There is a difference between playing quarterback and being
the quarterback. Yesterday, Ben Roethlisberger once again showed us the
difference.
It wasn’t long into the grudge match against the Jaguars at
TIAA Bank Field that it became obvious Roethlisberger didn’t have it. Not his
usual accuracy. Not his typical command. Not the feel for the game, his
receivers, and the opposing defense that often intersects and result in the
kind of performance he put together some 10 days earlier against the Carolina
Panthers, as one example.
There have been a bunch of outings similar to that perfect
night on Roethlisberger’s resume, and Steelers fans have come to know them when
they see them, but what everyone was watching originate from Northern Florida
was the polar opposite. In two games against this very opponent last year,
Roethlisberger turned the ball over seven times and his team lost both, one of
which ended its run through the postseason before it had a chance to begin. And
instead of authoring some payback here yesterday, Roethlisberger seemed to be
adding more chapters to the same, sad tale.
How the day ended was with Roethlisberger walking off the
floor of TIAA Bank Field with the game ball securely in his grasp, which is
where it belonged after the Steelers’ improbable 20-16 victory over their
tormentors in teal, and only partly because he had been the one to inch it
across the goal line for the deciding points with five seconds left to play. It
belonged in his hands because that’s where he holds this team’s destiny.
Anyway, back to the start of the afternoon. Until the final
41 seconds of the first half, the Steelers offense had managed just two first
downs on six possessions. To that point, which means through the first 29
minutes and 19 seconds of game time – a span of six offensive possessions –
Roethlisberger was 4-for-11 for 18 yards, with no touchdowns, and two
interceptions. Computing his passer rating at that point, it was 5.3. Read that
again, and then allow your mind to drift back to that Thursday night game
against Carolina.
It’s impossible to grasp the concept that those polar
opposite performances came from the same person, and impossible is an apt
description of the Steelers’ chances of winning any game when their quarterback
is playing like the guy who was pulling the trigger in that first half here
against the Jaguars.
People who perceived the Steelers of last season to be
mouthy likely would find them to be shrinking violets next to these Jaguars.
Jalen Ramsey and Telvin Smith are Nos. 1 and 1a on the agitator’s pecking
order, and both of them were enjoying themselves immensely at being able to
chronicle Roethlisberger’s foibles to him personally and to the entire Steelers
sideline.
That the half ended with the Steelers trailing by just 9-0
is a testament to their defense, but at the time it felt very much as if a 1-0
Jacksonville lead would be good enough to win on this day.
Inside the Steelers locker room at halftime, Roethlisberger
delivered part pep talk, part mea culpa for his contributions to the situation
in which his team found itself. He did it at high volume and with passion. It
was meant to inspire and unite. As Coach Mike Tomlin has said about
Roethlisberger, “When you tell Ben he can’t do something, and then you have his
attention and that competitive spirit flows out of him. You put him in a
hostile environment, and that competitive spirit flows through him.”
Roethlisberger and his teammates were in a hostile
environment, even though close to 50 percent of the 67,683 in attendance were
twirling Terrible Towels. It had been made hostile by a Jaguars defense that
seemed to be in complete control of the situation, especially by the midway
point of the third quarter when Ramsey intercepted Roethlisberger in the end
zone.
The Jaguars were in complete control until they weren’t, and
that’s when Roethlisberger drew blood by buying enough time in the pocket to
allow Antonio Brown to get lost by the Jaguars secondary. A perfect pass and 78
yards later, the Steelers trailed by 16-6.
In the fourth quarter, Roethlisberger made some plays, and
his offensive teammates made some to bail him out of some tight situations. And
in the meanwhile, the defense put up four straight three-and-outs to keep
getting him the ball back. It was far from a one-man show, but the team effort
had a clear leader and it was the quarterback.
The throw to Vance McDonald for an 11-yard touchdown on the
penultimate series was perfect. The back-shoulder throw to JuJu Smith-Schuster
on the final, decisive drive for a 35-yard gain was a thing of beauty. So was
the ball to Brown for a 25-yard gain on the same possession. And his 1-yard
dive across the goal line was supposed to be a shovel pass to McDonald, but
when the Jaguars bottled that up, he improvised, he adapted, and he overcame.
As it was, Roethlisberger completed his 41st game-winning
drive in the fourth quarter or overtime of his career, which broke a tie with
John Elway for sixth-most by any quarterback since the 1970 NFL-AFL merger. And
after struggling mightily targeting Ramsey through three quarters, he went
5-of-6 in the fourth quarter with Ramsey as the nearest defender, according to
NFL Next Gen Stats.
Telvin Smith’s mouth motivated Roethlisberger, and
Roethlisberger motivated his teammates, who returned the favor by supporting
him and the cause with their play. When it got to 0:00, the Steelers had an
improbable victory, their quarterback walked off with the game ball, and once
again the audience was treated to a visual explanation of the difference
between playing quarterback and being the quarterback.
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