No matter how you measure
it, the Cleveland Browns can't beat the Pittsburgh Steelers.
Ben Roethlisberger threw two touchdown passes before the Steelers'
offense began stopping itself with turnovers, and Pittsburgh benefited
from a curious first-down measurement to beat the rival Browns for
the 12th consecutive time, winning 27-14 on Sunday.
Roethlisberger,
second in the league in passing and on pace for what would easily
be the best statistical season of his career, was
23 of 35 for 417 yards in his second career 400-yard game. He threw
for 433 during a 31-20 loss to Denver in 2006. Hines Ward made eight
catches for 159 yards and a touchdown and Santonio Holmes had five
for 104.
The game turned out a lot closer than it was expected to be for
much of the second half — the Steelers, two-touchdown favorites,
once led only 17-14 — mostly because each team turned it over
four times in a sloppily played game in which Pittsburgh outgained
Cleveland 543-197.
There were four turnovers in a span of 1:25 to end the third quarter,
two by each team, about the only way the Browns slowed a Steelers
offense that had gone 50 games without generating 500 yards since
doing it against Cleveland in 2006.
What the Browns (1-5) couldn't figure out is how the Steelers (4-2)
ended up scoring in the final minutes of the first half, on Jeff
Reed's 32-yard field goal to make it 17-7, after Roethlisberger appeared
to come up several inches short on a fourth-and-1 sneak from the
Browns 14.
TV replays showed the ball short of the stick on a play in which
Roethlisberger took considerable time at the line of scrimmage, a
tactic in which the offense tries to draw the defense offside, only
to slam into the middle of the Browns' defense.
The Browns couldn't challenge the call since it was within the final
two minutes of the half. Roethlisberger appeared to throw a 13-yard
TD pass to Hines Ward two plays later, but the call was overturned
upon review because the ball came out of Ward's hands as he rolled
out of bounds.
Because of the first-down call, the Browns trailed 17-14 instead
of being tied at 14 after driving for only their fourth touchdown
on offense in 12 games — they've lost 11 of those — on
Derek
Anderson's 1-yard pass to Lawrence Vickers that finished off
a 66-yard drive to start the second half.
Anderson, who replaced an ineffective Brady Quinn after 2 1/2 games,
finished 9 of 24 for 122 yards.
The Steelers, winning their third in a row, came back after Vickers'
score to make it 24-14 when Roethlisberger hit Ward for 45 yards
and Mike Wallace for 21 ahead of Rashard Mendenhall's 2-yard touchdown
run.
The Browns' only other scoring came on Joshua Cribbs' 98-yard kickoff
return that followed Roethlisberger's touchdown passes of 8 yards
to Heath Miller and 52 to Ward. Cribbs ran untouched along the Steelers'
sideline for his club-record eighth kick return score, six on kickoff
returns, and his third against the Steelers.
After the flurry of turnovers ended the third quarter, Reed kicked
a 39-yard field goal, and theBrowns gave the ball back yet again — their
fourth turnover and 32nd in their last 12 games — when Anderson
was intercepted by Ryan Clark near the goal line with 4:21 to play.
Cribbs also was intercepted by Troy Polamalu, who returned after
a four-game injury layoff, out of a wildcat formation during yet
another dreadful first half by the Browns offense, which was outgained
289-71 in the half and 231-14 in yards passing.
The Steelers have won 18 of 19 against the Browns, counting a playoff
game, and are 9-1 against them in Heinz Field.
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