Veterans keying postseason success for four teams left

In with the old

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AP Denver Broncos tight end Joel Dreessen is tackled by a pair of Baltimore Ravens, including linebacker Ray Lewis (52), during the third quarter of their AFC divisional playoff game in Denver. (Charlie Riedel)
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OWINGS MILLS, Md. – Ray Lewis remembers when he was a twenty-something kid on the Baltimore Ravens en route to a Super Bowl title.

Back then, a dozen years ago, he was the one paying attention to the advice offered, and example set, by a pair of Hall-of-Famers-to-be in their 30s: tight end Shannon Sharpe and safety Rod Woodson.

"Shannon, because he had done it already," Lewis recalled this week. "Rod, because he hadn't done it. ... To look in his eyes, to know how he wanted to touch that Lombardi [Trophy] together, and then to listen to Shannon tell him how calm you had to be and how prepared you had to be."

Nowadays, the 37-year-old Lewis is the elder statesman trying to show the younger Ravens the way to a title before he retires at season's end. In what has been the Year of the Rookie in the NFL, Lewis joins New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady, Atlanta Falcons tight end Tony Gonzalez and San Francisco 49ers receiver Randy Moss – all at least 35, all veterans of at least 13 pro seasons – as old guys taking center stage in Sunday's conference championship games.

That quartet of famous faces is hardly alone. These are some veteran-laden clubs still in contention for the Super Bowl: According to STATS, the Ravens, Falcons and 49ers were three of the six oldest teams in the league based on average age of Week 17 rosters, all right around 27½ years old. The Patriots are a bit younger, STATS said, ranking 18th of 32 teams with an average age of about 26 years, 8 months.

On the Ravens, for example, 17th-year man Lewis is merely one of nine players with 10 or more NFL seasons to his credit, a group of graybeards that includes safety Ed Reed, linebacker Terrell Suggs, receiver Anquan Boldin, and offensive linemen Matt Birk and Bryant McKinnie. Lewis, Reed, Birk and McKinnie all were born in the 1970s.

"You can't coach experience, game experience. Those guys are going to lead us," sixth-year Ravens guard Marshal Yanda said. "It's great to have guys who have been around for a long time and been through it, and also to say to some of the young guys, 'Hey, this doesn't come around very often.' Around here, some young guys might take it for granted; it's the fifth straight year we've been in the playoffs. So sometimes you need to tell the young guys, 'Hey, this isn't normal. Take advantage of your opportunities.'"

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