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Harbaughs’ parents win Super Bowl: Family bracing for victory and defeat at Sunday’s Ravens-49ers contest

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Catholic News Service

BALTIMORE — When the Baltimore Ravens defeated the San Francisco 49ers on Thanksgiving night in 2011 — and John Harbaugh beat younger brother, Jim, in the first NFL matchup of coaching brothers — Jack Harbaugh peeked into the Ravens’ locker room after the game.

Jack Harbaugh, John and Jim’s father, was impressed by how ecstatic everyone was. There was nothing but celebration and smiling faces.

Baltimore Ravens head coach John Harbaugh and his brother, San Francisco 49ers head coach Jim Harbaugh, are pictured in a combination photo in late January. For Jack Harbaugh and his wife, Jackie, the upcoming rematch between their sons at the Feb. 3 Super Bowl in New Orleans means they are bracing for the “thrill of victory” and the “agony of defeat.” (CNS photo/Jeff Haynes, Reuters)

“I thought to myself, we really aren’t needed here,” Jack Harbaugh recalled, speaking to local and national media during a Jan. 24 conference call. He walked across the hallway at the Baltimore football stadium. The mood in the San Francisco locker room was quiet and somber, he said.

“I found Jim all by himself,” said Jack Harbaugh, a former college football coach. “No one was around him. That’s where we were needed.”

For Jack Harbaugh and his wife, Jackie, the upcoming rematch between their coaching sons at the Feb. 3 Super Bowl in New Orleans is likely to be another excruciating study in contrasts. Someone will win and someone will lose.

“It was the agony of defeat and the thrill of victory (a year ago),” Jack told The Catholic Review, newspaper of the Baltimore archdiocese, in a telephone interview. “I’m not looking forward to that next Sunday,” he added.

Jackie Harbaugh, John and Jim’s mother, remembered how John ran to find his brother after the Thanksgiving game — hugging him and giving him words of encouragement.

“It was just the epitome of how everyone in our family feels about each other,” she said. “We always try to raise one another up.”

Jack and Jackie, who raised their family in the Catholic faith and sent their children to Catholic schools, all said they will remain neutral at the Super Bowl. Younger sister, Joani Crean, also won’t take sides.

Despite several questions inviting him to compare his sons, Jack refused to go there.

“To make a comparison demeans,” he said. “They both have a love and passion for their families. They have a love and passion for their work. They enjoy being around the team. They enjoy being around their coaches. They really enjoy the fan base. They enjoy connecting with the people that have made this game so great.”

Jack credited his wife for the way his sons turned out in life.

“The rock of our family is Jackie,” he said. “She did all the heavy lifting. In our career, a 43-year coaching career, we moved 17 times and she was the one that sold the house, bought the house, enrolled the kids in school, took the kids out of school. She was the one.”

While some in the media have dubbed this year’s big game the “Harbowl” and the “Super-Baugh,” Jack prefers to think of it as the “Lombardi Game,” while his wife refers to it simply as the “Super Bowl.”

“We are excited that they’ve brought their teams to the pinnacle of sports,” Jackie said. “The Super Bowl is the ultimate accomplishment,” Jackie said. “It’s the ultimate for them and for their teams and for all of the extended football family and all of the teams who have participated in this great game.”

Matysek is assistant managing editor of The Catholic Review, newspaper of the Baltimore archdiocese.

 

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Archbishop Lori installed as leader of Baltimore archdiocese

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Catholic News Service

BALTIMORE — In a jubilant liturgy that highlighted the historic roots of the Baltimore archdiocese while also looking to the future, Archbishop William E. Lori was installed as the 16th archbishop of Baltimore May 16 at the Cathedral of Mary Our Queen.

A smiling Archbishop Lori wore the same pectoral cross that belonged to Archbishop John Carroll, the first archbishop of Baltimore, as he was led to the bishop’s chair by Cardinal Edwin F. O’Brien and Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano, apostolic nuncio to the United States.

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Md. Catholic leaders seek referendum on same-sex marriage law

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Catholic News Service

BALTIMORE — The Maryland Catholic Conference’s executive director, vowing to work with others to bring the measure to a referendum, said the people of the state “will be outraged” at how quickly the bill to legalize same-sex marriage made it through the Legislature to final passage.

The state Senate approved it 25-22 the evening of Feb. 23 after deliberating just 48 hours. The House of Delegates had already approved the bill Feb. 17, and Gov. Martin J. O’Malley, the bill’s sponsor, has pledged to sign it quickly into law.

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Md. General Assembly expected to address contentious issues

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Catholic Review (Baltimore)

 ANNAPOLIS – Leaders of the Maryland Catholic Conference (MCC) expect no shortage of controversy in the 90-day session of the Maryland General Assembly that begins today, Jan. 11.

Proposals to legalize same-sex marriage, end the death penalty and cut approximately $500 million from the budget are expected to generate passionate debate and dominate much of the session, according to the MCC.

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Maryland priest feels touched by the miraculous

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Catholic News Service

EPHRATA, Pa. — When Redemptorist Father John Murray bashed his head against a railing after tripping along a New Jersey boardwalk 15 months ago, the consequences were devastating.

The former pastor of St. Mary in Annapolis and St. Wenceslaus in Baltimore suffered a broken neck that left him instantly paralyzed from the chest down. Rushed to a hospital, he underwent emergency spinal cord surgery and later began rehabilitation at a prominent New Jersey institute.

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Maryland interfaith leaders defend traditional marriage

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Catholic News Service

BALTIMORE  – Leaders of a newly formed pro-marriage coalition came out swinging against efforts to legalize same-sex marriage in Maryland, pledging in a Nov. 30 news conference to rally citizens across the state to defeat legislation that would alter the traditional definition of marriage.

Gathered at First Apostolic Faith Church International in Baltimore, representatives of the interfaith, nonpartisan Maryland Marriage Alliance said they will not be intimidated by those who would call their position “bigoted.”

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