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Roethlisberger: 'I Let A Lot Of People Down'

Ben Roethlisberger Super Bowl

JIM LITKE   02/ 7/11 01:48 AM ET   AP

ARLINGTON, Texas — By the end of the night, any questions about redemption melted away like the snow falling softly outside Cowboys Stadium.

If there was any consolation to losing the Super Bowl for Ben Roethlisberger, for being cast as the villain in the morality play that dragged on all week, that was it. That – and the fact that tough as things went for the Steelers quarterback, he still had a better week than the NFL, Cowboys and stadium owner Jerry Jones and all the people in the Dallas area who invested so much time, money and emotion to bring the big game to town and fell flat on their face.

Not long after Green Bay's 31-25 win was in the books, Roethlisberger sat in front of his locker, his face buried in a towel to hide the tears. He wept so earnestly that when 78-year-old Pittsburgh owner Dan Rooney turned up for his customary postgame handshake with the players, a tradition that stretches back decades, he took one look at his struggling 28-year-old quarterback and simply kept walking.

"It's disappointing to lose. For me," Roethlisberger said, "it's even more disappointing because you let a lot of people down that stood up today to fight. ..."

He paused to rattle off the names of four teammates. Before walking into the interview session, Roethlisberger had detoured into the shower and shaved off the beard that covered his chin since the playoffs began. There was no way to mistake how hard it was wrestling with his emotions. He kept biting his lower lip.

"There are a lot of throws I'd like to have back," Roethlisberger said.

He didn't have to elaborate. Two of them were intercepted, though neither was entirely Roethlisberger's fault.

On the first, Packers defensive lineman Howard Green hit his arm and set in motion a wobbling pass that safety Nick Collins picked off and returned for a touchdown late in the first quarter. On the second, as the Steelers were climbing back into the game with five minutes left before intermission, safety Jarrett Bush caught up to receiver Mike Wallace just as the ball arrived, then ripped it out of his grasp.

Yet Roethlisberger insisted the responsibility was his.

"I don't put the blame on anybody but myself," he said. "I feel like I let the city of Pittsburgh down, the fans, my coaches, my teammates. It's not a good feeling."

Moments later, Roethlisberger softened his stance, but only so much.

"It's a crazy game. The ball's got to bounce your way. Sometimes it does," he said, his voice low, "and sometimes it doesn't."

That might be a fair description of Roethlisberger's roller-coaster season, which actually stretched all the way back to last spring. That's when he led a band of teammates on a booze-fueled birthday outing and wound up facing a second allegation of sexual misconduct in less than two years. Though neither incident resulted in charges, Commissioner Roger Goodell ruled Roethlisberger had violated the league personal conduct policy and slapped him with a four-game suspension.

"From Day 1, we had to overcome a lot of obstacles, starting with losing our quarterback," Steelers nose tackle Chris Hoke said. "That gave us some added fire to get here."

Some corners of the media tried to stoke that same fire one more time earlier this week. TMZ.com, the ultimate "gotcha" outlet, came upon a video of Roethlisberger out on the town Tuesday night with his linemen, singing Billy Joel's pop standard "Piano Man" – not too well, it should be noted – from a bar stool, reportedly after a couple of drinks.

When he showed up for interviews Thursday morning, reporters surrounded the podium where he was supposed to sit. Roethlisberger eased his way through the crowd, scanning the gathering through the lens of a video camera that he carried around to chronicle his own version of events since stepping onto the tarmac at the airport in Dallas at the start of the week.

The first question thrown his way was whether it was "appropriate" to go out "with all the issues you've been through."

Roethlisberger explained it was a tradition.

"I take my linemen out to dinner ... and they get to pick. Usually it's a steakhouse or something. They wanted to go to a barbecue place this time. It was really good."

It briefly reignited the debate that raged in Pittsburgh for most of the summer and on into the fall about whether the Steelers, an organization revered for its decorum and good sense, should have dumped Roethlisberger. The conversation then shifted back to the same one that followed his return, whether playing well enough all season and winning a Super Bowl could somehow provide a measure of personal redemption.

It was a silly exercise to begin with. Only a lifetime of behaving well is going redeem his reputation and by the time he headed down a hallway and out into the night, nobody was much interested in the topic, at least for the moment. A backpack was slung over Roethlisberger's left shoulder and a pair of headphones dangled from his right hand. The video camera was nowhere to be found.

___

Jim Litke is a national sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at jlitke(at)ap.org

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ARLINGTON, Texas — By the end of the night, any questions about redemption melted away like the snow falling softly outside Cowboys Stadium. If there was any consolation to losing the Super Bow...
ARLINGTON, Texas — By the end of the night, any questions about redemption melted away like the snow falling softly outside Cowboys Stadium. If there was any consolation to losing the Super Bow...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JazzyJim
Nuzis stay to the Right
04:00 PM on 02/14/2011
Man up! Daymn. Beck, Boehner, Rothlisburger...stop your crying you Nancy boys!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Balzac
10:11 PM on 02/08/2011
I was counting on Roethlisberger to win. I've made a few jokes at his expense, but at the end of the day, I figured the charges were dropped because they were some of the many bogus charges incited by ridiculous new laws, and deliberate entrapment schemes by neurotic women, who make up the vast majority of split-tail you're going to meet in a bar in a college town.

(Actually, college campuses get an extra big does of Authoritarian Feminist propaganda. 6% of rapists go to jail! Only 2% of women lie! 60% of imaginary rapes are real! Better to jail an innocent man for rape than to allow even one date-rapist to walk free!)

The reason they keep hammering on this fraudulent 6% claim is because their budget will go down if they don't. Also, claiming a low number means they can set a high quota and restrict men's basic civil liberties.

Former WWE champion Mick Foley should know better than to support RAINN.org
There are other charities which don't use propaganda and lies. Even for a WWE guy, he should know better than to support that. Maybe he's just a wimp whose wife has cowed him.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
arnth01
09:19 PM on 02/08/2011
He should have made this comment after raping a woman.
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huffyISaHottie
Nothing about me is micro;).
09:05 PM on 02/08/2011
you didn't let me down ben.....not a packer fan but i really enjoyed the outcome of the game..thanks ben
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OLMEQ
Pay Attention, You can't afford Free Speech...
05:23 PM on 02/08/2011
You threw the game Ben.... I could see it from here.....
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PatrickHenryNow
Teddy Roosevelt Rocks
11:31 AM on 02/08/2011
Karma Dude Karma !!!!!!
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Billy Jumper
Soon to be read independent author.
03:15 AM on 02/08/2011
Guys like Florida Law are just better qualified to judge people than anyone else. What do you think?
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Billy Jumper
Soon to be read independent author.
03:11 AM on 02/08/2011
Florida Law is correct...Ben was not prepared for the game.
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Billy Jumper
Soon to be read independent author.
03:09 AM on 02/08/2011
It seems that there are a lot of Christians on here, eh? Wasn't there something about forgiveness...?? Both Ben and Michael Vic will continue to grow...
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Billy Jumper
Soon to be read independent author.
03:06 AM on 02/08/2011
Who knew that Yanni is the former Greek record holder in 50 and 100 meter freestyle swimming...
Ben will grow from this too and become one of the greats...he has all of the tools.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FDRbyGodDemocrat
Liberal, nerdy, and festively plump.
01:36 AM on 02/08/2011
"He wept so earnestly that when 78-year-old Pittsburgh owner Dan Rooney turned up for his customary postgame handshake with the players, a tradition that stretches back decades, he took one look at his struggling 28-year-old quarterback and simply kept walking."

I think he might have kept on walking, crying or no crying.
12:25 AM on 02/09/2011
I think you might be correct about that.
01:14 AM on 02/08/2011
Wait. You mean he wasn't talking about random women in restrooms?
Jesterband
the fastest swimmer
12:05 AM on 02/08/2011
Karma's a b*tch, eh Ben.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mary Karius
my micro-bio is empty
09:11 AM on 02/08/2011
BAM! faved
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jeffp26
11:07 PM on 02/07/2011
Boo hoo hoo. I will never feel sorry for this rapist.
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09:34 PM on 02/07/2011
He played a good game. Hi on the first interception, I almost lept through the TV to catch it, it was in the air for so long. Second was stripped out of the receivers hands. I think he's a cowboy, and a d, but he's a hell of a football player. When he got the ball back, I was nervous.