Steelers Postgame Recap and Review
Thoughts and Ramblings After a Dominating 27-0 Steelers Win over St. Louis in Week 16
Merry Christmas to all, and to all, a good morning.
My present to you, a super-long post-game notebook highlighting some great running, some poor run defense and a few things the Steelers need to take away from a 27-0 win over St. Louis.
Steelers Pitch Second Shuout of Season with Routine 27-0 Win over Rams
Coming off a Week 15 loss in which not much went right, the Pittsburgh Steelers bounced back in the second to last weekend of the 2011 season with a 24-0 shutout victory over the St. Louis Rams. Pittsburgh entered the week allowing 15.57 points per game, the second fewest in the league. Sunday's shutout, the second of the season (Week 3 vs. SEA), lowered that total to 14.3. A few quick notes on the solid win:
- Dick LeBeau's defense allowed just 232 yards despite being on the field for 67 plays. 3.7 yards per play allowed is a winning figure.
- Offensively, the Steelers were balanced and efficient, picking up 169 yards rushing and 208 yards passing for a total of 377 for the afternoon. Rashard Mendenhall eclipsed the 100-yard plateau for just the second time this season. He finished with 116 yards and 1 TD on 18 carries. Isaac Redman (8 att. 35 yards) and John Clay (1 att. 10 yards) also found the endzone. Congratulations to Clay on his first career touchdown. Called up from the practice squad this week, the Wisconsin native scored on his very first regular season NFL touch from 10 yards out.
- Hats off to Rams RB Steven Jackson for his performance on Sunday and for keeping a quietly remarkable streak alive. Jackson rushed for 103 yards on 24 carries, his fourth game this year with 100 or more ticks on the ground. Jackson needed just 36 yards to reach 1,000 for the sixth consecutive season. He surpassed the milestone and then some in the losing effort.
- We can thank Josh Brown for the shutout. The Rams' kicker missed from 52 and 33 yards out. Shuan Suisham, meanwhile, rebounded from his crucial miss last week to connect from 49 to put Pittsburgh up by 13 early in the third quarter. Suisham also was true from 21 yards for the game's first points.
- Welcome back James Harrison. This defense is so much better when he's playing. Harrison registered his ninth sack of the season and finished with four total tackles.
- Lawrence Timmons was everywhere, taking down Rams a total of ten times, seven unassisted. He also had his first sack of the season. That's four straight games with at least eight tackles for the standout inside linebacker.
- I guess that's why Mike Tomlin gives Charlie Batch the nod in the rare week that Ben Roethlisberger can't or is not allowed to play. Batch lived up to his cliched reputation as a suitable game manager by 15-of-22 passes for 208 yards. He did not throw a TD pass, but he came awful close late in the game when he connected with Mike Wallace for a 49-yard completion that was initially called a touchdown, but ultimately reversed and spotted down at the 1 yard line. Batch did make one mistake with his pick, but all in all, a job well done by the veteran.
More soon from the rest of the day's action. Go Steelers!
Thoughts and Ramblings After A Brutal Steelers Week 15 Loss at San Francisco
We're a bit behind, thanks to a certain rewind function of NFL games not providing the Steelers game until today. We'll have stuff on the upcoming Rams game soon enough.
-neal
It was definitely a tough one to watch once, let alone twice. So many chances...so many miscues. The positive to take away from this is the score doesn't reflect the game play-by-play. San Francisco's a good team, and they deserved the win, but Pittsburgh wasn't far off many times from flipping the result the other way.
Let's dig into this:
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Steelers Survive Thursday Night Test against Rival Browns:10 Observations from Heinz Field
We're on to a new week and a fresh cycle of news, but in case any of you missed this recap of the Steelers' Week 14 win over the Browns last Thursday night. -Michael B.-
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My top 10 observations about the Steelers 14-3 win over the Browns from Heinz Field on Thursday. Apologies for redundant items you have already discussed at length.
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This game was one of the weirdest games I have ever attended. The Steelers score touchdowns the first and last time they touch the ball, and never in between. Both teams have touchdowns taken off the board. Both teams have their quarterbacks knocked out of the game, only to return, but they may still be injured enough not to play their next game. The crowd was nervous and relatively quiet the whole game, just weird stuff. More as we go.
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Nine penalties in the second half is simply unacceptable, though some were bogus.
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Speaking of which, Ed Hochuli and his crew had their worst game ever, and I rarely get on officials. Offensive pass interference was blatantly missed against Massaquoi shoving William Gay early in the game...Antonio Brown absolutely catches a ball that Hochuli incredibly overturns...Keisel was called for a neutral zone that caused the offense to move. It was Harrison who flinched, but stayed on-side, causing 81 to move illegally which in turn caused Keisel to wisely jump, horrible call...Farrior lifts his hands to cushion soft contact with McCoy out-of-bounds and actually tries to hold McCoy up. McCoy instead turns into a Hollywood stunt man taking a dive and the officials buy it...Hochuli actually once said "the result is a better result"...He also declared that there was no grounding, then called grounding on McCoy, when actually McCoy's knee was down before either the grounding or no grounding. It was wrong on top of wrong on top of wrong...The holding on Gay in the last minute was horrible...All in all, a shameful effort worse than any high school officiating effort.
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Thoughts and Ramblings After Pittsburgh's 14-3 Win Over Cleveland
It likely won't get much sloppier for the Steelers than Thursday's 14-3 win over Cleveland. Certainly, emotional divisional games bring out some of that sloppiness, but it nearly did in the 10-3 Steelers. There are no rankings that matter in the NFL, except record. Any win in a contender's Week 12 and Beyond schedule is huge.
Credit to Antonio Brown and David Johnson for their career-best performances, and credit to the Browns for a physical defensive game plan. In the end, it's a win kicking off a badly needed few days of rest.
Here are my thoughts upon a second viewing.
Ben Roethlisberger's Shocking Second-Half Return Cements Status as One Game's All-Time Tough Guys and Competitors
We've got 11 days until the Pittsburgh Steelers next play in Week 15, so we'll have ample time to break down their odd 14-3 win over the Cleveland Browns Friday, this weekend, and into next week. We're running behind on our posgame coverage already, but let's keep it siple and focused to start, and make sure we isolate what was truly a special performance by one of the greatest warriors the game of football has ever seen at the quarterback position. Sound overly dramatic? Maybe my word choice could have been more dry, but the reality is we're watching Ben Roethlisberger do ridiculous things as the quarterback of the Steelers. Not just all the wins, mind you. But the way he continues to suck it up and refuse to cry uncle no matter how many hits he takes, nor how hard they might sting.
Make no mistake about it, Big Ben was in pain. So much in fact that he thought he had broken his leg when ihe initially writhed in pain on the ground after being sacked:
"It was one of the most painful things I ever felt," Roethlisberger said. "It felt like the middle of my leg was just, cracked ... it felt like my foot was outside of my leg."
It's still not clear if Roethlisberger will be forced to sit out one or more games down the stretch, but when X-rays at halftime revealed no breaks, Big Ben opted to play, perhaps convincing himself that he was only making the sound medical decision to keep it active rather than swelling up:
"Doctors said 'Just keep moving,"' Roethlisberger said. "As we kept going they said, 'Just keep moving' because it literally felt like it was about to explode."
I actually said as much at the bar when my company asked why he would possibly be playing with such a bad limp. Really though, he was just delaying the inevitable, no? Did the foot feel any better after the game after refusing to shut it down and absorbing more hits? Obviously not. But like the battler and team player that he is, Roethlisberger didn't think about the pain he'd be dealing with later, only making it through the game and ensuring his team didn't drop an inexcusable home game to the Browns when so much was still at stake for the team's goals in 2011.
If you re-watch the injury, you'd join me in a big, deep sigh of relief as we counted our lucky stars that he's not looking at reconstructive knee surgery. When he went down after a sack in the second quarter, I thought on first view that he maybe blew out ligaments in his knee. Not having the volume on at the bar I was at didn't much help -- I couldn't hear the commentators or sideline reporters mention that it appeared to just be a nasty ankle injury. I suppose that became clear in the final minutes of the first half when Ben Roethlisberger limped into the locker room under his own power. That in itself hinted that he had not in fact torn an ACL, only sprained or perhaps broken his ankle. I say 'only broken' and that's a tad callous, but the bottom line is it's a huge relief the man didn't have his knee twisted deleteriously.
Happy enough that he hadn't busted his knee up, I was certainly shocked and delighted to return from the bar to see Ben Roethlisberger under center to start the second half. You can not keep this man down. Period. Roethlisberger probably should have takent he rest of the night off, but hey, maybe being inactive would have just caused it to swell up more quickly than it otherwise might have. More likely though, Big Ben just refused to err on the side of caution knowing he could play when it really came down to it.
Roethlisberger wasn't perfect in the second half, but he was damn close. His interception was ill-advised, but it was really the only mistake he made on the night, outside of him not throwing the ball away on the play in which he was injured, of course. .All told, he more than did enough to help his team win against a feisty Browns defense that opportunistically created turnovers just when it appeared as if the Steelers were going to take firm control of the game. By game's end though, Big Ben finished with 280 yards on 16-of-21 passing, with 2 touchdowns and 1 interception. In addition to that pick, one of his five total misfires came on a drop by Antonio Brown.
Forget about the tender ankle affecting his accuracy. That's a mighty fine day at the office throwing the football. Roethlisberger's final yardage numbers were obviously aided by Antonio Brown's sensational 79 yard score on what should have been no more than a 18-23 yard gain. But even if you hack off 50 yards from his final total in Week 14, we're still talking about one hell of a performance by a once-in-a-generation quarterback that still does not get all the due he's deserved.
To conclude, if you think I'm being a bit too effusive in my praise considering the offense only mustered 14 points, don't forget that Hines Ward and Heath Miller both fumbled deep inside Cleveland territory in the first half. Pittsburgh was cruising down the field and likely to score at least 6 -- and perhaps 14 -- on those drives if not for the uncharacteristic fumbles by the two sure-handed veterans. What can you do? Also, don't forget Big Ben led the Steelers down the field quickly for what should have been at least 3 points in the second half, only to run the same play four times in a row along the goal line, and subsequently surrender possession on downs on the 1 without padding their 7-3 lead.
More on all that later, but for now, a Steeler Nation salute to Ben Roethlisberger for continuing to win games and wow us in the process with not just his ability to throw the football, but also with his unrivaled ability to put pain out of his mind in order to stay on the field and lead his team. The results continue to pay off, which for better or worse I suppose only means he'll continue taking those chances in the future.
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Steelers Tame Bengals, 35-7: By The Numbers
Sometimes I'll do a 'by the numbers' piece as part of our preview coverage; this week let's make it part of the recap of the Pittsburgh Steelers' convincing 35-7 win at home over the Cincinnati Bengals this past Sunday.
0 -- Number of defenses allowing fewer yards per game than the Steelers. It took awhile for Dick LeBeau's group to get going, but they've been playing a consistently high, championship caliber now for a number of weeks now.
1 -- Number of times Ike Taylor has caught interceptions in back-to-back games. Taylor picked off Bruce Gradkowski in the fourth quarter of Sunday's win for his second pick of the season, and he'll look to keep the streak alive and match his career high for picks in a season (3) when the Steelers host the Browns Thursday night.
2 --- Number of consecutive games Hines Ward has either led or tied for the team lead in receptions (4 vs. KC, 5 vs. CIN). Ward, of course, surpassed the 12,000 yard mark with his 30 yards receiving, and is now just 10 catches shy of 1,000 for his Hall of Fame career.
3 -- Number of consecutive games the Steelers have rushed for more than 100 yards as a team. In the seven games they've eclipsed the century mark rushing the football, Pittsburgh is 6-1.
Little Room for Complaint with the Steelers 35-7 Victory over Bengals Sunday
Boy, do the Steelers know how to respond to a theme, or what? Last week, after their ugly, 13-9, victory over the Chiefs in Kansas City on Sunday Night Football, most of the talk centered around whether or not the team had the killer instinct necessary to put teams away when they had the chance. "What's up with all this sloppy play?" people wondered. I wondered the same thing as the Steelers prepared to take on the Bengals for the second time in three games.
But, the Steelers responded to the naysayers by throttling the Bengals, 35-7, and making it pretty darn hard for people like me to complain about anything this week.
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