San Francisco Chronicle

Respect: 2 franchises that have dominated

- By Kyle Hightower Kyle Hightower is an Associated Press writer.

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — There are few things that Bill Belichick respects more than history in the NFL.

And few teams elicit as much praise from the New England Patriots coach as the Pittsburgh Steelers.

Part of it is the reverence that Belichick holds for the way Steelers founder Art Rooney and his family have operated a franchise that has remained among the league’s best, winning multiple Super Bowl titles more than 30 years apart. It is a model emulated when Robert Kraft bought the Patriots in 1994 and six years later hired Belichick, who has nurtured a “Patriots Way” that has helped bring four Lombardi trophies to New England.

Those histories will collide when two of the most successful programs of the 2000s meet in Sunday’s AFC Championsh­ip Game.

“They’ve been tough to deal with going all the way back to coach (Chuck) Noll in the ’70s,” Belichick said. “They were pretty consistent­ly tough to deal with through that entire period of time, which has been all of my years in the league.”

Either New England or Pittsburgh has been a part of nine of the 17 Super Bowls since 2000, winning six championsh­ips between them.

“They have a lot of wins over there,” said Patriots receiver Julian Edelman. “It’s nothing but respect for the Steelers. I went to school in Steelers Country over in Kent State. Half the school was in a Steelers jersey. I’ve known about that whole faithful for a while now.”

But for all their successes, the teams have met only four times in the playoffs. The Patriots have won three of those matchups, including the past two in the AFC title games in 2005 and 2002 at Heinz Field. Both times New England went on the win the Super Bowl.

Pittsburgh quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger has been a part of both of the Steelers’ recent championsh­ips, but the 34year-old’s only playoff meeting with the Patriots was the 2005 loss when he was a rookie.

He has spoken often about his respect for the Patriots and quarterbac­k Tom Brady, which included him requesting a jersey from Brady prior to Pittsburgh’s loss to New England in October. Big Ben missed that game because of knee surgery. This is the latest opportunit­y to play in “the lion’s den,” he said.

“They are the best in the world,” Roethlisbe­rger said. “They are the gold standard, if you will. So you want to have that opportunit­y to go up to play the best.”

 ?? Chris O'Meara / Associated Press 2009 ?? Ben Roethlisbe­rger has won two of the Steelers’ six titles.
Chris O'Meara / Associated Press 2009 Ben Roethlisbe­rger has won two of the Steelers’ six titles.

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