Stop me if you’ve heard this one
before: When the Steelers needed it most; their defense couldn’t make a play.
Of course, you’ve heard it before, because it has happened before and very well
could end up being the story of their season. And should that be the case, it
will be a sad story indeed.
Yesterday, it was a 24-21 loss
that shouldn’t have been to a team of Raiders lugging a 2-10 record into an
exercise that was as ugly as the venue on this otherwise pleasant December
afternoon. From the Steelers’ standpoint, there were many culprits for the
outcome, starting with Coach Mike Tomlin’s curious strategy regarding the usage
of Ben Roethlisberger in the second half, to an offensive line that couldn’t
open any holes in Oakland’s Swiss cheese run defense, to a placekicker who
missed two makeable field goals in a game decided by three points.
But none of that ends up being
more than a curiosity on the talk show circuit if the Steelers defense made a
play, say, on one of the two fourth downs the Raiders converted on their pair
of touchdown drives in the fourth quarter.
First, the quarterback situation,
because, well, it’s the quarterback situation and since the quarterback is Ben
Roethlisberger and we’re examining why the Steelers lost a game they shouldn’t
have, that’s always the place to begin.
It’s not completely clear, at
least to me, when it happened, but at some point in the first half when
Roethlisberger was completing 18-of-22 (81.8 percent) for 164 yards and a touchdown
to JuJu Smith-Schuster with 10 seconds left to give the Steelers a 14-10 lead,
he was injured. The announcement, made soon after the second half began, was
that Roethlisberger was being evaluated in the locker room for a rib injury and
that his return to the game was questionable.
When he emerged from the locker
room later in the third quarter and joined the rest of the team on the
sideline, he put a baseball cap on his head instead of a helmet. Roethlisberger
watched the Steelers offense struggle to put even a couple of first downs
together with Joshua Dobbs at quarterback, and then once the Raiders took a
17-14 lead with 5:20 remaining he was returned to the field.
Tomlin’s history is that he’s
always been a “if he’s medically cleared to play, he plays” type of coach to
the point of having that attitude publicly criticized, and so I find it
unlikely that he would hold Roethlisberger out of such an important game on a
whim. And Roethlisberger is a wicked competitor who revels in his reputation as
a tough guy who loves to come through for his teammates, and so it seems just
as unlikely to me that he ever would choose to be a spectator rather than a
participant.
Tomlin also will get ripped, and
he already has been, for his decision not to use his timeouts once the Raiders
got inside the Steelers 10-yard line late in the fourth quarter during what
turned out to be the game-winning drive. Tomlin said he wanted to hold a
timeout for the offense, and again, that has been his history, but since the
Steelers lost the game and they flew back to Pittsburgh with one timeout left,
his procedure there will be criticized as well. And as Chuck Noll always
maintained, “When you lose, whatever they say about you is true.”
But the usage of Roethlisberger
and the timeouts is a moot point if the defense makes a play at any point
during the Raiders’ two fourth quarter touchdown drives, and those drives
numbered a combined 22 plays and covered a total of 148 yards. That’s a bunch
of snaps and a lot of real estate covered for a defense to come up empty, but
that’s what the Steelers’ did and generally speaking, that’s why they’re in the
predicament in which they find themselves this morning.
The first of the Raiders’ two
fourth-down conversions came with 8:24 remaining in the fourth quarter with the
Steelers holding a 14-10 lead. Oakland’s offense arrived here ranked No. 22 in
the NFL in rushing, and No. 31 in fourth-down conversions, but on this instance
the Raiders made it look easy with a 5-yard run by Jalen Richard. Five plays
later, a 3-yard pass to tight end Lee Smith put the Steelers behind, 17-14.
Oakland’s tight ends totaled 10
catches for 148 yards and two touchdowns, and the combination of guys charged
with covering Jared Cook, Smith, and Derek Carrier didn’t get the job done. And
neither did Morgan Burnett and Terrell Edmunds on a 39-yard completion to Seth
Roberts on the first play after the two-minute warning that gave the Raiders a
first-and-goal at the 7-yard line.
Roberts was double-covered, with
Burnett in a trail position and Edmunds coming over from the left. Burnett
turned back to find the ball too late, and Edmunds didn’t get there in time.
One second earlier, one step sooner and maybe that’s the play the Steelers
defense so desperately needed. But “if” and “maybe” are four-letter words when
it comes to December football in the NFL.
Three plays later, the Raiders
were faced with a fourth-and-goal from the 6-yard line primarily because
Burnett made a nice breakup of a pass for Cook in the end zone. Tomlin used a timeout
there to set the defense, and whatever the call it certainly did not include
any defensive backs in coverage giving ground in the end zone. But Mike Hilton
didn’t press Carrier, and when he slipped trying to come up once the ball was
thrown it was an easy pitch-and-catch for the touchdown. To a tight end.
Stuff the running play. Don’t
find yourself behind a receiver in the end zone. When you don’t do those
things, the talking points become timeout usage and quarterback drama and the
questioning of focus and preparedness, and to a degree, professionalism,
because how can players who are focused and prepared and professional lose to a
bad team when a victory would have done a great deal to put them in a position
to reach some short-term goals.
Stuff the running play. Don’t
find yourself behind a receiver in the end zone. These are the kinds of things
drilled in practice and emphasized in meetings at every level of football. It
has little to do with strategy, or scheme. It simply comes down to football players
making football plays when games are hanging in the balance. Winning teams make
those plays, or at least they make one of them.
The Steelers didn’t, and now it’s
their playoff hopes hanging in the balance.
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