Motown takes on pro-Steelers feel

? The Seahawks were fortunate to arrive in Detroit one day ahead of the Steelers. It gave them an extra few hours to get used to seeing so much black and gold in the Super Bowl city.

Even though the Lions’ home jersey is a shade of blue close to what the Seahawks wear, the color of choice this week already appears to have a Pittsburgh hue. At the airport, in the shopping malls, in Greektown – wherever – the only non-Lions NFL apparel seems to sport the names Bettis and Roethlisberger.

The Seahawks did get some feel for home Sunday at the suburban Dearborn hotel where they are staying. A 12th man flag flew above the hotel, and a dozen or so fans gathered in the lobby, all of them dressed in Seattle garb.

Team owner Paul Allen also brought along one of the flags, symbolizing the encouragement of the Seahawks’ supporters, on the plane ride east.

“It was nice to see that,” defensive end Bryce Fisher said Sunday night. “Our fans have been with us the whole time. When we were playing Dallas and New York and all the media people were saying we were going to lose, the fans stuck by us and believed in us.”

Still, the Seahawks’ greeting party was far smaller than the number of people wearing Steelers jerseys on the streets of downtown Detroit on Sunday – a full week before the Super Bowl.

That doesn’t bother league MVP Shaun Alexander, whose best friend doesn’t root for the Seahawks. He roots for, you guessed it, the Steelers.

“He is definitely coming,” Alexander said. “He’ll be there, probably wearing a Pittsburgh jersey, but that’s OK.

“He asked me for 10 tickets. I said, ‘Why do I want to give you 10 tickets and you’ll bring all Steelers fans?”‘

Alexander’s buddy won’t be alone. It takes just a bit longer to drive from Pittsburgh to Detroit as it does to fly from Seattle, and at considerably lower prices, the rising price of fuel notwithstanding.

Considering that the Steelers (14-5) have won three straight road games in the playoffs, in such difficult venues as Cincinnati, Indianapolis and Denver, any sort of home-field edge in the Super Bowl might not matter. Coach Bill Cowher has furthered that mind-set by insisting his AFC champions will wear white Sunday.

But Cowher surely knows Motown will resemble Steeltown by next weekend when Steelers fans arrive in droves. The last time Pittsburgh made the Super Bowl, 10 years ago, the Phoenix area was loaded with Pittsburgh supporters. And that was against Dallas – you know, America’s Team.

An argument could be made that the Steelers have usurped that nickname, or at least claimed a portion of it.

It sure seems that way with all the phone calls the players have been fielding.

“They are coming from everywhere,” running back Willie Parker said. “They are crawling from under the rocks. They are coming out of the woods. I am like, ‘How did you get my number?’ I have to change my number again.”

Added defensive end Brett Keisel: “People have come out of the woodwork. It wasn’t surprising. People that you knew in college and high school that think they had some sort of impact on your life call you up and say, ‘It’s me, remember what I did for you, can you get me tickets?’ You just have to take care of your family and cut it off.”

Cutting off the extra attention and hype of Super Bowl week is almost as big a challenge for the players as performing on Super Sunday. While only a handful of Seahawks (15-3) have been this far – with other teams, obviously – and one Steeler (reserve DB Willie Williams), both coaching staffs have Super Bowl experience.

They know the novices on both sides are in for quite an awakening.

But Seahawks coach Mike Holmgren, who guided the Packers to a 1997 Super Bowl win, lost the next year to Denver and also won two championships as an assistant with San Francisco, doesn’t sense any nervousness among his players.

“The mood was kind of like the mood of this team all year,” he said of the plane ride on the jet Allen has provided for the team. Holmgren certainly must have been relaxed, admitting he slept through most of the flight while many of the players watched Eddie Murphy’s “Coming to America.”

“I make it a point to go down the aisle once or twice to the coaches and players, and the guys were watching TV or sleeping or whatever. They know our season is not over yet.”