Coach Bill Cowher: A couple things here before we get
started, first of all in regards to the head coaching vacancies that exist in
the NFL, I can tell you that we have been contacted by three teams for Russ
Grimm and they are Detroit, New Orleans and Green Bay. One team has contacted us about Ken
Whisenhunt, and that is St.
Louis. All that I will say to you is that in
accordance with what the league guidelines are, we are going to allow them to
talk. Most of these will be by
phone and they will be done later in the week. I will talk to the players tomorrow, as
I have talked to the coaches, there will be no more questions about it. There will be no discussions about
it. Our focus this week will be on
the Indianapolis Colts. I don’t
think it will be a distraction to our team at all. Having gone through the process myself
if anything, it is inspiring to know that there is a potential opportunity for
them. I have talked to Russ and
Ken. It will it be later in the
week because we are in the process of game planning for this game and we will
provide that opportunity for them.
But there will be no more discussions about that from here on out.
We have made a roster move. Quincy Morgan fractured his fibula in
the game the other day. He will be
operated on tomorrow. We will place
him on injured reserve and we have signed Lee Mays to take his position on the
roster. Lee will be back with
us.
We have one payer doubtful, that is
James Harrison with an ankle. We
have six players that are probable: Jerome Bettis has a hamstring, Kimo von
Oelhoffen has a knee, Ben Roethlisberger has a thumb, Clark Haggans has a toe,
Travis Kirschke has a groin, Joey Porter has a hand.
Obviously, in the playoffs any win
is a big win for us and I will say this, regarding what happened. Carson Palmer is a bright young player
in the National Football League and I have tremendous respect for him, not just
as a player but the way he handles himself. I think the league will be better off
with a player like that for the future.
He will come back strong from this.
I feel bad for him, knowing him just through Troy Polamalu, he is a hard
working guy and he will be back and we will be trying to stop this guy again
next year, there is no question about it.
But you hate to see those things happen. No one felt worse about than Kimo von
Oelhoffen or really, our football team.
We have a lot of respect for that football team we played. It is going to be a battle from
here on out playing that team.
There is so much good talent over there. They are well-coached. We are very respectful of them and we
feel very fortunate to be able to move on.
We are playing a team now that is the number-one seed in the AFC and in
many peoples’ eyes the number one-team in the National Football League. We are going to have to play so much
better than we played the last time we played them. We are going to have to play better than
we played last week. It is going to
take a flawless effort on our part.
We are going to have to bring everything we have and more to this
football game to have a chance to compete and or win this game. I think we understand that and at the
same time, that is why it is the playoffs and why you play the game. We’ll show up. We’ll be there and hopefully we’ll be
able to do some things better than we did the last time we played
them.
Were you at all surprised or
disappointed by Marvin Lewis’ comments about not crying like Ben
Roethlisberger?
I would like to think it was said
out of frustration. The last thing
we ever do is comment on things that their players say, I could spend a whole
press conference with some of the things that come from that team. I would like to think that it was said
out of frustration.
Does it bother you that some people
are now starting to call your team dirty?
I don’t know who has done it. I
think that is something that papers have a tendency to pick up on and they want
to make a story that really isn’t there.
I don’t know what the basis of that would be.
Can you play your underdog role to
an advantage? Is there something to
be said from a strategy standpoint as being an
underdog?
If it is, tell me how I can use it
to an advantage. We are where we
are. This is the best team in
football and obviously, the last time we played there we had an opportunity to
play and we didn’t play very well.
Obviously, the only advantage I think that we have is the fact that we
have gone through it. They were
more physical than we were the last time we played them and we didn’t handle the
noise very well. We didn’t play
very good football. If we do the
same thing when we show up this time, the results will be no different.
Does having Marvel Smith and Ben
Roethlisberger automatically make you feel you will be a little better than last
time?
I don’t know if it automatically
does that. I would like to think
that we are playing a little bit better than the last time we went in
there. Certainly, we have
some guys back that have played, it was Marvel and Ben’s first game back. But still at the same time, we had
several other guys that had been playing and they had some guys, they played
their guys. It is going to come
down to execution. We had 10
penalties the last time we were there.
We weren’t able to really get anything going offensively, we gave up the
big play and the first play of the game put us in the hole, almost like we did
the other day. We are going to have
to play in all three phases. Our
kicking game wasn’t real good the last time, and special teams, we missed a
makeable field goal, we don’t get a good punt out of the end zone and they
barely got a first down and are kicking field goals. It is going to take a supreme effort on
our part in all three phases for us to have a chance.
Looking back, their defense was very
effective. What were a couple
aspects that you saw that night from that defense?
Their defensive line, they create a
lot of havoc. We all know about
Dwight Freeney and the force that he is.
Those other guys inside, Montae Reagor, Corey Simon and Larry Triplett,
those guys are very disruptive.
They do a lot of slanting.
They may not be big physically, but they play strong. They play low. They play with leverage. With Raheem Brock and Robert Mathis on
the other side of Dwight Freeney, they have six guys that they rotate in there
and they are fresh, they are strong, they are active. They can be very, very disruptive. What they do is they free up those
linebackers that can run in Gary Brackett, Cato June and David Thorton, they can
run and you better account for 21 and 20.
Those two safeties are factors.
They are excellent tacklers.
They have great team speed.
They are very disciplined defensively and like I said, you have to be on
top and have everybody accounted for if you want to have success on a regular
basis.
Can you comment on Bob
Sanders?
He is a good football player. He plays the game hard. He is decisive. He has takes great angles and when he
comes, he brings it all. This guy
is as good a safety as there is in the National Football League.
Have playing in two games in domes
helped your team deal with the crowd?
We will find out. I would like think that having been
there once, you know what to expect.
Hopefully we will have learned.
It wasn’t as loud in Minnesota. But I think when we walked out of the
RCA Dome, I think there was no question that it was louder than we anticipated
going in. So we understand what it
is going to be like and we will have to deal with it.
Were the false starts because of the
noise?
It was loud. Some of it was that. We had three of them. Only one was the
line, two were the receivers. So I
guess that is progress. If we can
keep our receivers more disciplined than we should be okay. We are going to have to deal with it
this week and hopefully apply a little bit of discipline on Sunday.
With
Quincy Morgan out, do you lean more on
Heath Miller if you want to spread things out?
We have some options there. We will see how the week goes.
How adept have you become with the
silent count?
You have to become a little bit
unpredictable with that. You don’t
want to give them the advantage of being able to get off on it as well. We will have to work that element of it
and we will see. We will have a
different approach than we had the last time going in. It has some effect, I will tell you the
best way of dealing with the noise is play good. If you play well, you can make some
plays and not let their crowd get into it.
That is one of the best things you can do. If we just go out there and play like we
have on the road with a lot of teams, but if you go out there and give up the
first play of the game and let it be a touchdown, that is not the greatest way
of trying to silence a crowd. That
has a lot to do with it, how you play, not so much what you do.
Will you use Ike Taylor on kick
returns?
That will be one of the options we
will look at, as well.
Is Nate Washington liable to be
dressed and a factor?
It certainly is an option that we
will look at.
Are you confident in your offense’s
ability to score?
I am and I think our players
are. We have put up some points.
When we had to put up some points.
We have been throwing the ball when we have had to throw the ball. This will be a big challenge again this
week. But I think that we would not
have gotten where we are right now if we were not a balanced football team. Yes, we want to run the football but we
feel that we have some playmakers that throw the ball, as well. Our quarterback is playing as well as he
has played this year and I think he has been in this situation before so he
won’t be overwhelmed by it. But we
know the challenge. This is a good
football team we are playing and we are going to have to be able to do both
because they didn’t get to winning 13 straight games, or whatever it was, by
being one-dimensional. We cannot
allow them to continue to tee off and we have to be able to run the ball but at
the same time, we have to make them respect us throwing it. We are going to have to be
balanced. We are not going to be
able to be one-dimensional in this game on either side of
it.
Has Cedrick Wilson done things
differently to emerge?
No, sometimes games unfold and
opportunities present themselves and he has done a good job. Ben has put the ball out to him
and he has made some plays. He made a big play against this team last time we
played them. We haven’t been a big
throwing team so I guess when some of these guys catch three or four balls, it
is the news around here. These guys
are good football players. To their
credit, sometimes they would like to be on a team that throws the ball 35 or 40
times and some of their numbers would probably be a lot greater than what they
are because their number should not indicate how they are as receivers, it is
just kind of how the game unfolds sometimes and how we play the game around
here.
Can you talk about facing a playoff
team in the playoffs that you played during the
season?
I don’t look at it from that
perspective. You know in the
playoffs that when you have played a
team once, that there are some things that you are going to see that they
have done to you, and how they played you that you may counter the second time
through, and them with you. The
first time you play someone, you are not sure how they are going to approach you
on both sides of the ball. I think
the second time through, you have a better sense of what they are about and so
there is a little bit of the adjustment that goes into the game planning on both
sides of the ball. I think that it
is a little more of a chess match as opposed to time getting acquainted when you
play each other for the second time.
I just like the fact that we played in that dome already once. That will not be foreign territory to us
going back there the second time.
It wont make it any easier, trust me, but at least we know what we are
walking into.
Does it help having experienced the
emotions of playing on the road at Cincinnati?
When you go on the road and
experience those emotions, it doesn’t just take any one situation like that to
take place. Those things happen. We were playing a team that was a rivalry team,
a lot of things were said leading up to that game, a divisional opponent, we
were playing them in the playoffs. That in itself lends itself to the talking
that takes place between players. In the playoffs, when you’re playing on the
road that’s the same thing. You’re dealing with a hostile environment and the
finality of where you are in the playoffs exists and you’re the underdog. You
are. We understand that going in. We’re going to in there and we’re going to
give it our best shot. We’ve been in this mode now, you lose you go home. I’m
not so sure it hasn’t been that way for the last four or five weeks. We
understand the level of desperation that we are going to have to play at. It’s
going to take our best football. We’ve got to be able to stay focused. There’s a
fine line between going in there and being emotional and allowing that to have
an adverse affect, which happened to us last week. We settled down more in the
second half of that game. We lost our composure at times. I don’t want us to
lose our emotion but we can’t lose our composure. There’s a fine line when
walking that and at times we kind of lost that the other day. We have to play
with the same emotion; we have to play with that same level of desperation or
else we are not going to move on. [We have to] play smart and executing, play
fast but not out of control. That’s the things that we have to be able to do. If
we can do that then we have a chance and if not then it will be our last game.
Did playing a high-octane offense
like the Bengals help with your preparation for
Cincinnati?
From a preparation standpoint, yeah
because we practiced the no-huddle last week. We’re ready for it. It will help
from that standpoint and it makes your practices that much faster. Our practices
will be real fast because it was all no-huddle and that’s the way it will be
again this week.
Three out of four road teams won in
the playoffs; does that speak to the parity in the
NFL?
I think that’s true. It can come
down to one or two games. You can see that. Where those one or two games were in
the year can make a difference. It’s really where you are at the end of the
year, how you’re playing. I think that really has a lot to do with it, not that
circumstances don’t take place. When you have an opportunity to earn a bye
(week), that’s a big advantage. So you may make decisions there accordingly. You
want to be playing your best football and you want to be playing with confidence
so that there isn’t a sense of overreaction when you hit a little adversity
during the course of a game, which you’re going to face when you play in a
playoff game. There’s going to be an ebb and flow in the game, you have to be
able to deal with that and how you respond to that has a lot to do with the
outcome of the game. There is a fine line. There are probably a couple plays
that can happen early in the game that can really affect the game one way or the
other.
Your team responded both times when
Cincinnati went up by 10 points twice.
Which is huge and we talk about that
all the time. You have to be able to weather a storm. You have to be able to
overcome things, not overreact and respond. It’s important that when you feel a
game start to sway, momentum-wise, to the other side that you’re able to come up
with some series or some play that can get it back to your side. It’s very
important that you’re able to respond to certain things and you have to keep
playing. You can’t overreact to things. You can’t control the last play or what
took place. The only thing you can control is the next play, the focus that has
to take place and the trust. You can’t deviate from that. Sometimes the bullets
start to fly and you try to do more than your job and that’s when it starts to
fall apart. Our guys have been pretty good about trusting each other, staying
within what they’re being asked to do, finding a way to keep battling back and
pecking away. Just keep playing. If you do that you may find yourself, when it’s
all said and done, with an opportunity to win it.
Is recognizing that the biggest
advantage to having experience?
Being able to understand that going
in and to be able to deal with that when it happens. It’s one thing to talk
about it here in a nice air conditioned room but also when you’re out there
you’re dealing with the emotional peeks and valleys. You have to channel that in
the right way. You can’t lose your composure but there’s got to be a resolve,
there’s got to be an emotion that you’re able to sustain through the course of
60 minutes. There’s going to have to be a focus between the whistles and [we
can] not allow it to filter out outside the whistle and making good decisions.
Sometimes things happen in a game that you don’t always agree with but you have
to move on. The people that can do that and channel that energy the right way;
deal with the circumstances and how you respond has a lot to do with the
outcome.
In your experiences as a No. 1 seed,
is it tough to stay sharp late in the season?
I don’t remember losing many games
coming off the bye (week). Of course we’ve lost that next game a few times. I
think it’s up to the individual teams. If you look at a lot of the coaches in
this tournament right now, they’ve been there before. They know their team a lot
better than anybody on the outside. Don’t count on that for any kind of
advantage. We have to go in there and play our best football and recognize the
strengths that we’re facing against this good football team that we’re playing
and make sure that we do the things that we do well and try to do it better than
them.
Are the things that the Colts do
similar to the things that Tampa Bay did when Dungy coached
them?
It would be hard to go back that far
and compare. Tony’s like a lot of good coaches in this league, he’s taking the
talent that he has and he’s doing what they do best. Their defense has a lot of
team speed; they have active safeties and if they get up on you they can make it
a long day for you. They have a lot of the same qualities. They’re a solid
defense that does not give up a lot of big plays. We have to be very patient
against them. I think that is the challenge that we have, is if we have to stay
patient.
Do you practice getting different
personnel on the field against a no-huddle?
We have to try to do it. We have to
be careful because they will hurry up to the line of scrimmage and try to run a
play before you can get your guys on and you can get [caught] with 12 guys [on
the field]. We’ll have to be judicious with how much we do substitution-wise. If
we’re going to do it we have to do it very quickly. We did it last time against
them. But we have to be ready to play with the people out there on second down;
we have to be ready to play with them on third down. We understood that going in
[the last game] and that’s how we’ll go into this game thinking as well.
Are you comfortable with the memo
the NFL sent out about artificial crowd noise?
Yes I am.
Can you comment on Dungy’s family
situation?
Everyone’s heart in
America went out to Tony and Lauren. I knew
Tony and his kids when I was with him in Kansas
City. I have not had a chance to talk to
him personally, which I will have a chance to do before the game. We all
understand the respect and no one has handled it more inspirationally than Tony
and his wife. That’s an unfortunate part of our profession; we live in a fish
bowl. We have to experience that with the rest of
America. Those are things that you would
sometimes like to share with just those who are close to you. Tony found out
that he’s very close to a lot of us. He’s a very special guy. My heart and
prayers go out to him, Lauren and their family. He’ll get through it. Tony’s a
strong guy.
Can you comment on your offense in
the first game against Indianapolis?
We did not play very well
defensively or offensively. We had 90 yards of total offense. There’s no
question that we have to play better. Their defensive line obviously jumped us
at the line of scrimmage. They did a great job of penetrating. The safeties show
up. The one play I can still see is when we had a draw play on third down and
seven and Bob Sanders was 20 yards deep and playing half the field and he took
an angle and [he] and Willie [Parker] were one-on-one and [Sanders] stopped him
about a yard short of the first down. They played well. They tackled well. They
jumped us at the line of scrimmage and we had some opportunities. We couldn’t
get any third down continuity on offense. It was hard to get any rhythm. If we
start moving the ball a little bit then you have a chance to get a little flow.
It’s important that we’re able to convert third downs and finish drives and
establish a little bit of that line of scrimmage. It’s probably going to be a
feast or famine type of game. We understand that going in and that’s the
challenge that we have.
Can you talk about Ike Taylor
shutting down Chad Johnson in the three Bengals games
this year.
Ike has played well. Ike has taken
that challenge on about mid-way through the season. We started to putting him on
some of the premiere guys because of his ability to match up size-wise, athletic
ability-wise and he’s taken that on as a challenge. He goes out there and
practices every day. He’s looking to get better every day. He’s taken a big step
this year. Now he’s got a chance to come back and look to play a little bit
better than he did last week and I think he will. This will be a big one. Every
time you see a preview of this game you keep seeing that first play [an 80-yard
touchdown pass to Marvin Harrison] shown over and over again. So he’s going to
live with that. We don’t have to say much about that anymore. He’s a good
football player. He’s learning and he’s growing tremendously. The strides he’s
taking from the beginning of the season to where he is now is something he will
build on and I think the best is still ahead of him.
Do you try to take away one aspect
of an offense when it is as balanced as they are?
You have to be careful. Edgerrin
James, of all the weapons that they have with [Marvin] Harrison, [Reggie] Wayne,
[Brandon] Stokely, Dallas Clark and the
quarterback [Peyton Manning], with the play-action, can hit you down the field
which we have experienced as well. Edgerrin James makes some unbelievable runs.
He’s one of those guys that, we had him pinned a couple times in the first game,
and you look up and he gains a yard or he gains two yards. He is a very strong
runner, great body lean, he’s always falling forward. You have to be very
careful. There’s no one part of this team that you can say, ‘If I stop
Harrison then we can stop them.’ There’s too
many of them. So we’re going to have to be very disciplined. We’re going to have
to take a cat-and-mouse approach to them and try to get them into third downs
and try to limit the big plays. [We have to] try to get them into some third
downs and get off the field and try to move the ball offensively and keep the
ball out of their hands. That’s the best approach that you can take against
them. It’s not been too successful by many people but that’s what we’re going to
try to do.
Was it big for
San
Diego to hold James to 30 or so yards in
beating them in Indianapolis?
It was.
[San
Diego] was able to get some pressure on
Peyton and got him out of sync. At the same time they were able to move the
ball. They threw the ball somewhat and they got a couple big plays. The big run
at the end of the game, when Indianapolis was able to come back, was a big
play. It’s going to be one of those games that, if we can play our best
football, we’re going to have to do it for 60 minutes. This is not a game that’s
going to be decided in the first three quarters. You’re going to have to sustain
that approach and that focus for 60 minutes.
Did you confuse Manning in the
second quarter in your first meeting?
I don’t know how you measure the
success. Peyton is a guy that there is nothing that you can show that he hasn’t
seen. They do a good job and don’t give you a lot of formations. What he’s
seeing in those formations that he’s in, everybody is trying at some point and
some way so he’s seen it all year long. You have to be patient sometimes with
what you show them. But at the same time you can’t jeopardize what you’re
responsibilities are. Again there’s a fine line that goes with that. We’re all
looking at the play clock knowing that at some point they’re going to make a
decision and do what they have to do. We have to ready to play the snap at any
point. It’s a little bit of that cat-and-mouse game. He’s too good of a
quarterback, when he sees a defense, he’s knows where to go with the ball,
particularly when they’re all on the same page.
What made you take a chance on
hiring Ken Whisenhunt?
Kenny was here. Kenny earned the
opportunity. I was around him when he was coaching the tight ends and I was
impressed with that. There’s a lot to be said when you can hire from within.