It was, head coach Mike Tomlin acknowledged, a “big
disappointment” when the Steelers came up just short of the playoffs, but the
just-completed season still had its share of memorable games.
FOUR STAND OUT IN PARTICULAR
DEC. 23, AT NEW
ORLEANS, SAINTS 31, STEELERS 28
It ended in heartbreak, on a last-minute fumble by wide
receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster at the New Orleans’ 34-yard line with the Steelers
driving for either the game-tying field goal or the game-winning touchdown. But
the Steelers nonetheless put on tape the type of game they were capable of
playing in a high-stakes confrontation against a top-caliber opponent in a
hostile environment.
Quarterback Ben Roethlisberger threw for 380 yards in the
Mercedes-Benz Superdome. Smith-Schuster finished with 11 catches for 115 yards,
and wide receiver Antonio Brown had 14 catches for 185 yards and two
touchdowns. Brown’s best might have been a 19-yard sideline grab that had to
withstand a replay review on fourth-and-15 from the Steelers’ 20 with 1:09 left
in regulation.
The Steelers battled through penalties they perceived to be
unjust and battled back from a 10-point, second-half deficit.
Steelers president Art Rooney II appeared on the Steelers
Radio Network Pregame Show prior to the regular-season finale against
Cincinnati and praised the Steelers for having played “a good game against a
tough opponent in maybe the toughest place to play in the league,” in New
Orleans.
The Steelers were proud of the way the team played against
the Saints even thought they couldn’t
get the job done. Giv Toomlin credit for having his team ready to go.
DEC. 16, HEINZ
FIELD, STEELERS 17, PATRIOTS 10
The Steelers came in having lost five in a row to the
Patriots and 11 of 13 to New England quarterback Tom Brady. But with the game
hanging in the balance late, the Steelers’ defense was able to seal the deal
this time. The late-game heroics included an interception by cornerback Joe
Haden at the Steelers’ 4 midway through the fourth quarter, and the forcing of
three consecutive incompletions from the Steelers’ 21 in the final 33 seconds.
Brady was only sacked once but he was hit seven times and
the Steelers’ pressure was relentless. The game ended on the last play of the
game when the Patriots were fourth-and-15 from the Steelers’ 21 with 20 seconds
remaining in regulation
New England was penalized 14 times for 106 yards, including
repeated infractions for either delay of game, false starts or offensive
holding.
Watt also credited a crowd he said was the loudest he’d
heard at Heinz Field.
A night to remember.
NOV. 4, AT
BALTIMORE, STEELERS 23, RAVENS 16
The Steelers had been pushed around up front in a 26-14 loss
to the Ravens on Sept. 30 at Heinz Field.
They pushed back at Baltimore.
They amassed 395 total net yards while possessing the ball
for 36:29. They rushed for 113 yards, including 107 by running back James
Conner, who averaged 4.5 yards on 24 carries. And they limited the Ravens to 61
yards on the ground.
Conner also had seven catches for 56 yards, including a
17-yard touchdown, on the way to becoming the first player in NFL history to
register four games with at least 100 yards rushing, 50 yards receiving and a
touchdown in a single season.
Before Conner got injured he showed the Steelers that he was
getting better as the season went along. Conner show the defense that no
challenge was too big for him, the No. 1 defense, whatever it might be.
The win was the Steelers’ fourth in a row since their loss
to Baltimore in the teams’ initial meeting.
NOV. 18, AT JACKSONVILLE,
STEELERS 20, JAGUARS 16
Another demon was exorcised via a seven-play, 68-yard drive
that culminated in a 1-yard touchdown run by Roethlisberger with five seconds
left in regulation.
Initially, the third meeting with the Jaguars in two seasons
was playing out as the two had last season. Running back Leonard Fournette
rushed for 74 yards and averaged 5.3 yard per carry in a first half that ended
with the Steelers trailing, 9-0.
But in the second half the Steelers slammed the door shut.
Fournette’s next 14 carries netted just 21 yards. And
Jacksonville went three-and-out and gained a combined minus 3 yards on four
consecutive possessions after the Jaguars had scored a touchdown for a 16-0
lead with 2:09 left in the third quarter.
For the Steelers, there was just enough time remaining.
Roethlisberger hit Brown for a 78-yard touchdown before the
third quarter ended (a two-point conversion attempt failed) and tight end Vance
McDonald for an 11-yard score with 2:28 left in the fourth quarter (this time the
Steelers kicked the PAT to pull within three at 16-13).
On the final drive, Roethlisberger had five options on
first-and-goal from the Jacksonville 1 with eight seconds remaining. None were
available to him, so he ran through Jaguars linebacker Myles Jack and nudged
the ball into the end zone.
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