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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Steelers, Panthers on Super Bowl road trip


Quarterback Jake Plummer is coming off his first playoff win with the Broncos. 
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Dave Goldberg Associated Press

The Broncos celebrated Sunday for the second time in as many days.

Less than 24 hours after Denver ended New England’s quest for its third straight Super Bowl victory, Pittsburgh held on to beat Indianapolis 21-18. That ensured that not only will the Broncos be home for the AFC title game Sunday, they won’t have to visit the RCA Dome, where they allowed 90 points in playoff losses to the Colts the past two seasons.

Carolina, which was in the Super Bowl two years ago, will go to Seattle to play for the NFC title after winning 29-21 in Chicago.

The Steelers and Panthers will be trying to get to the Super Bowl by winning three road games, something accomplished only by New England after the 1985 season.

Pittsburgh (13-5) at Denver (14-3)

This will be Pittsburgh’s sixth AFC title game in 12 seasons.

But this also will be its first of those on the road, not necessarily a bad thing, considering that the Steelers are 1-4 at home in those previous championships. They are the first sixth-seeded team to reach a championship game since the NFL went to the current lineup of six playoff teams from each conference in 1990.

But they are no ordinary sixth seed.

“Everybody was ready to put Denver and Indianapolis in the championship game,” wide receiver Hines Ward said. “We’re the same team that went 15-1 last year and made it to the championship game. We’re coming from a different perspective now, being on the road playing two tough road games. We all believed in one another, even if no one else did.”

Denver was second in the NFL in rushing this season and Pittsburgh was fifth.

The Broncos may also be a tougher test for Pittsburgh.

The Steelers beat an Indianapolis team that hadn’t played a meaningful game in a month. The rust showed early as Pittsburgh jumped to a 21-3 lead and kept Peyton Manning out of his rhythm until two touchdown drives in the fourth quarter.

Denver is fresh and Jake Plummer is coming off his first playoff win with the Broncos. Playoff experience can mean a lot to a quarterback, as Ben Roethlisberger has shown this year after five interceptions in two postseason games as a rookie last season.

Yes, Denver is a tough place to play. But so was Indy and the Steelers already have shown they aren’t especially good in title games at home.

So they might as well be on the road.

Carolina (13-5) at Seattle (14-3)

On paper, this is a matchup between Seattle’s potent offense and Carolina’s staunch defense – the Seahawks led the NFL this season with 452 points. But that can be simplistic – the Panthers and Bears both moved the ball well in a game that was supposed to end up something like 6-3 or 10-6 instead of a contest with 50 points and 716 yards between the two teams.

The home field should be an edge for Seattle. The Seahawks are 9-0 at Qwest Field, one of the noisiest venues in the league – indoors or out. But Carolina won the NFC title two seasons ago in Philadelphia, another tough home field.