Meet the new Joe Cool

Flacco, not Lewis, man of moment

Baltimore Ravens quarterback Joe Flacco is celebrated by his teammates after leading the Ravens to a 34-31 victory over the San Francisco 49ers on Sunday night in New Orleans. Flacco, the game’s MVP, passed for 287 yards and three touchdowns, one of those a 56-yard pass to Jacoby Jones, who also returned the second-half kickoff 108 yards for a touchdown. Flacco’s performance capped a four-game playoff run during which he threw 11 touchdown passes with no interceptions.
Baltimore Ravens quarterback Joe Flacco is celebrated by his teammates after leading the Ravens to a 34-31 victory over the San Francisco 49ers on Sunday night in New Orleans. Flacco, the game’s MVP, passed for 287 yards and three touchdowns, one of those a 56-yard pass to Jacoby Jones, who also returned the second-half kickoff 108 yards for a touchdown. Flacco’s performance capped a four-game playoff run during which he threw 11 touchdown passes with no interceptions.

— Midway through the third quarter of Sunday night’s Super Bowl XLVII, a Superdome spokesman issued a statement to explain what happened during the surreal 34-minute delay when the lights went out.

When electricity returned to the building, suspense suddenly filled the air again in a game that came down to the final tick.

All the while, Joe Flacco shrugged his way to becoming the Super Bowl Most Valuable Player in a 34-31 victory over the 49ers.

No fourth-quarter drama was going to faze Flacco, the coolest Joe since Montana, who showed his most emotion of Super Bowl week celebrating as confetti fell around him.

Go ahead and believe that linebacker Ray Lewis willed a 10-6 Ravens team to a world title if you wish. But the Ravens winning four consecutive postseason games had more to do with Flacco emerging as a $20 million quarterback than Lewis retiring as a first-ballot Hall of Famer.

Interest in Lewis overshadowed the importance of Flacco.

With 7:14 left in the game with the Ravens leading 31-29, Flacco reminded America. On third-and-1 at the Ravens’ 45, Flacco checked the play at the line when he noticed 49ers cornerback Carlos Rogers lined up in man coverage against wide receiver Anquan Boldin. The back-shoulder throw Flacco made to Boldin for a 15-yard gain displayed the smarts and accuracy for which he has become known. The completion led to a field goal that made the 49ers need a touchdown instead of a field goal to win on their final, frantic drive.

In the first time-capsule moment of Super Bowl XLVII in the second quarter, Flacco looked deep and unleashed a pass for wide receiver Jacoby Jones two steps behind the 49ers defense. When the under thrown ball finally got to Jones, he caught it, fell and raced laterally toward the end zone, outrunning the defenders who had caught up.

The play was perfectly imperfect, just like the man who authored it - the man who now stands to cash in as an unrestricted free agent after another clutch performance.

Flacco, who completed 22 of 33 passes for 287 yards 3 touchdowns for a passer rating of 124.2, keeps building a postseason legacy comparable only to quarterbacks enshrined in Canton. He has a 9-4 postseason record and threw 11 touchdowns in these playoffs without an interception.

He isn’t fleet-footed or quick-witted and nobody on Madison Avenue has lined up at Flacco’s door - yet. Flacco’s dad even was quoted last week calling his son dull, not that Flacco disagreed.

“It’s just who I am,” he said.

Boring not only was better for Flacco but contributed to making him the best on a night he shined for four quarters, no matter how dark things looked.

Super Bowl MVPs

2013 Joe Flacco, QB, Baltimore

2012 Eli Manning, QB, N.Y. Giants

2011 Aaron Rodgers, QB, Green Bay

2010 Drew Brees, QB, New Orleans

2009 Santonio Holmes, WR, Pittsburgh

2008 Eli Manning, QB, N.Y. Giants

2007 Peyton Manning, QB, Indianapolis

2006 Hines Ward, WR, Pittsburgh

2005 Deion Branch, WR, New England

2004 Tom Brady, QB, New England

2003 Dexter Jackson, FS, Tampa Bay

2002 Tom Brady, QB, New England

2001 Ray Lewis, LB, Baltimore

2000 Kurt Warner, QB, St. Louis

1999 John Elway, QB, Denver

1998 Terrell Davis, RB, Denver

1997 Desmond Howard, KR, Green Bay

1996 Larry Brown, CB, Dallas

1995 Steve Young, QB, San Francisco

1994 Emmitt Smith, RB, Dallas

1993 Troy Aikman, QB, Dallas

1992 Mark Rypien, QB, Washington

1991 Ottis Anderson, RB, N.Y. Giants

1990 Joe Montana, QB, San Francisco

1989 Jerry Rice, WR, San Francisco

1988 Doug Williams, QB, Washington

1987 Phil Simms, QB, N.Y. Giants

1986 Richard Dent, DE, Chicago

1985 Joe Montana, QB, San Francisco

1984 Marcus Allen, RB, L.A. Raiders

1983 John Riggins, RB, Washington

1982 Joe Montana, QB, San Francisco

1981 Jim Plunkett, QB, Oakland

1980 Terry Bradshaw, QB, Pittsburgh

1979 Terry Bradshaw, QB, Pittsburgh

1978 Randy White, DT and Harvey Martin, DE, Dallas

1977 Fred Biletnikoff, WR, Oakland

1976 Lynn Swann, WR, Pittsburgh

1975 Franco Harris, RB, Pittsburgh

1974 Larry Csonka, RB, Miami

1973 Jake Scott, S, Miami

1972 Roger Staubach, QB, Dallas

1971 Chuck Howley, LB, Dallas

1970 Len Dawson, QB, Kansas City

1969 Joe Namath, QB, N.Y. Jets

1968 Bart Starr, QB, Green Bay

1967 Bart Starr, QB, Green Bay

Sports, Pages 16 on 02/04/2013

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