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By BARRY WILNER
AP Pro Football Writer
You again.
Not that the Patriots and Seahawks are likely to mind seeing who has joined them in the NFL's conference championships. Remember, New England routed Indianapolis 42-20 and Seattle romped over Green Bay 36-16 to open the season.
Rematches at the final step to reaching the Super Bowl have been common recently. In the AFC, from 2009-14, only in 2011 was the conference championship not a repeat meeting. In the NFC, it happened in 2010, 2011, 2013 and this season.
Twice in the NFC, intradivision matchups meant a third game between rivals: 2010 when Green Bay won at Chicago, and 2013, when Seattle beat San Francisco.
Not one of the others has involved teams from the same division. Excluding 2014 - if you know now who is going to win next Sunday, please clue us in - in those rematches, the regular-season winner also won the AFC playoff game only once: Baltimore over New England in 2012.
In the NFC, the Giants lost to the 49ers during the regular schedule, but beat them in overtime in the conference title match.
Rematches are a double-edged sword. The victor in the first meeting has the confidence of already owning a win and the knowledge that more than enough worked during that regular-season game to handle the opponent. The loser has the revenge factor - and maybe a touch more motivation.
"I'd like to think I'm a better quarterback and we're a better team and more well-equipped to handle the unknown and the unforeseen," Colts QB Andrew Luck said.
"I think we've got a bunch of good football players, and a chance to go up New England and play them and get another crack at it is awesome. We'll make sure to take full advantage of it and do what we can."
The Colts did plenty on Sunday in dominating Denver, avenging their opening loss of 2014. They also saw the Patriots struggle, twice falling into 14-point holes before rallying to defeat Baltimore on Saturday.
As Patriots coach Bill Belichick noted, dryly of course: "I don't think that's a formula to win a lot of playoff games. They're a tough group and they never give up, no matter what the situation is."
The upcoming situation is simply this: Luck and the Colts have the look of a rising power after two highly impressive postseason performances. New England showed some vulnerability that Luck, who led the NFL with 40 TD passes, and a rapidly improving defense just might be able to take advantage of.
Of course, after vanquishing Peyton Manning and the Broncos, Indy gets Tom Brady, the most accomplished postseason quarterback of his era.
"That's how it works in the playoffs," safety Mike Adams says. "Everybody we play is top-tier. Everybody we play is big time. We got to step our game up and be ready."
Even more intriguing might be the NFC matchup.
Seattle was on a, well, Super high for the season's traditional kickoff game, and the defending NFL champs dismantled Green Bay. Then the Seahawks went into a funk and, at one point were 3-3.
They are now 13-4 and have that mean, hungry, determined, versatile and, yes, invincible air about them.
"Guys are playing selfless. There aren't any egos, there aren't any agendas, and guys just want to do whatever it takes to win," All-Pro cornerback Richard Sherman said.
"If that means making a tackle, then make the tackle; if that means catching the football, we're going to catch the football. Guys are playing for one another, they don't care about stats, nor do they care about anything else."
Sounds a lot like Green Bay, which displayed the resilience of a championship contender in its scintillating comeback victory against Dallas at Lambeau Field. An ailing All-Pro QB Aaron Rodgers, still battling an aching calf, got everyone involved, including two rookie targets who scored touchdowns in the second half.
Just like the Seahawks, the Packers are vastly improved from midseason.
And equally as hungry.
"Looking forward to going back up to Seattle," coach Mike McCarthy says, "and looking forward to winning the NFC championship."
KRISTIN J. BENDER, Associated Press
SCOTT SMITH, Associated Press
YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK, Calif. (AP) —
American rock climber Tommy Caldwell was first to pull himself atop a 3,000-foot sheer granite face in Yosemite National Park, followed minutes later by his longtime friend Kevin Jorgeson.
The pair embraced and then Jorgeson pumped his arm in the air and clapped his hands above his head. After years of practice, failed attempts and 19 grueling days scaling the vertical wall on El Capitan by their bloodied fingertips, the friends at last grasped success.
"That's a deep, abiding, lifelong friendship, built over suffering on the wall together over six years," said Caldwell's mother, Terry, among some 200 people in the valley floor thousands of feet below who broke into cheers at the climbers' historic feat Wednesday.
She said her son could have reached the top of the world's largest granite monolith several days ago, but he waited for his friend to ensure they made it together.
The men completed what had long been considered the world's most difficult rock climb, captivating the world through social media and livestreamed video coverage while documentary filmmakers dangled from ropes capturing each move.
Washington DC- (AP)
San Antonio Spurs coach Gregg Popovich is well known to rest his aging players without consideration of the strength of his opponent or the size of the stage.
So when the Spurs visited the White House on Monday to celebrate last year's NBA title, President Barack Obama couldn't help opening with a joke. "I was considering having the vice president cover these remarks so I could stay fresh for the State of the Union," Obama said to laughter.
GRAHAM DUNBAR,
BARRY WILNER, AP Pro Football Writer
No fear.
That's the motto for the visiting teams in this weekend's NFL playoff games, a brave stance indeed considering the hosts were a combined 30-2 at home this season. And that includes one gimme, the Patriots' loss to Buffalo in a meaningless season finale.
There could be some validity, though, to the bravado displayed by Baltimore and Dallas. The Ravens have won two of their three postseason trips to New England, and lost by three points in the other. The Cowboys are 8-0 away from Dallas.
"Our guys have been in tough stadiums against good teams," said Ravens coach John Harbaugh, who has guided his team to the playoffs in six of his seven seasons, and won the 2012 NFL championship.
"No different this week going into a tough stadium against a good team. The fact that it's playoffs and those kinds of things, and we played in a playoff game last week on the road, that helps the guys ... the rookies. It's the first time they have ever done it, but they did a good job last week.
"All that other stuff, it's how well you play the game in that three-hour time block against the opponent you're playing against."
The opponent for Dallas is, of course, Green Bay. And the elements in the Cowboys' first postseason visit to Lambeau Field since the 1967 Ice Bowl.
Cowboys coach Jason Garrett recognizes the interest in Sunday's matchup for historical reasons, but understands his players might not.
"Oh I think we have guys who are football fans and know some history," Garrett said. "But having said that, we've got a lot of guys that were born in 1991 or 1992. So it's like ancient history to them. The '90s seem like history to them if that makes any sense to you."
The other visitors are Carolina at Seattle on Saturday night, Indianapolis at Denver on Sunday.
Baltimore (11-6) at New England (12-4), Saturday
The Ravens come off their first playoff win at Pittsburgh, so they will carry some extra confidence into the opening game of the divisional round. Joe Flacco has seven road playoff wins, the most by a quarterback since the 1970 merger.
Of course, he goes up against the top seed in the AFC, a perennial Super Bowl contender led by Tom Brady. One thing is certain: Brady and the Patriots won't be lacking in conviction, either.
"We're always trying to win the last game of the year," Brady said. "We set pretty high expectations and I think we all have high expectations, but you've got to go out there and earn it. It's not easy and this is a first step for us.
"A lot of teams played last week, we didn't get a chance to do that. This is a week where we can really try to make an impact on this season.
Dallas (13-4) at Green Bay (12-4)
Despite the result of the Ice Bowl, after which the Packers went on to win the Super Bowl, Dallas leads 4-2 in playoff matchups. It's the first time a team with an 8-0 home record in the regular season hosts one with an 8-0 road record.
The Cowboys are 15-9 in divisional playoff games, but lost their past three. They bring a high-powered offense paced by league rushing leader DeMarco Murray, QB Tony Romo, receiver Dez Bryant and tight end Jason Witten.
Packers QB Aaron Rodgers has been battling a calf injury and has had limited preparation for Sunday. Rodgers' home passer rating of 133.2 is the best in NFL history. He's had 418 pass attempts and 36 touchdown passes at Lambeau without an interception, both NFL records.
Carolina (8-8-1) at Seattle (12-4), Saturday night
The defending Super Bowl champion Seahawks know all about division winners with a losing record advancing to this round of the playoffs. They did it in 2010, and now they host the Panthers, who have won five in a row, including last week's wild-card victory over Arizona.
Defense has been the calling card for both sides, especially Seattle in the second portion of the schedule.
Looking to become the first defending champion to win a playoff game since New England in January 2006, the Seahawks led the NFL in total defense and points allowed for the second straight season. They also led in scoring defense for a third straight season and Seattle did not allow any fourth-quarter points in the past six games.
The Panthers have been strong defensively, too, ranking second to Seattle in points allowed (11.8) and yards yielded (238.2) since Dec. 1.
Indianapolis (12-5) at Denver (12-4)
Andrew Luck vs. Peyton Manning gets the main headlines here, and why not? The five-time MVP against the young master who took his place in Indy when Manning headed to the Rockies.
Luck has thrown for 300 or more yards in three straight postseason games and comes off a strong effort in the win over Cincinnati: 376 yards and a touchdown. He broke Manning's team mark with 4,761 yards through the air this season.
Manning, who led the Colts to eight division championships, two AFC championships and one Super Bowl title, has the Broncos tied for second-most wins (46) in the league since joining them.
Oh, and as for the home-field thing, the Broncos finished 8-0 at home for the sixth time. Minnesota has the record for most seasons with a perfect home mark with seven.
JIMMY GOLEN, AP Sports Writer
BOSTON (AP) —
Boston's bid for the 2024 Summer Games won over the national governing body with a cost-effective and athlete-friendly proposal that would help reverse the trend toward ever-more expensive Olympics.
One day after the U.S. Olympic Committee selected Boston as the American nominee over San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington, local bid organizers said Friday they will draw on the more than 100 colleges in the area to host events and house athletes and media — and save millions or billions in construction costs.
"There is no other state or city in America that has that," bid chairman John Fish said Friday in a news conference attended by USOC executives, former athletes and local elected officials. "All those universities have a majority of those facilities that we need, and if they don't they are planning for the future."
Boston's victory in the first stage means its bid will be presented in September to the IOC, which will vote on the host city in 2017. Rome has already jumped in, and France, Germany, Hungary and South Africa are also expected to submit bids.
USOC chairman Larry Probst said Boston's bid was in harmony with the recent IOC reforms, called Olympic Agenda 2020, designed to reduce the cost of bidding for and hosting the games. The measures recommend maximum use of existing and temporary facilities.
GENARO C. ARMAS, AP Sports Writer
GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) —
A brisk wind blew through the open doors of the Hutson Center, turning the Green Bay Packers' indoor practice facility into an ice box. Bundled up in a heavy parka, the conditions felt just right to coach Mike McCarthy.
In the cold, the Packers are in their element. It might be one edge that Green Bay could have ahead of Sunday's playoff game against the warm-weather Dallas Cowboys at Lambeau Field.
Ball security is at a premium in the playoffs. Receivers — and the defensive backs trying to snare interceptions — must be prepared for the sting that comes with trying to catch a cold ball.
"I think whoever handles the ball best in the cold is going to come up on top. I think we definitely have the advantage," Packers cornerback and special teams ace Jarrett Bush said.
"At the same time, it is football, and you've got to line up and prove it between the white lines."
LAS VEGAS –
UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones announced Tuesday that he has entered a drug treatment facility.
The announcement came just days after Jones defeated Daniel Cormier on Saturday in the main event of UFC 182 at the MGM Grand Garden in a five-round decision that left many considering him as the greatest mixed martial arts fighter of all time.
SAN ANTONIO -
The Spurs kept giving the Detroit Pistons hope Tuesday night. Brandon Jennings made the most of a last-second opening.
The Pistons guard took a bad inbounds pass by Tim Duncan and drove the length of the court in the final seven seconds, weaving through San Antonio's backpedaling defenders, to bank in an 11-foot jumper. The shot lifted Detroit to its sixth straight victory, 105-104.
A.D. Ibarra -Castroville, Tx
The CC Winn mavericks opened their District 29-AAAAA slate with a 31-26 loss to the Medina
Valley Panthers Friday in Castroville.
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