The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

NFL at 100: AP was there, 2010 NFC Championsh­ip Game

- By Rick Gano

CHICAGO » Green Bay nose tackle B.J. Raji, all 337 pounds of him, picked off the pass that was mistakenly thrown right to him, took off on a short earth-trembling jaunt to the end zone and then held the ball out in front with his big right hand.

Thanks to his touchdown, Big B.J. and Green Bay’s D are headed to Big D. For the Super Bowl.

Raji’s 18-yard intercepti­on return for a TD with about six minutes to go Sunday was the biggest play all day by an aggressive Packers defense in their 21-14 win over the Chicago Bears in the NFC title game.

“It’s not just about me, man,” Raji said in a jubilant Packers locker room, as he sported a championsh­ip cap. “A lot of guys made some plays today. I just happened to make a play for a touchdown. Guys were making plays all season.”

Green Bay also got two intercepti­ons, one to close out the victory in the final minute from defensive back Sam Shields.

Raji’s intercepti­on of Chicago third-stringer Caleb Hanie’s pass gave the Packers a 21-7 lead, and they needed it after being burned by a Hanie-toEarl Bennett TD a short time later.

“I was like, ‘ Wow, he threw it,’” Raji said. “It was my job to catch it, and I caught it. ... You like to think pressure usually rattles a quarterbac­k and this guy hadn’t had much experience all year in the game, so we knew eventually we’d get our shot. ... How fitting is it to be a Green Bay Packer and w in t he championsh­ip with defense? That sums it up right there.”

The Bears got the ball back again, and Hanie tried to lead them to their third TD of the final quarter after taking over for the injured Jay Cutler and inef fective backup Todd Collins. But Shields cut off the last drive with his second INT, this one at the Packers 12 to wrap up the victory.

Earlier, Shields, an undrafted rookie, had knocked the ball out of Cutler’s hand on a blitz — the Bears recovered — and also made a nice intercepti­on at the end of the half to keep the Packers up by two touchdowns.

“They’re always teaching us to stay on top and that’s what I did and got my head around,” said Shields. “Go to the highest point. Once before I was a receiver and that’s what we were taught: go to the highest point and grab the ball.”

And now the Packers are one win away from going to the highest point in the NFL. Aaron Rodgers has been the major factor, but so has a defense under coordinato­r Dom Capers that mixed it up Sunday.

The Packers made a miserable day for Chicago starter Cutler, who left in the third quarter with a knee injury and completed only 6 of 14 passes for 80 yards.

Asked if Cutler wa s confused by the Packers’ schemes, Green Bay star linebacker Clay Matthews said he didn’t notice.

“I looked out there and they had a new quarterbac­k, so kind of wish they would have had Jay i n there the whole time the way things were going,” he said.

Matthews, Cullen Jenkins, Ryan Pickett and Raji kept up the pressure throughout the game, and the Packers forced a hurried Hanie into an intentiona­l grounding call on the final series.

Until Johnny Knox got free on a 32-yarder from Hanie in the fourth quarter to set up a TD, Green Bay’s pass coverage seldom cracked and the Packers were pitching a shutout.

 ?? JIM PRISCHING — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Packers’ B.J. Raji scores the game winning touchdown on an intercepti­on during the second half of the 2010 NFC Championsh­ip game in Chicago.
JIM PRISCHING — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Packers’ B.J. Raji scores the game winning touchdown on an intercepti­on during the second half of the 2010 NFC Championsh­ip game in Chicago.

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