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STEELERS COMMENTARY FROM BEYOND THE 'BURGH

Big, fat heartbreak


By Mike Batista

Steelahs.com

January 7, 2008

It was pretty clear the 2007 Steelers had their limitations and were going to get knocked out of the playoffs at some point. It would have been a whole lot easier if they had just done it my way.

I predicted the Steelers would lose to the Jaguars 28-17 Saturday. That was the score after the first play of the fourth quarter when Ben Roethlisberger threw a 37-yard touchdown pass to Santonio Holmes. But it wasn't the final score. Instead, the Steelers put us through a gut-wrenching, heartbreaking fourth quarter in which they came back from a 28-10 deficit and pulled ahead 29-28 with 6:21 left, only to see their season end when Josh Scobee kicked a 25-yard field goal with 37 seconds left, giving the Jaguars a 31-29 win in their AFC wild-card game at Heinz Field.

If my predicted score were correct, then the Steelers would have gone down fairly quietly and it would have been a lot easier on the ol' ticker.


Despite my forecast for a loss, in the days leading up to the game, I was thinking that the Steelers had a chance to beat the Jaguars and how great it would be to get another shot at the Patriots. How close they came.


The loss puts me in the kind of mood where I don't see how I can get excited about sports ever again. March Madness seems like it's a decade away. And there's a long winter ahead before baseball season starts. Yeah, there's always next year. But at this point you see how long and hard a road it is just to get to the playoffs, and the Steelers have to start all over again next season. That's the kind of mood a Steelers' playoff loss puts me in, especially one like this.


The Steelers came into these playoffs with what might be the worst top-ranked defense in the history of the NFL. This defense couldn't get it done when it mattered most this season. And never did it matter more than when the Jaguars faced a fourth-and-2 from the Steelers 43 with no timeouts and 1:56 left. The Steelers led 29-28 and had the Jaguars on the ropes. But quarterback David Garrard, who looks like Seal without all those welts on his face, scrambled through that overrated defense for 32 yards to the Steelers' 11. It was time for a "Prayer for the Dying" for the Steelers. Scobee's chip-shot field goal was a mere formality.


How fitting it was that the Steelers' 2007 season ended with one more failure by the offensive line, which let the Steelers down all season. After Scobee's field goal, the Steelers had the ball on their own 28 with no timeouts and 29 seconds left. They needed about 40 yards to get into Jeff Reed's field-goal range. But on the first play, Roethlisberger was sacked for the sixth time and coughed up the ball. Big, fat number 66 Derek Landri recovered the fumble to secure the win for the Jaguars, who deservedly get a shot at foiling the Patriots' perfection on Saturday night.


The O-Line wasn't the only glaring Steelers' weakness that came into play against the Jaguars. The Steelers opened the game with a smooth, 10-play, 80-yard drive that ended with a 1-yard touchdown run by Najeh Davenport and a 7-0 lead. But any tone-setting was negated by the Steelers' shoddy kickoff coverage. Maurice Jones-Drew returned the ensuing kickoff 96 yards to the Steelers' 1, and Fred Taylor punched it in from there to tie the score at 7-7.


It's maddening that the Steelers' real downfall Saturday night came right after they had a brush with the glory days. On third-and-10 from their own 16, Roethlisberger threw a pass that Heath Miller couldn't handle. The ball was deflected into the air. Hines Ward grabbed it and scampered to the Steelers' 49. Right on cue, NBC showed a clip of The Immaculate Reception. Unfortunately, the taste of the 1970s was fleeting. Just two plays later, we were served some vintage 2006 Roethlisberger. Yuck. And instead of Jack Tatum, the Steelers had to deal with the less menacing but more deadly Rashean Mathis.

Roethlisberger reverted to his 2006 ways by throwing three interceptions in the second quarter. The first two were thrown to that old tormentor Mathis, who returned the first pick 63 yards for a touchdown and a 14-7 Jaguars lead. Mathis intercepted another pass on the Steelers' next series to set up Garrard's 43-yard TD pass to Jones-Drew, which increased the Jags' lead to 21-7.

Mathis, you may recall, intercepted two Roethlisberger passes last season in a 9-0 win over the Steelers. In 2005, he beat the Steelers by intercepting a Tommy Maddox pass in overtime and returning it for a touchdown. But at least it didn't stop the Steelers from winning the Super Bowl that year.


This year, Mathis did stop the Steelers from winning a championship. But he had plenty of help, from his teammates and from the Steelers.

Roethlisberger completed his interception hat trick late in the second quarter. The Steelers trailed 21-7 but were driving and seemed poised to put some points on the board before halftime. But big, fat number 66 put an end to that. On second-and-4 from the Jaguars' 21, a Roethlisberger dink over the middle found the hands of Landri, a rookie defensive tackle from Notre Dame.

The Steelers didn't get nearly as much help from their Notre Dame connection. With 10:25 left in the game, Roethlisberger threw a 14-yard touchdown pass to Heath Miller to pull the Steelers to within 28-23 then threw to Hines Ward for the two-point conversion. But it was negated by a holding call on ex-Fighting Irish Sean Mahan, a disappointment this season at center.


After missing that two-point try, they had no choice but to go for two when Najeh Davenport gave them the lead on a 1-yard touchdown run. They missed it, which kept their lead at one point.


Then Bruce Arians' perplexing play-calling became a factor. With 2:56 left, the Steelers were facing a third-and-6 at their own 27. Instead of throwing the ball to Ward or Miller, who combined for 11 catches in the second half, Roethlisberger tried to run for the first down. He gained just a yard, and Dan Sepulveda's 40-yard punt was returned to the Jaguars' 49, giving them a good start on their game-winning drive.


No one embodied the spirit of the Steelers' comeback more than Ward, who caught 10 passes for 135 yards. There was a lot of pushing and shoving in the fourth quarter, and the normally affable receiver was right in the middle of it. After Cedrick Wilson caught a pass, Jaguars' defensive back Brian Williams wouldn't let him get up. They had words, and Ward rushed to his teammate's defense. Ward also did some jawing with rookie Reggie Nelson, who got a little too mouthy. Like a true mentor, Steelers' coach Mike Tomlin, not even a full four years older than Ward, put his arm around him on the sidelines to try to calm him down, a scene that demonstrated both the Steelers' unity and Tomlin's firm grip on the reins of the team.


The Steelers fought the good fight, and it went unrewarded. It makes the loss hurt that much more.

 

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