Ben Roethlisberger has earned the
right, as he declared recently, to tell it like it is.
Maybe sometimes. Or maybe not.
As he stood in the Steelers’
locker room at Heinz Field the night of Dec. 2, the quarterback- critic tried
to sell the idea that this current flow is nothing more than a blip in the big
picture. After all, it followed one of the most inglorious losses in the
franchise’s history, a 33-30 collapse against the Chargers that marked the
first time Pittsburgh lost at home after leading by at least 14 points in the
second half.
His level of concern?
“None,” he insisted.
Why not?
“Don’t need to panic,” he
replied. “Don’t need to worry.”
He just needs to face the
reality: The Steelers have the look of a team that’s blowing it.
For the second game in a row, the
Steelers faded in crunch time. A week after Roethlisberger’s goal-line
interception sealed a loss at Denver, the Steelers allowed the Chargers to
rally from a 16-point deficit.
Before Sunday, Pittsburgh (est.
1933) was 220-0-2 when holding a 14-point lead after halftime. Or 174-0-1 when
leading by 16 points at home at any point of a game.
Just pick a trend-busting stat.
They were all bad news for Mike Tomlin’s drama-magnet of a team.
No, the defense couldn’t protect
the lead. But with a big meltdown as such, there’s always plenty of blame.
Roethlisberger’s offense went flat, punting on its first three possessions of
the second half. And one of the punts was returned by Desmond King for a
73-yard touchdown, exposing the special teams.
There were assorted missed
opportunities, such as Roethlisberger overthrowing a wide-open Justin Hunter
for a would-be 34yard touchdown in the second quarter. Hunter replaced
deactivated rookie James Washington in the lineup, days after Roethlisberger
publicly shamed Washington for not hauling in a deep heave at Denver. Now the
shame is on Roethlisberger.
On another first-half throw,
under pressure on a third-down play from the Chargers’ 22, Roethlisberger
didn’t get enough on the ball. Rookie safety Derwin James intercepted the ugly
throw, marking another squandered opportunity. It was Roethlisberger’s
sixth interception in three games, which coincided with some beautiful passes
to Antonio Brown and too many errant throws.
But there’s no level of concern.
Must be a company line.
At 7-4-1, the Steelers are still
leading the AFC North. But two weeks ago, they were positioned as the No. 2
seed in the AFC, in line to earn a first-round bye. Now, with Baltimore (7-5)
surging, the division lead isn’t safe, either.
Not exactly the direction a team
with championship visions needs to be heading. If it doesn’t turn around
quickly, the Steelers will again assume the position as the NFL’s biggest
tease.
But at least, as Haden allowed,
there’s time to get back on track.
Haden, incidentally, was involved
in a crucial play — or Keystone Kops moment — that epitomized the type of
night it was for the Steelers in blowing a 23-7 halftime lead.
On a third down from the
Pittsburgh 10, late in the third quarter, Haden undercut Keenan Allen’s route
in the end zone and had his hands on a Philip Rivers interception until ...
safety Sean Davis crashed into his teammate to jar the ball loose.
The football popped into the air
for a diving Allen to snag for the touchdown. The comeback was on. “Oh, I had
it,” Haden said of the game-swinging event. “It was picked. Just unlucky right
there.”
But not concerned.
With a trip to Oakland next week
followed by a Week 15 showdown at home against the Patriots, the condition of running
back James Conner will also bear watching. Conner left in the second half of
the Chargers game with a lower leg bruise.
Conner has been a largely
impressive replacement for Le’Veon Bell, the all-pro who opted to sit out the
season rather than accept a $14.5 million franchise tag salary. Now Conner’s
availability, or effectiveness, could be a concern.
Of course, the Steelers, and
Roethlisberger, don’t want to panic or worry.
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