Two star quarterbacks, a rematch of a nail-biter from four years ago featuring many of the same key characters, plus Madonna — this Super Bowl has all the makings of another thriller. A season that began in labor turmoil and wound up the most successful in league history is set for a fitting end this Sunday. “It’s actually been a very fun week here,” said New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady, seeking his fourth Super Bowl ring in 11 seasons, and doing it in the city where archrival Peyton Manning has worked for 13 years. “It’s a bit surreal to be playing in Indy’s home stadium and to be practicing at their facility.” It’s been even weirder for New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning, whose superb season and chase for a second championship has been overshadowed by his big brother this week. Even with the Super Bowl in town, the biggest storyline in Indianapolis this week has been Peyton’s pain in his neck. Or, rather, his status following three neck surgeries in 19 months; whether the Colts will keep him around, at the cost of a $28 million roster bonus due in March; and whether he’s truly feuding with owner Jim Irsay. Eli, who will surpass his brother for NFL titles with a victory at Lucas Oil Stadium — yes, Peyton’s Place — claims his sibling’s issues are irrelevant to this game, in which New York is a 3-point underdog in line betting. “I’m proud of Peyton. I’ve talked to him this week. None of that comes up,” Eli said. “When I talk to Peyton, he does a great job of trying to keep me relaxed. (We) talk a little football and talk about New England some. He’s supported me this week. I know he’s just working hard trying to get healthy and I’m going to support him on that.” While Eli would own two championships with a victory, to one for Peyton, Brady could tie his childhood quarterback hero Joe Montana, and Terry Bradshaw, with four. Patriots coach Bill Belichick would equal Chuck Noll with the same number. To get it, New England must protect its crown jewel. Four years ago, Brady was banged around so much by New York that it turned the Super Bowl in the Giants’ favor. Yes, they needed David Tyree’s miracle pin-the-ball-against-the-helmet catch, then Plaxico Burress’ touchdown reception to shatter New England’s perfect season in 2008. But that victory was built on the relentless pressure applied to Brady. The formula hasn’t changed. “We feel that we certainly have a very strong group of men in the front,” Giants coach Tom Coughlin said. “It’s just the way we play and prefer to play. It’s a pressure group, and we have played better in the back end as well, probably as a result of the ball having to come out faster than it has at certain times during the year.” Brady certainly remembers the pain, physically and emotionally, from the beating he took on the field and the scoreboard. “Any time you lose, it’s a tough thing,” Brady said. “We’ve lost one Super Bowl. I remember waking up in Arizona the next morning after an hour of sleep thinking, ‘That was a nightmare, that didn’t happen.’ After time, you learn to move on and get over it.” The Giants got all over Brady again during their regular season 24-20 win at Foxborough, the last time the Patriots lost. That victory preceded a four-game slide, and New York eventually slipped to 7-7 before turning it around. Adding to the juicy potential of a down-to-the-wire reprise of 2008, both teams barely won their respective conference championship games. The Patriots needed backup cornerback Sterling Moore stripping the ball from Baltimore receiver Lee Evans in the end zone in the final seconds, then for Billy Cundiff to miss a 32-yard field goal that would have forced overtime. The Giants went into overtime in San Francisco, using two botched punt returns by the 49ers to advance. “We feel very fortunate to be here, and I’m pretty sure they do, too,” Patriots defensive lineman Vince Wilfork said. “But we also know we deserve to be here, and they know they deserve it. We are two very good and very confident teams.” Both teams are owned by key figures in solving the long labor dispute last year. New England’s Robert Kraft shuttled back and forth from the meetings to his dying wife’s bedside late in the negotiating process. Myra Kraft passed away days before the lockout was resolved. His players wore a patch with her initials MHK on the left side of their jerseys this season. “The fact that she was so dear to me and all of our players are wearing her initials above their heart is an endearing thing,” Kraft said. “What she represented is important and I hope that special sense of spirit comes through.” Giants owner John Mara played an equally important role in the labor negotiations, and when both teams reached the Super Bowl, Kraft mentioned “a certain karma” about the matchup. “I’m not necessarily happy to be playing Bill Belichick and Tom Brady, I’ll tell you that,” Mara joked. “But I’m very happy for Bob because he put his heart and soul into those negotiations during a very difficult time for him and his family, so the success they’ve had is well-deserved.” When they finally kick off Sunday, the two biggest stars will be Brady and Manning — yes, Eli. Not halftime performer Madonna, but the quarterbacks on whose arms, wits and leadership this Super Bowl will turn. “They are both leaders on the field,” Wilfork said. “That position you have to be smart, you have to be intelligent. You have to understand what’s going on around you. Both those guys have that.” On Sunday, we’ll see which one adds to his championship legacy with another Super Bowl ring.
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