PITTSBURGH — Sean Spence’s word choice was not by accident.

Spending three years in the Pittsburgh Steelers locker room has taught the linebacker certain opponents evoke certain feelings. There’s only really one that pops up when the Baltimore Ravens come to mind.

“Just a rich tradition of hatred we have for one another,” Spence said.

Even if Spence’s participation in that tradition is limited. He’s hardly alone. The vast majority of players on both sides of the field will be getting their first taste of what one of the NFL’s true blood feuds looks like in the playoffs when the Steelers (11-5) host the Ravens (10-6) in the wild-card round.

That list, however, will not include Le’Veon Bell. Pittsburgh’s All-Pro running back and team MVP is out with a hyperextended right knee, leaving rookies Josh Harris and Dri Archer and newly acquired Ben Tate in his place.

Tate, on his fourth team in 12 months, was looking for a job a week ago. Now he finds himself thrust into one of the league’s longest-running dramas.

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“Everyone knows about it,” Tate said. “So, it’s nothing new that I’ve never heard about before.”

And really, that’s kind of the point. Signing with Pittsburgh or Baltimore comes with the underlying expectation that for any season to be successful, you’re going to have to find a way to deal with your archrival.

“That’s one of the reasons I came here,” Baltimore linebacker Elvis Dumervil said. “This is best rivalry I’ve ever been a part of by a long shot. It’s cool man, to be able to see it early in my career and be a part of it now, to have played in it. And now, for a playoff game, it doesn’t get any better than that.”

The Ravens and Steelers have been battling for AFC North supremacy off and on for most of the millennium. Both have two Super Bowl titles since 2000. Three times they’ve met in the playoffs at Heinz Field.

Three times Pittsburgh advanced while Baltimore trudged back home wondering how its season slipped away. The Ravens led by 14 at the half in the divisional round in 2010 only to watch the Steelers rally, winning on a Rashard Mendenhall touchdown run with 1:39 left.

It’s a painful history in Baltimore, though the Ravens hardly sound worried about repeating it.

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“The other ones pretty much have their result, but this one doesn’t,” Ravens linebacker Terrell Suggs said. “Come Saturday, it’s an opportunity to do something special and do something we haven’t ever done.”

Besides, most of the faces have changed. Pittsburgh has just 15 players on the active roster who were part of the 2010 team that reached the Super Bowl.

The Ravens only have 19 guys remaining from the group that won the franchise’s second championship two years ago. They split their two regular-season meetings this year, with each club winning by 20 points at home in a couple of rare blowouts in a series where the result usually isn’t determined until the final seconds.

Both sides are preparing to etch another bruising chapter on Saturday. It’s January. It’s Ravens-Steelers. That’s the way it’s supposed to be, right?

“This is probably what the NFL wanted more than anything to see these two AFC North teams go at it,” Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger said. “I like to think we’re different. I like to think we’re still moving up.”

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