SUPER BOWL: Football fun, but isn’t ‘who we are,’ Steelers coach Tomlin says

ARLINGTON?The Christian conversion of Pittsburgh Steelers’
third-year offensive lineman Tony Hills saw the team’s practice
facility used for something unusual this season — a baptism. And that
on a team that needed new life to begin this storied season.

“I
appreciated everybody who came in because it was a big moment for me
after I was saved,” Hills told Baptist Press during the annual Super
Bowl media day on Tuesday at the Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas.
“I had not been baptized before, obviously, and it was something I
needed to do. Baptism stands for leaving the old ways behind and coming
up anew. And I knew that’s exactly what I was trying to do. That is
what our season is about this year.

“In life everybody is
different, but to know that some people on this team share the same
values is a great blessing,” said Hills, a Houston native who played at
the University of Texas.

Pittsburgh Steelers’ coach Mike
Tomlin, in his fourth season as a head coach and the youngest ever to
coach in and win a Super Bowl — in 2009 at age 36 — came into this
season with a stench hovering over the organization and with his star
quarterback, Ben Roethlisberger, suspended by the league for the first
six games for alleged sexual assault. Formal charges never
materialized, but it was the second time Roethlisberger was accused of
such conduct, which was enough for NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell to
act. The suspension eventually was reduced to four games.

Despite
the travails and preseason doubters, the Steelers, with Roethlisberger
back in his winning form, are in Super Bowl XLV — the team’s third
championship appearance in six years.

Looking up at the colossal
dome of Cowboys Stadium on Tuesday, Tomlin used words like “blessed”
and “humbled” to describe being on the world stage again in arguably
the biggest sports and entertainment spectacle on the planet.

If being the youngest coach to win the big game is important to him, he doesn’t let on.

“It’s
down the list, to be quite honest with you,” Tomlin told Baptist Press.
“I’m a husband. I’m a father of three. I’m blessed enough to be the
head coach of this group of men, countless other things. I’m a brother.
I’m a son. It’s down the list.”

Such priority comes from a
public but gently stated Christian faith. Tomlin doesn’t quote
Scripture every time a microphone is near, but he doesn’t shy away when
asked about it either.

“It provides a confidence, not only for
me but for everyone who’s a believer,” Tomlin said as media crowded
around him. “Football is what we do; it’s not who we are. It is our
job, it is our business. We all are very passionate about it, we all
want to do very well at it, but [faith] keeps it in perspective.”

That theme — “football is a job, it’s not who we are” — was prevalent among the Christian players at media day.

Tomlin’s
example has influenced his team in the most difficult of seasons, even
if the committed believers on the team are the minority, as they are in
most workplaces.

That example hasn’t been lost on Daniel
Sepulveda, a veteran punter from Baylor on injured reserve who will
watch his second Super Bowl in three years from the sideline.

“The
Steelers are a very storied franchise and I think there’s a lot to be
said for running an organization and being a leader with godly
principles and applying those to the way that you lead and the way that
you carry yourself. Absolutely, it’s an encouragement to me to see
that.”

Said cornerback Anthony Madison, “A lot of times, the
media doesn’t talk about the good stuff, about the good guys on this
team. They don’t want to carry a positive message. I guess that is just
human nature.”

“My faith has sustained me my entire career,”
said Madison, a fifth-year veteran from Alabama. I have been relying on
God and He is always good to me no matter if we have a good year or
not. I don’t want the enemy to have the upper hand whatever happens in
my life or career.”

Running back Mewelde Moore said Christian
relationships on the team “bring about a confidence and more than
anything else it molds men together. It allows us to communicate on a
spiritual level, to fellowship. It gives you strength in everyday life.
It allows us to be family, even strangers from faraway places, and
allows us to have a common ground and common faith to stand on.”

Veteran
receiver Antwaan Randle El, in his second Super Bowl with the Steelers,
said having a relationship with Christ is crucial to surviving the
stresses of the NFL.

“Some guys are really outspoken, some guys have it in their heart. But you have to have [God] to make it here.

“It’s
just a game. We are just blessed to be playing a game, but it’s just a
game,” Randle El said. “It will be going on one day with or without us.”

Hills, the new convert, said he wears Matthew 10:28 on his left arm as a reminder.

“It
says ‘fear not those who can destroy the body, but fear those who can
destroy the soul and the body.’ That means I fear no man, only God. In
the NFL you have to have no fear. Only fear God. That is what I’m
trying to do every day…. I want to honor God every day.”

?With reporting by Art Stricklin, a Dallas-based sports
correspondent.

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