A team of
astronauts aboard the International Space Station is pulling for the Pittsburgh
Steelers in this weekend's Super Bowl showdown against the Arizona Cardinals.
Leading the
space
Steelers charge is station skipper Michael Fincke, a native of Pittsburgh,
Pa., who beamed a video message of support to his team during the NFL playoffs earlier
this month.
"The entire
crew's rooting for a good Super Bowl this year and of course we want the
Steelers to win, but you know it's more than that," Fincke told the Pittsburgh
radio station KDKA this week. "It's great that our team has made it to the
Super Bowl yet again."
Fincke
and his crewmates, NASA astronaut Sandra Magnus and Russian cosmonaut Yury
Lonchakov, plan to tune in late Sunday night, since they follow Greenwich Mean
Time as they orbit the Earth from 220 miles (354 km) up. They'll be about five hours ahead of the game's 6:00 p.m. EST (2300 GMT) start time.
"We're
actually going to be up late at night watching the Super Bowl like many other people
that are around the world," Fincke said. "Yury, he's from Russia and he still
doesn't quite get American football, but I think he's still a Steelers fan deep
down inside."
There's
little doubt that Fincke's faith in the Steelers' Super Bowl bid is strong.
After all, he packed a Steelers cap and Terrible Towel in his luggage when he launched
to the space station last October.
"I'm really
glad to have the opportunity to bring up not just the Terrible Towel, but also
one for my daughter...a Terrible Toddler
Towel," said Fincke, who is married to wife Renita and has two
young daughters - Tarali and Surya - and a son, Chandra.
While
Steelers captain "Big" Ben Roethlisberger or strong safety Troy Polamalu might
make good astronauts, Fincke favored team coach Mike Tomlin as being at the top
of his list.
"He
actually understands how to get the whole team together, and that's what we do
here aboard the International Space Station," said Fincke. "Practically, any of
the Steelers could
make it up here."
Fincke was
born in Pittsburgh and grew up in nearby Emsworth, Pa. A veteran NASA spaceflyer,
he is currently commanding the station's Expedition 18 crew and is due to
return to Earth in early April. He last flew
to the space station as an Expedition 9 flight engineer in 2004.
"When I fly
up here, Pittsburgh is with me," Fincke said. "There really is no place like
home, and there's something really special about the great, big Pittsburgh."