Monday, February 4, 2013
Monday, February 4, 2013
@

Joe Flacco leads Baltimore Ravens past San Francisco 49ers in electric Super Bowl

Baltimore Ravens quarterback Joe Flaccois lifted into the air by teammates after defeating the San Francisco 49ers. (Bill Haber/AP)
Baltimore Ravens quarterback Joe Flaccois lifted into the air by teammates after defeating the San Francisco 49ers. (Bill Haber/AP)
More coverage
  • Flacco shines in Super Bowl win
  • Bleacher Report: Instant contributors Birds can find in draft
  • Eagletarian: Montgomery's concussion, famous run
  • Photos: Super Bowl XLVII
  • Have your say: Eagles stay or go?
  • Forum: Sound off on the Eagles
  • Latest Eagles videos
  • Baltimore Ravens quarterback Joe Flaccois lifted into the air by teammates after defeating the San Francisco 49ers. (Bill Haber/AP) Gallery: Ravens 34, 49ers 31
    Gear Up!
    • Loading...

    NEW ORLEANS - Joe Flacco is an Ordinary Joe no more.

    In a game that will forever be known as the Blackout Bowl, the Baltimore Ravens survived a near collapse following a 34-minute delay after the Superdome lost power, then rode their steady quarterback to beat the San Francisco 49ers, 34-31, in Super Bowl XLVII on Sunday night.

    Flacco, the Audubon, N.J., native who has been criticized for his placid demeanor, was voted the Super Bowl's most valuable player. He completed 22 of 33 passes for 287 yards and three touchdowns. A crucial third-down pass helped to give the Ravens a late five-point lead and put pressure on the 49ers to score a touchdown to win.

    "I don't think it's going to settle in for a while," the 28-year-old Flacco said. "We don't make anything easy. It was a hard-fought game on both sides. I think we gave the country a pretty good game to watch. Not to our liking necessarily, but that's the way it goes sometimes."

    Ravens coach John Harbaugh won his first Super Bowl and beat his little brother, Jim, the Niners coach. The former Eagles special teams coordinator and defensive backs coach became the first of Andy Reid's former assistants to claim a crown.

    "It's very tough," Harbaugh said of beating his brother. "It's a lot tougher than I thought it was going to be. It's very painful."

    The victory marks the second Super Bowl title for the Ravens, who have been in existence since 1996. The Ravens won after the 2000 season in Steve Bisciotti's first year as owner after he purchased the team from Art Modell, who relocated his Cleveland Browns to Baltimore.

    The retiring Ray Lewis is the only member of the Ravens to be on both Super Bowl-winning teams. The controversial linebacker was mired in a hullabaloo last week when a trainer claimed in a Sports Illustrated report that he sent Lewis deer antler spray, which contains an NFL-banned growth hormone, as he recovered from a torn triceps injury earlier this season.

    "No other way to go out and end a career," Lewis said. "This is how you do it."

    From the Sports Desk
    Stay Connected

    San Francisco drove all the way to the Baltimore 5-yard line after Justin Tucker's 38-yard field goal gave the Ravens a 34-29 lead, but quarterback Colin Kaepernick could not complete a miracle comeback. Kaepernick, who threw for 302 yards and ran for another 62, tossed three straight incomplete passes and Baltimore took over.

    The Ravens took a safety when punter Sam Koch ran out of the end zone, and the 49ers could not score on the ensuing free kick as time ran out.

    The 49ers spotted the Ravens a 28-6 lead when Jacoby Jones returned the second-half kickoff 108 yards for a touchdown, setting a Super Bowl record. But after San Francisco ran a few plays, the lights went off at the Superdome.

    "Both teams had to deal with it," John Harbaugh said. "Actually, I thought they dealt with it better, obviously. They were able to turn the momentum of the game."

    The 49ers scored the next 17 points and outscored the Ravens, 25-6, after the blackout. But Flacco did enough to stave off the charge. He hit receiver Anquan Boldin (six catches for 104 yards and a touchdown) with a 15-yard pass on a key third down on the Ravens' drive that expanded their lead to five with 4 minutes, 23 seconds left in the game.

    A former University of Delaware star, Flacco became the third quarterback ever with 11 touchdown passes in a single postseason, tying the 49ers' Joe Montana and the Rams' Kurt Warner. The 49ers, who won five previous Super Bowls - four with Montana - lost for the first time in the championship game.

    Baltimore led, 28-3, and then the lights went out. Except for a few emergency lights, the stadium was in near darkness. The NFL said that the power went out just at the stadium and not throughout the city. The apparent cause was the halftime show featuring Beyoncé, which required a great deal of electricity.

    After the delay, the 49ers were the first to score when Kaepernick engineered a seven-play, 80-yard drive with 7:20 left in the third quarter. The quarterback fired a 31-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Michael Crabtree.

    The 49ers kept the momentum going as Frank Gore went around right end for a 6-yard touchdown run. The 49ers scored 14 points in a little over two minutes and were back in the game, trailing the Ravens, 28-20, with 5:05 to go in the third.

    The Ravens continued to fall apart when running back Ray Rice fumbled after a short catch on his own 24. The 49ers couldn't get a first down, however, and David Akers kicked a 34-yard field goal.

    By the end of the third quarter, the 49ers had whittled the deficit to 28-23, having scored 17 straight points since the blackout.

    The Ravens stopped the bleeding on their next possession. Flacco marched Baltimore 71 yards on 12 plays, but the drive was halted at the 49ers 1. Justin Tucker kicked a 19-yard field goal and the Ravens were again up by eight, 31-23.

    San Francisco kept coming back. Kaepernick needed just five plays to march 76 yards, finishing the drive with a 15-yard touchdown run.

    The 49ers went for two and the tie, but Kaepernick's pass was off and the Ravens held on.


    Contact Jeff McLane at jmclane@phillynews.com or on Twitter @Jeff_McLane.

    Jeff McLane INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
    email
    You May Also Like
    Comments  (32)
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:26 PM, 02/03/2013
      I think this game shows Scrambers don't win the "Big One" I mean Colin Kaepernick is a Randall Cunningham or Michael Vick or whatever you wanna call him. But I really don't get why scrambling QB don't win the Big One. Like they should. If you look at the situation Logically scramblers would be better than a Pocket. I'm a guy who prefers a pocket passer but Logically scramblers are No-Brainers at being better if they have a "Sense". Scramblers only have a sense with their legs and physicality. Pocket Passers stand their and Read and don't run unless somebody blew an assignment on their block. But Logically if you have a QB That Has Speed and can run, Make Reads, Can throw, Take Hard Hits, then the Sky is the Limit. If you have a QB Who can Run, Have throwing Power, but accuracy is Poor throwing unstable passes, and not make reads, Then NO WONDER why you can't win the Big One. From my Perspective if you had an All-Around QB Who can switch from Scramber to Pocket and have a sense then you can do. If a QB had all qualities like I just listed then he could run and supply another weapon if nobody is open and run and get a first down and stay in the pocket and make perfect reads and deliver the ball.
      DeathPenalty94
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:10 AM, 02/04/2013
      Kaepernick had plenty of time most of the game, he could do what he wanted. Turnovers and tightness hurt the 49ers. I see the difference in the 2 QBs this way....the Ravens have been knocking on the door for a few years. Kaepernick is a rookie who hasn't got an entire season of starts. We're always trying to make general statements, like "scrambling QBs don't win Super Bowls". But really, each team is in a different situation, it's a team game, and many time the wily, experienced team can capatalize on the other's mistakes and win.
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:29 PM, 02/03/2013
      Great to see a player from the area do so well. Flacco upstaged Ray Ray, which was good because we then didn't have to hear him.
      watsonmr
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:31 PM, 02/03/2013
      Exciting SuperBowl game; horrendous half-time show.
      Chantal
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:32 PM, 02/03/2013
      Good game, bad call at the end, but congrats to Ravens. Ray Lewis invisible as he has been for a couple years now.
      Sidewinder7
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:34 PM, 02/03/2013
      Joe is a winner--and the second most famous graduate of my high school, Audubon High.
      birdsfansince56
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:42 PM, 02/03/2013
      Good game but the holding non call at the end kinda spoiled it. I could understand if it were a grab and let go type play but the Ravens player darn near tackled him to the ground. That Kapernick dude is a serious duel threat, deadly arm and legs, makes you wonder what could've been if the Eagles had chosen him instead of Kafka.
      realtruth
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:44 PM, 02/03/2013
      Congratulations to MVP Joe Flacco, finally a local kid that won it all.
      jim35
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:46 PM, 02/03/2013
      Must be nice. Congrats Baltimore.
      Richard Saunders
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:59 PM, 02/03/2013
      @DeathPenalty94 - What game were you watching? Kap was killing there secondary stats in the 2nd half showed it. The main reason for the loss was shaky 9ers D at crucial points in the game and lets not forget if it were not for the kick return Ravens lose to a srambling QB. Oh yeah as for scrambling QBs not wining SBs Steve Young was one Brett Farve was another uh yeah what the other guy from Green Bay I think his name was Arron Rodgers. Both QBs played well and nothing you wrote made much sense.
      realtruth
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:04 AM, 02/04/2013
      I enjoyed the game. Lots of action. I don't think the no call at the end was a bad call. The ball would have been over the receiver's head and out of bounds. It was pretty much uncatchable. Who would have thought John Harbaugh would win a SB before Andy Reid.
      Phillies2008WSChamps
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:04 AM, 02/04/2013
      Congrats to the Ravens. Happy for John Harbaugh, Joe Flaccid, Ray Rice & Bernard pierce. Fitting that the Ravens had a defensive stand to win the game.Bolden was a beast. Jacoby Jones had 2 huge plays for ttouchdowns. The Ravens are everything the Eagle's are not. Baltimore runs the ball, they have a tough physical defense, a Qb who makes plays & tall, physical receivers who go up and make plays. Bolden, torrid smith, Jacobs Jones & Pita all have size & make plays. The eagle's have no size at receiver and Reid refused to run the ball. Congrats Baltimore.
      Fan74
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:10 AM, 02/04/2013
      I had no dog in the fight [sorry] so I looked at it as the new offense against the standard offense. The niners O outscored the Baltimore O and the diff in the game was the kick off return. Baltimore O was out of gas at the end which bodes well for the Eagles going forward. Baltimore could not stop the niners once they got rolling. Penalties evened out. That phantom roughing the kicker penalty was a joke and the holding at the end was borderline and perhaps the ball was too far out of bounds to have been caught anyway. Kelly's offense did well for itself as far as the niners using a lot of his principles. Great game though. Congrats to Baltimore and thank God I don't have to watch Ray Lewis anymore. He reeks of phoniness.
      tpizza
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:11 AM, 02/04/2013
      I think there's a difference between running QBs and scrambling QBs. Guys like Vick and RGIII and the QB from Carolina (can't think of his name) are running QBs while guys like Young and Kaepernick and even when McNabb was at his best were more scrambling QBs. I don't the QBs who run with the ball and get crushed can ever have success.
      Phillies2008WSChamps
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:13 AM, 02/04/2013
      DP94 must have been at one h#ll of a party...
      tpizza


    View comments: 1  |  2  |  3