Awful. In a word, that’s an apt description for what the
Steelers put out there last night at Lambeau Field.
Granted, it was just a preseason game, the second of four,
which means there still is time before the opening of the regular season. And
yes, the Steelers played without a bunch of their front-line guys, some
injured, some held out of the game for various reasons, which means
reinforcements are just waiting to be called upon.
But 51-34 wasn’t about Coty Sensabaugh not being as good as
Joe Haden, or Jake Rodgers not being as good as Marcus Gilbert, just to cite a
couple of examples. It wasn’t about a list of non-participants that included
Ben Roethlisberger and Antonio Brown and Haden and Cam Heyward and T.J. Watt
and Vance McDonald and Maurkice Pouncey and Sean Davis.
This was about turnovers ending up on the scoreboard, and
twice at that; about allowing a couple of different quarterbacks to escape
contain and make plays down the field; about penalties and missed tackles and
bad angles; about punts of 30 and 28 yards from deep in their own territory.
This was about the Steelers doing all of the bad things they
didn’t do exactly one week earlier in their preseason opener against the Eagles
in Philadelphia. This was about the Steelers regressing.
The Steelers have been preaching ball security to Mason
Rudolph for months now, all the way back to OTAs in late May. Against the
Packers the decision was made to split the playing time between the youngest of
the four quarterbacks, and Rudolph started the game because Joshua Dobbs’
escapability was seen as a nice counter to what reasonably could be expected
from the third-team offensive line.
Rudolph fumbled twice in Philadelphia, but the Steelers
recovered both, but there was no recovering from his first play in Green Bay.
Attempting to get the ball to Darrius Heyward-Bey on a quick out route on a
first-and-10 from the 21-yard line, Rudolph fell into the trap baited by
veteran cornerback Tramon Williams, who welcomed him to the NFL with a 25-yard
pick-six.
That set the tone.
From there, Green Bay’s second touchdown drive was aided by
a 6-yard pass turning into a 27-yard gain because Morgan Burnett took a bad
angle that allowed Davante Adams to break into the open field; then a
12-men-on-the-field penalty wiped out an incomplete pass on third-and-13, and
Aaron Rodgers capitalized on the second chance with a touchdown pass to Jimmy
Graham.
Sure, the Steelers delivered some counter-punches, the first
coming on a three-play drive when James Conner accounted for all 73 yards – 58
rushing and 15 more on the facemask penalty he drew – for the touchdown that
halved Green Bay’s 14-0 lead, and then another when Terrell Edmunds forced and
recovered a fumble on the ensuing kickoff to set up Rudolph completing a
21-yard pass to Jesse James and then a 4-yarder to JuJu Smith-Schuster to tie
the game, 14-14.
But by the time the Steelers scored again – on 22-yard pass
from Dobbs to James Washington in the third quarter – they were cutting into a
deficit that had grown to 41-14.
That deficit was built at least partly by the Steelers’
inability to contain two of Green Bay’s backup quarterbacks – Brett Hundley and
DeShone Kizer – and in this instance the word “contain” can be taken literally.
Hundley ran for a touchdown and Kizer passed for two, and along the way to all
three of those scores came plays each quarterback made after using play-action
and then rolling out to get outside the pass rush to make plays, or by getting
away from the pass rush when they were about to be trapped in the pocket and
possibly sacked.
Both Hundley and Kizer have mobility, sure, but neither
would be confused with Michael Vick in his prime, and so what happened was guys
either were being sucked inside with play-action, or they were sloppy in their
rush-lanes, or both. Being unsuccessful in getting to the quarterback is one
thing, but running yourself out of the play is a whole other kind of sin.
Halfway through this preseason, it’s apparent the Steelers
have a lot of work to do on their defense, that any perceived improvements are
only theoretical at this stage. Getting their front-line players back onto the
field should help, but assuming that alone will make the difference is somewhat
naïve.
That response – on Saturday, Aug. 25 vs. Tennessee at Heinz
Field – could end up revealing a lot about what these 2018 Steelers are. Or are
not.
No comments:
Post a Comment