After making the decision of relaunching Three Caballeros, I went through the previous blog postings (the ones that remain) and found myself drawn in particular to the Superbowl posting. This year, it was my beloved Packers´ to hoist the Lombardi trophy and decided that regardless of the fact that the Superbowl ended about 3 months ago, my first blog posting back would feature the 2011 World Champions Green Bay Packers!
To start, a bit of my history regarding the teams. My team has always been the Packers. I´ve

followed them from the age of 13, the season they won the ´96 Superbowl. There are several reasons why I love this

team: their history and majesty, their amazing fan base (the team has 86,000 people on the waiting list and the waiting time to get the season ticket? 955 years according to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel), the fact that the team is owned by the city itself (the fans own the team!) and of course, the great players they have, specifically #4 Brett Favre. I won´t get into Favre because it´s all too painf
ul, but I can´t deny he played a huge role in me becoming a cheesehead.

I can´t go into the Superbowl without mentioning the season that lead to it. What a season! Filled with amazing highs (great wins agains Eagles, Cowboys, Jets, Giants, sweeping the Vikings, emergence of Clay Matthews and a dominant defense, high-powered offense lead by the accurate and impressive Aaron Rodgers) and abysmal lows (losses against Redskins, Detroit, Miami and New England, season-ending injuries to Ryan Grant, Jermichael Finley, Al Harris, Atari Bigby and alarming concussions to Aaron Rodgers himself) this season was spectacular. There was a lot of hype surrounding the Packers heading into this season, with many "experts" picking them to be the NFC representative at the Superbowl; halfway through the season with a 4-3 record, those predictions seemed exaggerated. Truth was that as the season went along one could see the potential in the team, but oftentimes, dumb mistakes, lack of character or sometimes plain bad luck got in the way and the team faltered.

It got to the point where two games before the season ended, after two straight losses, the playoff future for the team was uncertain. In order to advance, they would need to win out the season. And did they! A great, overwhelming win against New York Giants was followed by a tough win against division rival Bears; gutsy performances both of those. And so it was that with a not terribly impressive 10-6 record, the Packers moved into the playoffs with a 6 seed, meaning they would not only face the tougher playoff route, but they would have to do it on the road. The team showed it was up to the challenge by giving its fans three glorious victories. This was a team of destiny.
That is how the Pack got to the Superbowl, playing a combination of explosive offense, tough defense and (at times) sloppy football.
I´ll admit that I was very nervous when I realized that Green Bay would have to face Pittsburgh. I knew that my team had great potential, they were very well coached and the players were amazing athletes; talent-wise, the Packers were the better team, but I feared the Steelers´ mental fortitude.

The Steelers have a well-earned reputation of being a tough, aggressive team that doesn´t give up, ever. They will fight ´till the bitter end and more often than not, come out victorious. I knew that unless the Pack kept the pressure up all 60 minutes of the game, it would come down to the wire and we would have a nervous, thrilling game.
With the stage set, game day came. I had the chance to watch the game with my amazing girlfriend at her house with her family (three people rooting for Packers, my girl rooting for Steelers and one disinterested mom) on her new, big, beautiful TV. After long years of retirement, I finally wore my #4 GB jersey. After the burgers were eaten, the beers out of the fridge and in our hands, we werea all set... GAME ON!!
Generally speaking, the Packers dominated the first half racking up a 21 to 3 score just shy of the 2 minute mark. This was beyond my wildest dreams. In the biggest stage possible, the Packers were performing as well as could be expected, having both their offense and defense scoring and keeping the opposing team in check. 2 passing touchdowns, one interception returned for a TD vs a field goal.

The game was off to a great start. Still, the Steelers would show their mettle and grit by coming up with a TD-scoring drive in the little time that remained making the half-time score 21-10.
It was a weird mood during the incredibly long half-time break (I won´t go into the half-time show this time around, except to say that Black Eyed Peas weren´t as horrible as The Who were the year before) and there was a considerable amount of nervousness settling as the injuries to Packer players Donald Driver, Charles Woodson and Sam Shields left them uncertain to return. These were three huge injuries, Driver being one of the toughest receivers in the league and vital for short gains, Woodson being the most dynamic and variable player in defense and Shields shutting receivers down.

The game resumed and my mood didn´t improve. After forcing the Pack to a 3 and out, the Steelers came back and scored, closing the scoring gap. The momentum had turned in a serious way. The 3rd quarter was all Pittsburgh. Relief wouldn´t come until the Pack scored in the 4th quarter after recovering a fumble forced by Matthews. This turned into a score and allowed cheese-heads the world over to relax for a bit. At least until the Steelers came back and not only scored a TD, but made good a 2 point attempt. The game hinged on a 3 point difference. The Packer response was a field goal but more importantly, it ate up a good chunk of time.
With the Green Bay lead being only 6 points, all the Steelers had to do was go on a 2 minute drive and score the winning TD. It all came down to this. The Defense would have to

hold... and did. In a magnificent effort and display of excellence, the Packers secondary after allowing two early completions, forced three straight incompletions and that was that; they were able to force a turn over on downs and let the Packers run the clock down. My heart was doing its best to leave my chest during all this time, my hands were sweating and I had to force myself to take deep breaths. The moment I had been waiting for 15 years was so close to arriving. After the 4th down incompletion came, I literally fell to the floor and collapsed into a ball of unexpressable joy. I wanted to run, to jump, to scream for joy, to explode all at the same time and it all canceled each other out. I was speechless, motionless. I simply was... I let the glory of the moment take me over, envelop me. I was at peace with the world. And life was good.
To top it off, Rodgers was designated the game´s MVP. Glorious.
This was the best moment in my life as a sports fan. I must admit the my favorite sport is soccer and in that, Barcelona is my team. But despite all the joys that team has given me, it pales in comparison to the glory of seeing the Green Bay Packers win the Superbowl.
There have been criticisms regarding this game, that both teams made errors, that game play was sloppy at times, that excellence on the field fell short of expectations, to which I say: fuck that. We got an exciting, nail-biter of a game. While both teams didn´t play all 60 minutes of the game at their highest level, while balls were dropped, while questionable coaching calls were made, while key injuries abounded, the game was good. Two tough, historic teams fought it out and played their hearts out. Most importantly, Green Bay won the game and in the same way they played the whole of the season. This was the best game ever.
GO PACK GO!