Commentary: Pittsburgh fought hard to win for Bettis

? As grand exits go, it wasn’t much.

The Bus didn’t win the Super Bowl for the Pittsburgh Steelers in the final game of his career. Didn’t even have a lot to do with it, until he was given the ball to grind up some yards and run down the clock toward the end.

Don’t believe for a minute, though, that this wasn’t Jerome Bettis’ game.

He ran onto the field alone because his teammates wanted to give him one final tribute. He walked off it for the last time as a champion, beloved in two cities.

And he did what most athletes never can – walk away on top.

“I think the Bus’ last stop is here in Detroit,” Bettis said.

It was quite a ride. Bettis wasn’t the same back who punished defenders in the NFL for 13 years, but he didn’t need to be on this team.

His role wasn’t so much to run as it was to lead. He came back for another year because quarterback Ben Roethlisberger promised him a trip to Detroit, and once he got here he made them all feel at home.

His teammates wanted to win one for Pittsburgh, one for Bill Cowher, one for the thumb and one for themselves.

They never lost sight, though, of the one they wanted to win so badly for: big No. 36.

“It was all for Jerome,” MVP Hines Ward said. “We were going to fight for him.”

The night between the end zones was largely forgettable, though Bettis helped Roethlisberger score the Steelers’ first touchdown with a block late in the second quarter. He wasn’t the best running back on the field, not even the second best.

Bettis didn’t even play during the first quarter and ended the game with just 43 yards on 14 carries. He wasn’t a starter, but he was the only Steeler on the field for a few moments as his teammates let him savor his final run out of the tunnel by himself.

Pittsburgh's Jerome Bettis holds the Vince Lombardi trophy after the Steelers beat Seattle, 21-10, Sunday in Detroit.

“Joey Porter told me, ‘It’s only right that you lead us out there. It’s your home. You need to bring us in,'” Bettis said. “I was in awe. They wanted me to bring them in, and I brought them in. It was incredible. It gave me a moment I’ll never forget.”

Bettis responded by trying to give the Steelers something they would never forget. He rooted teammates on, sprinting onto the field to congratulate them after big plays and giving them words of encouragement when things went bad.

When it was over, Bettis finally had his Super Bowl championship, the only thing missing from what surely will be a Hall of Fame resume. He celebrated on the field, while his mother – who had never missed a game since Bettis began playing football – cried and his dad celebrated in a luxury suite above.

Detroit celebrated with them, perhaps hopeful that this was a good omen of things to come in a city that so desperately wants to improve itself. It was almost as if a city whose own team is woeful had somehow claimed a title of sorts of its own.

Bettis made his retirement official even before he left the field. He held the Super Bowl trophy aloft, said he was through, and then went to have some fun in the locker room.

“It’s official, like the referee whistle,” Bettis said.