A
most fitting comeback for Ben Roethlisberger. With the kind of playmaking
that put two Super Bowl rings on his fingers, the Steelers quarterback
connected on a 58-yard pass to
rookie Antonio Brown with less than two minutes to go. The
go-for-broke toss set up the winning touchdown in a rough-and-tumble
31-24 victory Saturday over the archrival Baltimore Ravens.
“Let’s just chuck it deep,” Roethlisberger told
offensive coordinator Bruce Arians just before he threw his biggest
pass of the season. “If they pick it, it will be a pick way
down there, just as good as a punt. … I just throw it as far
as I can.’ “
He did.
“It was kind of amazing,” Brown said. “It kind
of stuck to my shoulder.”
As a result, the Steelers (13-4) are a win away from their third
Super Bowl in six seasons. The Steelers will play the winner of Sunday’s
game between the New York Jets and New England Patriots.
Rashard Mendenhall scored the winning TD from 2 yards with
1:33 left. That ended any ideas the Ravens had of finally winning
a playoff game against their division rivals.
Roethlisberger took his shots early from the Ravens’ defense,
but threw for 226 yards and two touchdowns before his big pass on
third-and-19.
“He may not be (Tom) Brady or all those other guys, but when
I see him in the huddle I know we’ve got a chance to win,” said
Hines Ward, who caught a TD pass. “He’s a proven
winner. And history shows he’s a proven winner against Baltimore.”
The third meeting this season between these AFC North rivals had
the usual skirmishes, but also was filled with penalties and turnovers.
It’s been a rugged season for the Steelers’ quarterback.
His life and reputation were in tatters 10 months ago following sexual
assault allegations that weren’t prosecuted. He was suspended
for the first four games of the season, and helped his team finish
with 12 victories and a first-round bye.
“It’s Ben. You give this guy an opportunity to snap
it; he’s capable of producing plays,” Steelers coach
Mike Tomlin said, “It’s not always how you draw it up,
but he has a no-blink mentality. He is a competitor and a winner.
And those guys follow him.”
While the Steelers trailed by two TDs at the half, it was the Ravens
who fell apart in the in the second half as the team they love to
beat most came back to knock them out of the postseason. The Steelers
are 9-0 against division teams in the postseason.
The Steelers were trailing 21-7 after turnovers created two Ravens
touchdowns. But they came back with the help of three Baltimore turnovers
in the third quarter. It was so bad, the Ravens’ minus-4 yards
in offense wasn’t the worst of it; they ended with 28 yards
in the second half.
“We knew we had to play great. We knew if we didn’t
play great we were going to lose this game,” defensive end
Brett Keisel said.
Baltimore was outgained 263-126 and Joe Flacco was 16 of
30 for 125 yards.
The Ravens’ last chance to beat the Steelers—they haven’t
in three postseason tries—ended when T.J. Houshmandzadeh
dropped Flacco’s fourth-down pass at the Steelers’ 38
with 1:03 remaining.
“We knew it would be a close game,” Houshmandzadeh said. “I
didn’t think it needed to be, but it was.”
Failing to protect the ball cost the Ravens—even after they
scored two touchdowns in less than 30 seconds in the first half.
Defensive end Cory Redding returned a Roethlisberger fumble
for a touchdown that both teams thought was an incompletion, but
that wasn’t nearly enough on a day when the Ravens’ offense
did so little.
“What better way to put the Ravens out of the tournament,” Ward
said. “They keep asking for us and we keep putting them out
of the tournament. They’re going to be ticked about this for
a long time.”
With Baltimore up 21-7, Ryan Clark forced a rare fumble by
Ray Rice on a screen pass, and LaMarr Woodley recovered
at the 23. The play re-energized the crowd of 64,879 that had grown
silent as Baltimore opened its two-TD lead.
“You know what, our offense went in there (at halftime) and
said, `We played terrible. We gave them the ball in prime position
too many times,’ ” Roethlisberger said. “We had
to do something about it.”
Mendenhall ran for 14 yards before Roethlisberger’s 9-yard
scoring pass to Heath Miller, who missed two games after sustaining
a concussion on a hit by Jameel McClain during the Steelers’ 13-10
win in Baltimore last month.
Later in the quarter, Flacco overthrew tight end Todd Heap,
and Clark returned the interception 17 yards to the 25. Three plays
later, Roethlisberger found ol’ reliable Ward, absent in the
offense most of the day, for an 8-yard touchdown pass and it was
tied at 21.
Along the sideline, the Ravens had the look of a team that couldn’t
believe it had squandered the lead—and couldn’t figure
out how to get it back. They never did.
“We felt good at the half,” Rice said. “Our defense
had them stopped and I thought we were going to come out and handle
our business. But then the situation happened: fumble, turnover,
another turnover.”
Roethlisberger went 19 of 32 in beating the Ravens for the seventh
successive time in a rivalry in which both teams had won twice by
3-point margins during the last two seasons. The asterisk: Roethlisberger
didn’t play in either Steelers loss.
Baltimore turned it over for the third time in 9 minutes as center
Matt Birk snapped the ball early to Flacco, who never got
his hands on it, and Keisel recovered at the 23.
The drive stalled, but Shaun Suisham, who had missed earlier
from the 43, converted a 35-yard field goal with 12:15 remaining
to give Pittsburgh its first lead, 24-21, since its opening drive.
An apparent punt return touchdown by Lardarius Webb was negated
by a holding penalty on Marcus Smith, but the Ravens—with only
36 yards of offense in the half to that point—tied it at 24
on Billy Cundiff’s 24-yard field goal with 3:54 remaining.
That was too much time for Roethlisberger, who excels in fourth-quarter
comebacks.
Each team took advantage of a long pass interference penalty to
score during a penalty-filled first quarter. Josh Wilson’s
37-yard penalty for yanking on Mike Wallace led to Mendenhall’s
1-yard touchdown run on the Steelers’ first possession.
On a third-and-15 play, Steelers backup Anthony Madison’s
33-yard pass interference penalty set up Rice’s 14-yard TD
run up the middle.
Then it really got interesting.
Terrell Suggs knocked the ball loose from the quarterback
as he tried to get off a pass. Roethlisberger pump-faked, but before
he could bring his right arm forward, the ball came out.
As Suggs celebrated the apparent incompletion, the ball lay on the
turf for one, two, three full seconds. Haloti Ngata was closest
to it but no one touched it until an alert Redding—realizing
the whistle hadn’t blown—picked it up and ran it into
the end zone from the 13.
Mendenhall fumbled on the Steelers’ subsequent possession,
Ed Reed recovered and Flacco threw a 4-yard TD pass to Heap.
Notes: Mendenhall was the game’s leading rusher with only
46 yards on 20 carries. … Pittsburgh lost to New England 39-26
and to New York 21-16 during the season. … There were 11 sacks
in the game, six by Baltimore, including three by Suggs. Pittsburgh
LB James Harrison also has three sacks.
Steelers Rout Browns and Claim AFC North Division Title
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