The last three times the
Jaguars played at Heinz Field they left with a victory. On Sunday
the Steelers put an end to their winning streak with a 17-13 victory.
The Steeler offense put up more than 300 yards of total offense in
the
first
half but
could not put together a single scoring drive in the second half.
Mike Tomlin isn’t
ready to say the Pittsburgh Steelers are back. Not after watching
his team
sleepwalk
through
the second
half
against
Jacksonville on Sunday.
“The big challenges lie ahead,” the Steelers coach said
after a 17-13 win over the Jaguars. “We need to prepare for
them.”
The Jaguars gave the defending AFC champions plenty to work on.
Jacksonville (1-5) dropped its fifth straight to match the franchise’s
longest losing streak in a decade, but it was the Steelers (4-2)
who were apologizing after an agonizing 30 minutes in which they
nearly frittered away a commanding lead.
“If you get out to a 17-point lead and get comfortable, you
take it off their throat,” Pittsburgh wide receiver Mike Wallace
said. “We have to keep the same intensity the whole game. We
started out with a lot of intensity and then we fell off a little
bit.”
Jaguars eookie quarterback Blaine Gabbert led a methodical comeback
that didn’t end until his desperation heave on the game’s
final play bounced harmlessly to the ground in the back of the end
zone. Gabbert scrambled on a 4th down play to keep the Jaguars hopes
alive.
“The biggest thing is that we gave ourselves a chance,” Gabbert
said. “We had an opportunity to win the football game at the
end and we had to capitalize on that opportunity.”
Blaine Gabbert completed 12 of 26 passes for 109 yards and a touchdown
in the second half. and even though he remains winless as a starter,
the Jaguars remain competitive
and upbeat. In the sad-sack AFC South, Jacksonville remains just
two games out of first place.
“I guess the growing theme around here is that we’re
so close,” wide receiver Mike Thomas said. “We’re
doing some good things, but we’re not doing enough to finish
the deal.”
The Pittsburgh offense overwhelmed
Jacksonville in the first half, outgaining the Jaguars 315-68. Yet
all that dominance translated into just a two-touchdown lead.
The Steeler offense managed just 70 yards after halftime and Pro-Bowl
safety Troy Polamalu sat out Pittsburgh’s final two defensive
series after experiencing concussion-like symptoms after stuffing
Jacksonville’s Maurice Jones-Drew on a critical third
down.
Tomlin said Polamalu was held out as a precaution. The Steelers
didn’t need him to hold off Jacksonville, though the road gets
significantly tougher over the next few weeks. Pittsburgh travels
to Arizona next Sunday then hosts New England and Baltimore in what
will be the season’s next litmus test.
If the Steelers play the way they did in the first half against
the Jaguars, they can make some noise. If they play the way they
did in the second half, they’re in trouble.
“It’s frustrating because my expectations for this offense
are high,” quarterback Ben Roethlisberger said.
Pittsburgh appeared to be living up to them for a half. Roethlisberger
hit Mike Wallace for a 28-yard touchdown pass and Rashard Mendenhall
ripped off a career-best 68-yard run and scored a touchdown a week
after sitting out a victory over Tennessee with a hamstring injury.
Mendenhall finished with 146 yards on 23 carries, while Roethlisberger
passed for 200 yards and a score. But after the break, Mendenhall
needed 11 carries to get 33 yards and Roethlisberger completed just
one pass.
That allowed the Jaguars, who came in last in the league in total
offense and passing offense, and 31st in scoring, to hang around.
“We didn’t play the style of football that we like to
play in the second half,” Tomlin said. “All that being
said … we made the necessary plays at the end.”
And Jacksonville didn’t—again.
The Jaguars haven’t lost five straight since 2001, when Gabbert
was 12. He’s 22 now, and impatient. Jacksonville didn’t
turn the ball over and Gabbert stood his ground behind a rebuilt
offensive line and a Pittsburgh pass rush that sacked him five times.
It was a step forward, just not in the win column.
“We just have to score more points and come out with a sense
of urgency in the first half like we did in the second half,” Gabbert
said.
The Steelers have the opposite problem. They’ve won four of
five, but have shown only flashes of their usual form. They know
it’s time to get going.
“We’re going to get better, but we’re not going
to apologize for this win,” wide receiver Hines Ward
said. “We won that game. That’s all that matters.”
Game Notes: Ward caught three passes for 47 yards to move past Michael
Irvin and into 19th place on the yards receiving list. Ward now has
11,939 yards. … New Jacksonville punter Nick Harris,
signed last week, averaged 42.3 yards on seven punts. … Scobee’s
two field goals gave him field goals in 14 straight games, a team
record. … Pittsburgh G Doug Legursky left in the second
quarter with a dislocated toe.
Big Ben Throws 5TD's Steelers Defeat Titans 38-17
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