remember when it seemed like every Super Bowl was a blowout? Last four have been amazing games. Giants, Steelers, Saints, now this
9:50 P.M. Packers Gameplan?
What's to come on Packers' next drive? They have rushed nine times, total, the entire game. 33 passes. -- Bob Goetz
9:49 P.M. Overtime?
George Bretherton writes: Who wants to see an overtime finish? Justin points out that would give us our first look at the new playoff overtime rules in a Super Bowl.
9:47 P.M. A Record Comeback?
There has never been a team that has come back to win a Super Bowl after trailing by 11 points with 12 minutes left to play. But here we are, Steelers down by 3 (thanks to Greg Rosenthal for this tidbit). -- Justin Sablich
9:42 P.M. Packers 28, Steelers 25
Mike Wallace ran for a 25-yard touchdown after he caught a pass against the Packers' Sam Shields.Jonathan Daniel/Getty ImagesMike Wallace ran for a 25-yard touchdown after he caught a pass against the Packers' Sam Shields.
Touchdown Steelers! Roethlisberger throws a 25-yard touchdown pass to Mike Wallace and then pitches to Antwaan Randle-El to convert a 2-point conversion and bring the Steelers within 3. The momentum swings again!
9:38 P.M. Steelers Confused on Touchdown
Greg Bedard, a former Packers writer now with The Boston Globe, via Twitter:
TD to Jennings. Steelers were completely screwed up in the back end. Should have called timeout, if they had more than 1
9:36 P.M. Turnovers Loom Large
So far, the Packers have converted three turnovers by the Steelers into 21 points. On offense, Green Bay has taken care of the ball and not turned it over once.
9:34 P.M. Good Things Happen to Green Bay
Good things finally happened to the Packers in the second half. They recovered a Mendenhall fumble on the first play of the fourth quarter. And then, another good thing: a huge 38-yard reception by Nelson. And to cap it off, an 8-yard touchdown pass to Jennings. It's amazing how the severely the momentum has changed hands during this game. -- Justin Sablich

9:31 P.M. Packers 28, Steelers 17
Troy Polamalu dives at Jordy Nelson.Charlie Riedel/Associated PressTroy Polamalu dives at Jordy Nelson.
Touchdown Packers! Rodgers to Greg Jennings for an 8-yard touchdown pass. Green Bay extends its lead to 28-17. Troy Polamalu was trailing Jennings on the play, highlighting what has been a subpar game for him.
9:29 P.M. Nelson Redeemed
A play after he dropped a potential first down pass, Jordy Nelson catches one going across the middle and takes it to the 3. The Packers are knocking on the door.
9:24 P.M. Fumble!
Rashard Mendenhall dropped it after getting it and Green Bay recovers. Is that the break the Packers have been waiting for?
9:21 P.M. End of the Third
It's on to the fourth. Pittsburgh is in Green Bay territory and threatening to take the lead. The Steelers have clearly had the momentum throughout the second half. Will they be able to complete the comeback?
9:17 P.M. Ruling Confirmed
It's an incomplete pass. Packers will punt with 31 seconds left in the quarter.
9:17 P.M. A Challenge for Everybody
From Aaron Schatz of Football Outsiders, via Twitter:
If PIT had recovered that fumble, they would have challenged the incomplete too, right?
9:14 P.M. More on Driver
The Packers will now be without two of their biggest leaders on the field, Woodson and now Donald Driver, who had two receptions for 28 yards before leaving with an ankle injury. -- Justin Sablich
In related news, the Packers just dropped another Rodgers pass that would have converted a third down. Mike McCarthy had asked for an official review.
9:09 P.M. Three and Out
Pittsburgh didn't make much noise on that drive, going three and out before punting it back to Green Bay.
9:07 P.M. Another Chance for the Steelers
The Packers stalled and were forced to punt. Pittsburgh gets the ball at its own 13. In other news, Green Bay receiver Donald Driver is out for the rest of the game.
9:04 P.M. Suisham Struggles
Granted, that was a long attempt (52 yards), but Shaun Suisham is now 6 for 11 in his career on playoff field goal tries. -- Justin Sablich
From Mike Tanier on Twitter: That kick was so wide that Bobby Hill caught it.
9:00 P.M. Steelers Are Stopped
Pittsburgh looked to be on its way to either a field goal or a touchdown before Clay Matthews made an athletic play to break up a screen pass, Frank Zombo sacked Roethlisberger and Suisham missed a long field-goal attempt. Can't emphasize enough how big it was for the Packers to get a stop on that drive. Can they seize momentum back?
8:53 P.M. Harrison Has Fans Excited
James Harrison has arrived for the Steelers, bringing an end to the Packers' second drive of the half with a big sack. Plays like that are helping to fuel an incredibly loud Steelers fan base. Seriously, I can't hear myself think! --Justin Sablich
Judy Battista via Twitter: James Harrison's first play of the night is a doozy. Seriously, I feel like I'm in Heinz Field right now.
8:50 P.M. Tough Break for Woodson
Poor Charles Woodson. All Woodson, the Packers' all-everything cornerback, wanted was to make it to the Super Bowl again and be at his best. He played in Super Bowl XXXVII with the Oakland Raiders after undergoing surgery for a broken leg. Alas, he apparently broke his collarbone in this game and will be sidelined for the second half. -- Karen Crouse
8:48 P.M. Packers Go Nowhere
After Jordy Nelson drops a pass and Aaron Rodgers is sacked, Green Bay is forced to punt. The largest deficit overcome by a winning team in the Super Bowl is 10 points. The Steelers were down 18 in the first half. Could they take the lead on this drive?
8:47 P.M. Mendenhall Looks Good
Rashard Mendenhall ran for a touchdown in the third quarter.Barton Silverman/The New York TimesRashard Mendenhall ran for a touchdown in the third quarter.
It looks like Mendenhall is just fine. He appeared shaken up a few plays before his 8-yard touchdown run after he steamrolled over a cameraman on the sidelines. He now has 55 yards on 10 carries. -- Justin Sablich
8:45 P.M. Ground Game
The Steelers' scoring drive covered 50 yards, all of it on the ground. Old-school Pittsburgh football.
8:42 P.M. Packers 21, Steelers 17
Touchdown Steelers! Mendenhall just had a relatively easy 8-yard path to the end zone and Pittsburgh cut the Packers' lead to 21-17. The momentum is completely with Pittsburgh right now with 10:25 left in the third quarter.
8:40 P.M. Confident Steelers Fans
Steelers fans at Cowboys Stadium surely don't think this one over. They were extremely loud and supportive during the Packers' first drive of the second half that was derailed by penalties. A bad punt, followed by a 15-yard face mask penalty, has the Steelers in excellent position to start their first drive. --Justin Sablich
8:36 P.M. Bad Start for the Packers
Green Bay has not had a good start to the second half. First came the news that Charles Woodson had been lost for the game, then James Jones dropped a pass from Aaron Rodgers that looked like it could have gone for a touchdown. Then the Packers were flagged for a face mask on the ensuing punt. Can the Steelers capitalize?
8:35 P.M. Woodson Out
Green Bay cornerback Charles Woodson is out for the rest of the game. Bad news for the Packers.
8:33 P.M. Almost a Tackle for Polamalu
Pittsburgh's Troy Polamalu just had his first tackle of the game, though the play was wiped out because of a holding penalty on the Packers. Polamalu has been shockingly quiet.
8:32 P.M. Where Were the Peas?
The biggest question about the halftime show is just where The Black Eyed Peas were hanging out during the first half. Is there a green room inside the massive scoreboard that they dropped from to start the show? Did they have to go there hours before the game, before fans were allowed in? There's no way to walk the cat walk and drop into the scoreboard, at least that we can spot from the stands. And that might have attracted some interesting attention in the middle of the first half. -- John Branch
8:31 P.M. Twitter Trends
More thoughts from Greg:
Love worldwide trending topics: Axl Rose, Boom Boom Pow, Auto Tune, Sweet Child, Puppy Bowl and Step Brothers. Twitter is interesting place.
8:30 P.M. Thumbs Down
Count Greg Bishop of The Times as one of those unimpressed with the halftime festivities. Here are his thoughts, via Twitter: This reminds me of the opening ceremony during the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Minus 2,008 drummers. And less impressive.
8:28 P.M. Pass-Happy Packers
The Packers, who averaged 7.9 yards per pass when they threw on first down during the regular season, passed on every first down but two in the first half. Aaron Rodgers was 4 of 8 for 45 yards on first downs, including a 21-yard touchdown to Greg Jennings. James Starks had two first-down carries for 19 yards. -- Karen Crouse
8:25 P.M. Getting Ready for the Second Half
It's almost time to get back to football. Will the Steelers be able to capitalize on the late momentum they got when Hines Ward caught a touchdown pass in the final minute of the first half? Or will Aaron Rodgers help the Packers make a statement on their first possession and play with the same kind of poise that he did in the opening half?
8:13 P.M. Halftime Entertains
Mike Tanier, via Twitter, weighs in on the halftime show:
For better or worse, they really are singing.
Judy Battista, via Twitter: Okay, I'm old. But I want The Who back. Sorry.
Justin Sablich: Not a big fan personally, but that was entertaining for sure. So I guess the Black Eyed Peas were living in the scoreboard the entire first half?
8:11 P.M. Packers' Secondary Has Injury Issues
As The Black Eyed Peas provide halftime entertainment, Justin Sablich reminds us that Green Bay has some injury issues:
The Steelers are taking advantage of the holes in the Packers' secondary. Woodson and Shields are both out with shoulder injuries.
8:00 P.M. The Start They Wanted
If you take away the Steelers' late touchdown, the Packers could not have scripted the first half better. They talked endlessly last week about getting off to a fast start, and sure enough they've shot out of the blocks like Carl Lewis. They seem determined for the game not to come down to the last play, as it did the last time the teams met, in 2009. Showing he is a student of the game, Green Bay quarterback Aaron Rodgers said last week, "You look at the last 10 Super Bowls and eight of the nine teams that have won the turnover ratio have won the game. So you can't turn it over against them and expect to win." Or vice versa. The Steelers' Ben Roethlisberger has thrown two interceptions that the Packers have converted into 14 points.
7:58 P.M. Packers 21, Steelers 10
Hines Ward scored the first Steelers' touchdown at the end of the second half.Lynne Sladky/Associated PressHines Ward scored the first Steelers' touchdown at the end of the second half.
There is life in the Steelers yet. An eight-yard touchdown pass to Hines Ward cuts the Packers' lead to 21-10 with 47 seconds left in the half. Huge score for Pittsburgh heading into halftime.
7:57 P.M. Woodson Appears Hurt
Charles Woodson is now on the sideline. He appeared to injure his shoulder as he broke up a pass attempted for Mike Wallace near the end zone. -- Justin Sablich
7:56 P.M. Establishing the Pass
The Packers have yet to run on first down: incomplete, incomplete, incomplete, four-yard completion. As Mike Tanier said, "forget establishing the run."
7:55 P.M. Don't Forget About Starks
Rodgers is in an absolute zone, but don't forget the effect that running back James Starks is having. He had a key 12-yard run on the last drive and his play is only making things easier for Rodgers and the receivers. -- Justin Sablich
7:53 P.M. Rodgers Continues to Impress
Greg Bishop, via Twitter, on the touchdown Rodgers threw to Jennings:
How many NFL QBs make that throw that Green Bay QB Aaron Rodgers just made? Not many. This one's getting out of hand.
7:50 P.M. Numerous Injuries
From Judy Battista, via Twitter:
Lots of injuries already. There are swaths of the field that were replaced -- wonder if that has anything to do with it.
7:49 P.M. Taking Advantage of an Opportunity
Frank Zombo is a Green Bay rookie linebacker who was thrust into the starting lineup when Eric Walden was injured. Zombo has three tackles, which suggests he has corralled the pregame nerves he expected to battle. Last week he explained how he expected to be feeling today: "You are a nervous wreck. You are playing for a lot." He added: "You have a lot to play for. You are playing for your job. You are playing for your family. You are playing for your coaches." -- Karen Crouse
7:43 P.M. Packers 21, Steelers 3
Aaron Rodgers made two touchdown passes to give the Packers an 11-point lead over the Steelers going into the second half.Kevin C. Cox/Getty ImagesAaron Rodgers made two touchdown passes to give the Packers an 11-point lead over the Steelers going into the second half.
The Steelers had a nice little drive going and Roethlisberger appeared to be settling into a rhythm. Then Jarrett Bush stepped in front of a pass and the Packers regained momentum. It didn't take them long to capitalize. Several plays later, Rodgers tossed a 21-yard touchdown pass to Greg Jennings to make the score Packers 21, Steelers 3, with 2:31 left in the half.
7:42 P.M. A Missed Call?
Steelers fans are getting crankier at Cowboys Stadium after the refs just appeared to miss a face-mask call on Mendenhall. The refs are probably the only ones not impressed with the giant screen hovering above the field. --Justin Sablich
7:39 P.M. Fans Are Allowed Inside
According to Pro Football Talk, the 400 fans who bought tickets for seats that didn't quite exist have been allowed into the stadium.
7:34 P.M. Driver Limps to Locker Room
Packers receiver Donald Driver was just shown limping to the locker room. As you probably recall, he has recently been dealing with a quadriceps injury.
7:28 P.M. Big Drive for the Steelers
On the Steelers' last drive, Roethlisberger finally came up big on a third-and-13 at the Packers' 35-yard line, hitting Sanders for a first down. The drive was kept alive and while the Steelers were held to 3 points, it was vital for them to at least get on the board. Most of the team's offensive success has come on the ground so far, with 51 yards compared to 37 through the air. -- Justin Sablich
7:24 P.M. Packers 14, Steelers 3
The Steelers get some much-needed points on the board, as Shaun Suisham's 33-yard field goal capped a nine-play, 49 yard drive that took 7:12. Pittsburgh would have preferred a touchdown, obviously, but points are points.
7:23 P.M. Backing Up a Boast
Green Bay's Nick Collins scored the second touchdown of the game.Barton Silverman/The New York TimesGreen Bay's Nick Collins scored the second touchdown of the game.
Nick Collins challenged Ben Roethlisberger to throw at him, saying last week: "He just has to bring it. I am a competitive guy and I know about this game." It wasn't exactly Babe Ruth calling his home run shot but Collins does have more scoring catches than any Steeler to this point. -- Karen Crouse
7:19 P.M. Second Quarter Begins
On the first play of the second quarter, Charles Woodson makes a terrific play and wraps up Pittsburgh running back Rashard Mendenhall for a two-yard loss.
7:15 P.M. More Bad News for the Steelers
The Steelers' starting right tackle Flozell Adams has a right shoulder injury and his return is questionable. The Steelers already have used six different offensive line combinations during the season and now they have to hope they have a lucky seventh. -- Karen Crouse
7:13 P.M. Time to Celebrate?
The Packers were penalized for excessive celebration after Collins returned an interception for a touchdown. On her Twitter page, Judy Battista had this reaction: They call excessive celebration penalties in the Super bowl? Really??
7:12 P.M. More on Jordy Nelson
Green Bay Packers' Jordy Nelson (87) caught the ball for the first touchdown of the game.Marcio Jose Sanchez/Associated PressGreen Bay Packers' Jordy Nelson (87)
Who is Jordy Nelson? Nelson, a small-town Kansas native, looked around Cowboys Stadium on media day:
"A bunch of farmers would like to have a building like this. You could put every piece of machinery, every cow, every bale, everything you need in here."
The Kansas City Star has more.
7:08 P.M. Packers 14, Steelers 0
The Steelers take over on their own 7 after a penalty on the kickoff, and then things get ugly. Roethlisberger drops back, gets hit as he throws and the ball is intercepted by Nick Collins, who returned it 37 yards for a touchdown. Just like that, it's Packers 14, Steelers 0.
7:07 P.M. Packers In a Groove
Green Bay has a really good thing going on offense and Rodgers looked much sharper on that drive, completing five of his six attempts. I can't wait to see how Dick Lebeau is going to try to slow down the Packers on the next drive. F.Y.I.: The Packers have now scored first in all five of their Super Bowl appearances. -- Justin Sablich
7:03 P.M. Scoring on Third Down
The Packers Jordy Nelson scored a touchdown in the first quarter.Barton Silverman/The New York TimesThe Packers Jordy Nelson scored a touchdown in the first quarter.
Jordy Nelson catches a 29-yard touchdown pass on third-and-1 with William Gay covering. This was Jordy last week: "I think we need to convert on third downs to win the game." -- Karen Crouse
7:02 P.M. Packers 7, Steelers 0
Touchdown, Packers! Rodgers and Jordy Nelson didn't miss this time. Rodgers threw a terrific pass that Nelson hauled in over William Gay for a 29-yard touchdown catch that put Green Bay up, 7-0. That capped an 80-yard touchdown drive.
6:58 P.M. Packers Moving the Ball
Packers are doing a better job of protecting Rodgers on this drive and the team's aggressive approach is starting to pay off a bit more. First-and-10 at midfield. -- Justin Sablich
6:56 P.M. Blogging the Commercials
Stuart Elliott of The Times is monitoring the Super Bowl commercials on the Media Decoder blog.
6:55 P.M. Slow Start
James Starks just bounced outside and picked up a first down for the Packers, but not before the slow start drew this satiric Twitter message from Mike Vaccaro of The New York Post:
NFLPA just confirmed that Steeler & Packer offenses have gotten a jump on the work stoppage
6:53 P.M. Protecting Rodgers
From Judy Battista, via Twitter:
Let's see if Packers can do better job protecting Rodgers on this drive. He's gotten smacked twice already.
6:49 P.M. A Punter's Dream
Three drives, three punts. Neither team has gotten much going on offense yet. With 8:17 left in the opening quarter, the Packers will take over on their own 20 and Aaron Rodgers will get his second chance at the Steelers' defense.
6:48 P.M. Packers Miss a Chance
Aaron Rodgers just missed Jordy Nelson at the Steelers' 15-yard line for what would have been an easy touchdown. It looked like a play Nelson could have made. Rodgers completed just one of his four attempts on the first drive, a nice 24-yard toss to Donald Driver on an early third-down conversion.
6:43 P.M. Even Better Than the Real Thing
I find myself watching the video board more than the actual game. It's like the coolest, biggest TV ever invented. Real time, too. -- Greg Bishop
6:40 P.M. National Anthem Miscue
Christina Aguilera apparently messed up the words to the national anthem, repeating the phrase "what so proudly we hailed." She was also timed at 1 minute 55 seconds, a bit of an upset. Prognosticators figured she would fly right past the two-minute mark.
6:37 P.M. Fumble!
The Packers' Tramon Williams misplayed the punt, but Green Bay recovered in the first quarter.Doug Mills/The New York TimesThe Packers' Tramon Williams misplayed the punt, but Green Bay recovered in the first quarter.
Green Bay's Tramon Williams just fumbled a punt return, but the Packers recovered at their own 20.
6:34 P.M. A Coin Toss Streak Continues
Fun fact from Canada: the columnist Bruce Arthur just wrote on Twitter that the N.F.C. had won 13 straight coin tosses before today. Well, make that 14, with an added bonus: that awesome Deion Sanders suit. Not many could pull that off. But Prime Time can. -- Greg Bishop
6:33 P.M. Coin Toss
The newest members of the Hall of Fame were out on the field for the coin toss, with Deion Sanders, not surprisingly, getting a huge ovation. Steelers will receive the kick. -- Justin Sablich
6:29 P.M. Cheers for a Former President
Before the game, the giant 60-yard long video screen over the field showed former President George W. Bush and his wife, Laura. Fans gave the former Texas governor a large roar. -- John Branch
6:22 P.M. Terrible Towel, Meet Title Towel
Steelers fans appear to have the edge amongst those in attendance, bringing a bit more noise than Packers fans during the team introductions. There were certainly more Terrible Towels spinning than the rival Title Towels that Packers fans have brought in. -- Justin Sablich
Judy Battista via Twitter: "There are A LOT of Steelers fans here. Seems like more than Packers, although you can't twirl a Cheesehead."
6:17 P.M. The Commercial Lineup
If you're the type of person who watches the Super Bowl for the commercials (and we know there are millions of you out there), then the Sports Business Journal has done you a serious service. Here is the lineup for which commercials will air when during the broadcast. (Hat tip to Quickish for the link).
6:07 P.M. The Band Is Out on the Field!
Lynne Sladky/Associated Press
The Texas Christian marching band just brought the house down! The fans in attendance are certainly ready for kickoff; the decibel level is rising. -- Justin Sablich
6:00 P.M. Scene Outside
From Time's Sean Gregory, picture of the line of ticketholders outside Cowboys Stadium 35 minutes before kickoff.
5:58 P.M. What, Me Worry?
As he does every game, Ted Thompson, the Packers general manager, is sitting in the press box. He is in the second row, surrounded by reporters. This is funny, if only because Thompson ranks among the most unassuming executives in sports, and while he is accommodating and deals regularly with the media, he definitely does not enjoy the whole media portion of his job. It's not in his nature.
Thompson did look relaxed, though. He was eating fried okra and talking to a few reporters. He did not seem as nervous as you might have expected him to be. --Greg Bishop
5:56 P.M. Zombo to Start
For Green Bay, Frank Zombo will start at right outside linebacker instead of Erik Walden, who is on the inactive list. For Pittsburgh, center Maurkice Pouncey, who was the subject of much speculation last week on whether he'd play, is on injured reserve. Dorian Brooks will start in his place. -- Justin Sablich
5:40 P.M. The First Roar
The Steelers' Ben Roethlisberger warms up before the game.Charlie Krupa/Associated PressThe Steelers' Ben Roethlisberger warms up before the game.
For those fans who actually have seats, they are starting to make some noise with the players now out stretching on the field. Aaron Rodgers just got a huge roar out of the Packers fans. At first glance, black and yellow seem to be outnumbering the green and yellow, but there are still plenty of empty seats yet to be filled. -- Justin Sablich