SUPER BOWL XLVII RAVENS VS. 49ERS

Lewis last Super link for Ravens

Baltimore Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis (right) celebrates with quarterback Joe Flacco near the end of the second half of Sunday’s AFC Championship Game against the New England Patriots in Foxborough, Mass. The Ravens won 28-13 to advance to Super Bowl XLVII. Lewis is the only Ravens player still on the team from its last Super Bowl appearance at the end of the 2000 season.
Baltimore Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis (right) celebrates with quarterback Joe Flacco near the end of the second half of Sunday’s AFC Championship Game against the New England Patriots in Foxborough, Mass. The Ravens won 28-13 to advance to Super Bowl XLVII. Lewis is the only Ravens player still on the team from its last Super Bowl appearance at the end of the 2000 season.

— When the Baltimore Ravens last went to the Super Bowl, Art Modell was the owner, Brian Billick served as head coach and Trent Dilfer was the starting quarterback.

Now, 12 years later, they’re back with owner Steve Bisciotti, Coach John Harbaugh, quarterback Joe Flacco and one significant link to both teams: Ray Lewis.

Drawing inspiration from Lewis, their longtime middle linebacker, the Ravens bullied their way past New England 28-13 Sunday night to win the AFC championship and set up a match up with the San Francisco 49ers. The victory ended a lengthy dry spell for a franchise with one Super Bowl appearance in its 17 years of existence.

Lewis was voted Super Bowl MVP after the Ravens beat the New York Giants 34-7 on Jan. 28, 2001. He announced earlier this month that he would step into retirement after Baltimore completes its current playoff run, and his teammates were determined to make sure that didn’t happen before the Super Bowl.

“Ray is a guy who’s been here since the beginning of this franchise,” strong safety Bernard Pollard said Monday. “He’s a guy who is The Raven. We respect him when he speaks. Everybody stops and everybody hears him. He’s kept this team together, he’s kept this organization together in so many ways.”

Lewis knows what it takes to win. He knows about playing in the Super Bowl. Most of all, he knows how to get his teammates ready to play with unyielding intensity.

“Everyone knows what kind of player he is and what he’s meant to this team and this organization,” center Matt Birk said. “There’s probably not another leader like him. There’s no one like him, somebody that means as much as he does to this team. Just everything he’s been through, being here since Day 1, and the way he plays and the emotion and the passion that he plays with. I’ve been his teammate for four years, and that’s how it’s always been.”

Lewis got to the Super Bowl in his fifth season, then had to wait until his 17th to get back. In between, Modell sold majority ownership of the team to Bisciotti in 2004 and Harbaugh replaced Billick, who was fired after the 2007 season.

Harbaugh on Monday paid homage to Modell, who died in September, and voiced praise for the current owner.

“Art Modell is the foundation, the bulwark of this organization,” Harbaugh said. “He and Steve come from the same place, kind of how they see things.”

Dilfer, meanwhile, was released within months of his solid performance in the Super Bowl. He was replaced by Elvis Grbac, who played one season before retiring. The Ravens then went through a half-dozen starting quarterbacks, including Anthony Wright, Chris Redman, Kyle Boller and Steve McNair, before drafting Flacco in the first round of the 2008 draft.

Flacco took over as a rookie in the season opener and has started every game since.

One day after throwing three touchdown passes and outplaying New England quarterback Tom Brady, Flacco couldn’t fully comprehend the enormity of going to the Super Bowl.

“I think we’re still on a little bit of a high from the game,” Flacco said. “I don’t know if anybody quite believes it yet, but it’s pretty real.”

Shutting out New England 21-0 in the second half? Beating Brady and the second-seed Patriots after knocking off the top-seeded Denver Broncos and Peyton Manning?

It was almost as if the Ravens needed to pinch themselves.

“I’m just kind of numb to the whole thing,” Birk said. “Slowly, it’s coming though. Hopefully, I guess you realize the moment and appreciate it, but then obviously get to work.”

Sports, Pages 19 on 01/22/2013

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