The Pittsburgh
Steelers were coming off a 13-win regular season with the best
offensive trio in the game.
Le'Veon Bell sensed the urgency, and the short life span.
Bell and the Steelers haven't quite applied that advice,
following a stunning playoff loss to the Jacksonville
Jaguars with an underwhelming 2018 that has them in danger of
missing the playoffs for the first time since 2013.
Saying "there's always next year" is becoming
increasingly difficult for a fanbase losing patience and the potent duo
of Antonio Brown and Ben
Roethlisberger losing precious years.
The championship window isn't closed, but the wind is
getting in.
The "Killer B" trio of Bell, Brown and Big Ben was
together for five explosive seasons filled with record-breaking performances
yet have just three playoff wins to show for it. The promise of that group will
remain unfulfilled as Bell's year-long holdout clears the path to free agency.
The Steelers will never be in rebuilding mode with
Roethlisberger and Brown, who combined for another 100-catch season and 15
touchdowns this year. But with Roethlisberger turning 37 in March and Brown
turning 31 in July, chances are running out.
And that probably goes for an offensive line that's still
highly productive but doesn't have a starter under age 28 if counting
oft-injured right tackle Marcus
Gilbert.
Each curious road loss accentuates that reality, and this
year there were two: At Oakland and at Denver.
Sitting at 8-6-1 and hoping the Browns pull off a Baltimore
upset just to enter the playoffs has offensive coordinator Randy Fichtner
feeling uneasy despite his quarterback's career season. Roethlisberger is on
pace for his first 5,000-yard season and he broke the Steelers' touchdown
record with 33.
After everything broke right last year, the Steelers
abandoned their ability to close in 2018. Five of their six losses were decided
by seven points or less, including the last three by three points. A defense
that ranks first in sacks and ninth in total defense gave up late-game scores
in each of the past four losses.
The Steelers have invested heavy draft capital on defense
every year since 2013 but still appear incomplete despite obvious young
talents.
Players tried to keep a united front in the locker room this
week, but a normally vibrant environment was noticeably calmer, almost subdued.
This season hurts, knowing they've sabotaged what could have been a glorious
playoff run in a wide-open AFC race.
The Steelers have youthful building blocks such as wide
receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster, a team MVP as voted on by his teammates, and
linebacker T.J. Watt, who has 12 sacks this season. Pairing those players with
an established collection of veterans likely will keep Pittsburgh among the
game's best teams in 2019.
Coach Mike Tomlin has zero losing seasons in 12 years, but
with three playoff wins since 2011, he'll be tasked with refining a roster to
maximize Roethlisberger's final years. Roethlisberger turns 37 in March and
could sign a multi-year extension this offseason.
As the New Orleans
Saints have shown this season, luck can change just that
quickly with a franchise quarterback. Drew Brees and
the Saints produced three straight 7-9 seasons before winning a combined 24
games the past two years.
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