Hatred and Respect
December 16, 2008
By Patrick Cartwright
I hate the Ravens.
I abhor and disdain them.
I loathe, despise, and detest them.
But I respect them.
Not as individuals. On their defense, they have a linebacker who, more likely than not, was involved in a murder. They have another linebacker that tells the media they put bounties on opposing players in order to injure them. They have a player who spit in a kicker’s mouth. And another player who so delighted in the fact that when he sacked Steelers QB Ben Roethlisberger he “felt the breath leave his body”, that he felt the need to brag about it to the national media. To call the Ravens a bunch of thugs would be unfair and offensive to thugs.
So how can a Steelers fan respect a group so heinous? A group that I wouldn’t let inside my house without a national guard regiment present. A group that makes my skin crawl. A group that undoubtedly gets together in the offseason to drown kittens, strangle puppies, and plot to bring back the Macarena?
Because they play the game the way it should be played.
The Baltimore Ravens play the game with intensity and vitriol. They run the ball down your throat. They trust their young , confident QB. They control the clock. And they play a punishing style of defense that leaves the other team’s offense battered, broken down, and wondering how much time is left before they can get on the bus and get the hell out of town. They play good old-fashioned smash-mouth football.
Sound familiar?
It’s the exact same way the Steelers organization has played for the past 40 years, ever since Chuck Noll took a losing team and molded them into a dynasty. And it’s the way the Ravens have played since the day that Art Modell pulled the midnight switch on Cleveland and bussed the team to the East Coast. Just another reason to hate the Ravens. They used to be the Browns. But even so, you have to respect the way they go about playing the game, even if you don’t like it. Even if you don’t like them.
The best enemies are always the ones that are slightly distorted reflections of the hero. Wolverine and Sabertooth. Green Lantern and Sinestro. Spiderman and Venom. It’s the same with the Steelers and Ravens. They play the same style of football, and they play it the same way. Both teams have a QB that has been a rookie phenom, playing well beyond his years. Both have an All-World game-changing safety. Each has an old man that just happens to be the most reliable receiver on his team. Each has punishing linebackers who regularly put the opposing quarterback on his back. Since the AFC North was founded in 2002, with the exception of the 2005 Bengals, only the Steelers and Ravens have won the division. They have both won a Super Bowl this decade. Ravens Coach Jim Harbaugh is in his first year at the position. The Steelers’ Mike Tomlin has been at it twice as long, currently coaching in his second year.
If the NFL was a soap opera (and with the likes of T.O., Chad Ocho Cinco, and Pacman Jones in the league, who’s to argue that it isn’t?), the Ravens would be the Steelers’ evil twin. Nobody knows the Steelers better. Nobody plays them harder. No other team has been as much a thorn in the Steelers’ sides as the carrion birds from Baltimore.
From a Steelers fan’s perspective, looking at the Ravens is like looking at the Steelers in a dirty, grungy, distorted mirror. You don’t like what you see. You don’t want to admit that what you’re looking at may well be everything you love filtered through a different light. When you look at the Ravens, from an organizational and team standpoint, you’re just looking at a thugged-out version of the Pittsburgh Steelers. Did the truth of that just make you throw up in your mouth a little? Me too.
Like them? No way.
Respect them?
You have to. Right?
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Wow. Great post! As a diehard Bawlmer fan I have always felt the same way about your steelers. I hate them but I respect them. You have to say about these matchups… this is the way God intended football to be played.
1Exactly Drew. Hating the Ravens would be like hating the Steelers, and vice versa.
The rivalry between these two teams is equal parts animosity and respect.
2I, as a hard core Ravens fan appritiate this post, although I don’t enjoy thinking of my team as a dirty mirror imiage of yours. I wear my purple proud, cheer when our men beat the crap out of the other team or intersept there ass off. I hope to God you lose this Sunday, but it’s cool to see someone respect us, while hateing us. Most people hate on Baltimore till there purple in the face and that just makes winning so much more powerfull and sweet.
3Well Laura, I don’t think the Ravens will be playing anymore after tonight. Thanks for coming though. See ya next year.
4Great post.
No one ever said the life of a gladiator was pretty or subline. Gladiators strap on the tools of battle, get their minds right for the upcoming struggle and wage personal warfare until they or the opponent drops in submission. The Ravens and Steelers players, as gladiators, are the best of the best. They are hard nosed, determined professionals that give their all. Anything short of that and the player will no longer don the purple & black or the black & gold.
In the heat of battle things are said and done, tempers flare and fights ensue, but if you ask every Raven and Steeler veteran, I am sure each of those players will say much the same as you have. Ravens players, especially those who have been here awhile, will say I hate the Steelers but I respect them.
One thing in your post I do take issue with and that is the sort of backhand comment about Ray Lewis’ involvement in a murder. If you read the transcripts of the trials for Ray and the other defendants, it appears Ray was not involved in the altercation at first then tried to be a peacemaker. Ray was never a suspect in the murder but was suspected of withholding information about the event that could help police. In other words, they suspected he was stonewalling the police to protect his friend who was suspected of commiting the murder. Although Ray could have continued to fight the obstruction charge and stand trial (and forfited the football season), he decided to plead guilty to obstruction in a plea bargan. So, based on you very non-specific words of being involved in a murder, Ray appears to have been involved to the extent that he was trying to prevent the escalating violence by trying to talk sense to his friend.
The other stuff I understand. Suggs says Hines Ward is a dirty player, other Ravens say Harrison is a dirty player and some Steelers say Suggs and others play dirty. I don’t know. All I know is the Ravens and Steelers are the best football gladiators in the NFL.
5