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Flacco and Jones give John Harbaugh a victory over brother Jim’s 49ers

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Head coach John Harbaugh of the Baltimore Ravens celebrates with the Lombardi Trophy after a 34-31 win against the San Francisco 49ers in Super Bowl XLVII at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome in New Orleans, Louisiana, Sunday, February 3, 2013. (Photo by Mark Cornelison/Lexington Herald-Leader/MCT)

(MCT) — NEW ORLEANS — Ray Lewis stood on the podium waiting to accept the Lombardi Trophy for the second time on the last day of his NFL career, and the soon-to-be Hall-of-Fame linebacker said to his coach, “How could it be any other way?”

The Ravens forced three straight incompletions in a dramatic goal-line stand and Joe Flacco capped a near-perfect postseason with three touchdown passes as Baltimore survived a Superdome power outage to beat the 49ers, 34-31, in Super Bowl XLVII.

Flacco completed 12 of his first 15 attempts and tied Joe Montana and Kurt Warner for most touchdown passes (11) in a single postseason as Lewis got the storybook sendoff he desired and Ravens coach John Harbaugh earned permanent bragging rights over his younger brother, San Francisco coach Jim.

“We said to our team many times after many games that played out just the same way, it wasn’t perfect, it wasn’t pretty, but it was us,” John Harbaugh said. “That’s who we are.”

The Ravens raced to a 22-point third-quarter lead before a freak power outage helped the 49ers get back in the game.

Colin Kaepernick led San Francisco to 17 points in a 4-minute, 10-second span after the 34-minute delay left the Superdome with one row of half-working lights near the top of the stadium, then cut Baltimore’s lead to two points with a 15-yard run early in the fourth quarter.

Trailing, 34-29, Kaepernick drove the 49ers to Baltimore’s 5-yard-line with two minutes to play before three straight incompletions essentially ended the game.

Lewis, who announced his retirement before the postseason, retrieved the ball after Kaepernick’s final throw and walked off the field.

“How else can you finish that off but with a goal-line stand?” Lewis said. “How else can you finish a Super Bowl off when your coordinator trusts you the way he trusts us? And we finished that off. We kept them out of the end zone on the 2-yard line. That is championship football.”

Kaepernick, making his 10th career start, completed 16 of 28 passes for 302 yards and carried seven times for 62 yards, but the 49ers didn’t call a run play for him near the goal line on their final drive.

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