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Inactives For Steelers Vs. Bengals

With just under an hour until kickoff, here is a look at the inactive list for tonight’s divisional showdown against Cincinnati.

Steelers

QB L. Jones, WR J. Brown, CB Ike Taylor, SS Troy Polamalu, DE C. Geathers, G C. Hubbard, and TE M. Palmer.

Bengals:

QB McCarron, CB Newman, C Johnson, OT Hawkinson, DT Still, WR Wright, and WR Little.

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Heinz Field

With Win Tonight, Steelers Will Host The Ravens Next Weekend

The Baltimore Ravens have clinched the number 6 spot today with a win over the Cleveland Browns. After winning 20-10 today, the Ravens will travel to Heinz Field next weekend if the Steelers win tonight. The Ravens will be getting DT Haloti Ngata back from suspension this week.

If the Steelers lose, they will travel to Indianapolis to take on the Colts. In the odd event the Steelers should tie tonight, they will travel to Cincinnati to face the Bengals for a third time this year.

nfl pro bowl

5 Steelers Voted To Pro Bowl Squad

The 2015 Pro Bowl selections have been announced, and 5 Steelers are among them.

  • Ben Roethlisberger, 2nd in passing yards.
  • Le’Veon Bell, 2nd in rushing yards.
  • Antonio Brown, 1st in receptions and 1st in receiving yards.
  • Maurkice Pouncey, main anchor of the Steelers offensive line (2nd total offense).
  • Lawrence Timmons (9th in tackles).

For Bell and Timmons, this will be their first trip to the Pro Bowl, the third for Roethlisberger and Brown, and the fourth for Pouncey.

For the Steelers, other players who could have been in consideration due to their performance this season:

  • David DeCastro, Heath Miller, Cam Heyward, William Gay and James Harrison.

Teams with most players selected:

  • Denver Broncos – 9
  • Dallas Cowboys -6
  • Green Bay Packers, Seattle Seahawks, Philadelphia Eagles, New England Patriots, Pittsburgh Steelers  and Indianapolis Colts – 5

Full list of selections can be found here.

 

 

Steelers news

Lessons from Week 16

Allowing only 39 rushing yards to an offense led by Jamaal Charles, sacking Alex Smith 6 times, winning the turnover battle and converting 50% of their 3rd downs meant the Steelers beat the KC Chiefs and have locked a ticket to the Playoffs for the first time since 2011.

The Steelers can end no worse than the 5th seed. In fact, if the Steelers win against the Bengals, they’ll be AFC’s #3 seed (thanks to the Colt’s loss at Cowboys). Next week’s game vs Cincinatti has been flexed to primetime (which gives the Steelers a league high 6 primetime games this season). The Steelers are 4-1 on primetime games in 2014 (their only loss at Baltimore, week 2, with wins at Carolina, vs Houston, vs Baltimore and at Tennessee).

Even though several important plays occurred during the game, 4 key turning points went the Steelers way and shaped this big win:

  • Blake breaks up TD pass. With the Score tied 3-3, and the Chiefs had just converted a 4th down on a trick play to get a 1st and goal at the Steelers 6 yard line. On 2nd and goal from the Steelers 4 yard line, Alex Smith threw a perfect pass to Bowe, who appeared to have a great chance to catch it and put his team 10-3, but A. Blake broke up that pass. Next play, Worilds sacked Smith for a 3 yard loss, forcing KC to settle for a FG, making it 6-3 and keeping it a low-scoring, close game.
  • Big stop on 4th down. On a questionable play call by Andy Reid, the Chiefs went for it on 4th and 1 from the Steelers 12 yard line with 27 seconds left in the 1st half. Lawrence Timmons and James Harrison stopped Charles at the line of scrimmage, negating a score by the Chiefs, keeping it 10-6, Steelers, going into halftime.
  • Tuitt’s forced fumble. Score 10-6, Steelers. After exchanging punts to open the 2nd half, the Chiefs drove 44 yards to the Steelers 28 yard line on what appeared to be a scoring drive. On 2nd and 7 from the Steelers 28, Smith found Charles open, who caught a short pass and was fighting for extra yardage, when Tuitt delivered a big hit on Charles, forcing a fumble (that V. Williams recovered).
  • Roethlisberger’s TD pass to Brown. After that fumble recovery, the Steelers drove 72 yards to the Chiefs 3 yardline. With the scoreboard still 10-6 in the 3rd quarter, Ben Roethlisberger found A. Brown for his only TD pass of the game, just after being tripped and before being knocked down by the Chiefs pressure. His patience with the football gave Brown enough time to find an opening, and Ben delivered a perfect bullet to Brown, who made it 17-6 with 40 seconds left in the 3rd quarter.

Offense: The Steelers had just 6 offensive drives all game long, and scored on 4 of them, being able to put 20 points on the board while gaining 282 total yards. Let’s not forget they were facing KC’s defense, ranked 3rd in scoring in the NFL.

  • Even though Ben had a low yardage game for his 2014 standards (220 yards), he didn’t throw for an interception for the 3rd consecutive game and had 1 TD pass (to Brown), on a play in which he was unintentionally tripped (really?), and being patient to find him open in the End Zone. Could have had three more TD passes, but drops from AB and Miller negated a couple more for him, while he underthrew a relatively open Palmer in the end zone. He wasn’t erratic often, didn’t force throws into double coverage and was able to find both, Miller and Brown, 7 times each to move the football, while contributions by Wheaton (2 catches for first downs) and Bryant (on a 44 yard reception) helped to establish scoring drives. He didn’t take a step back after being hit, while being able to move the football and convert 3rd downs throwing during the 4th quarter.
  • Statistically, Bell had a subpar game with 72 total yards (63 rushing with a 3.1 average), but he still was a big factor while getting 5 first downs and a rushing TD, also being able to put some good blocks on pass protection, helping the OL keep Ben clean. Once again, no other halfback carried the football for the Steelers.
  • Wide receivers accounted for more than 53% of the Steelers total offense, with Martavis Bryant accounting for 53 yards on consecutive plays in the 1st drive (44 yard catch, 9 yard run), Wheaton grabbed two catches (both good for first downs), and Antonio Brown grabbing 7 passes and a TD. Going to Bryant on 3rd and 4 in the first series was a smart call, which showed they both have a good tempo on that go route. Brown, even when double covered, finds a way to get open and that was a key factor to let the Steelers move the football between the 20s.
  • Miller was a factor too, grabbing 7 passes, with 4 of them being good for first downs. Spaeth was deactivated, and Palmer played on his #2 TE spot, being targeted just once on an underthrow by Ben. Miller has been getting more and more involved as the season unfolds, which is good news facing the season finale and playoffs, giving Ben another reliable target, besides his young WRs and elusive RB.
  • Offensive Line allowed Ben to establish his passing game, but once again struggled to open lanes for Bell. Of 52 total offensive plays, only 1 was for negative yardage (Houston’s sack of Roethlisberger) and the OL deserves credit for it. Still, Bell was able to convert 5 rushing first downs, score a rushing TD behind DeCastro and Gilbert, and Ben was given enough time to throw for most of the game. Foster committed a 15 yard penalty after one of Suisham’s FGs, forcing the Steelers to kick from their own 20 yard line, and giving KC Great field position to start what became a FG scoring drive. Poe and Houston weren’t big factors for most of the game, and that’s to be credited to the Steelers OL, too.

Defense: 6 sacks, fumble recovery, 3rd & 4th down stops, limit the Chiefs to 39 rushing yards: no TDs allowed.

  • The Steelers Defense stopped KC’s offense on 4 drives inside the Steelers Red Zone (KCs offense was ranked #2 in red zone efficiency  in the NFL, before the game), who had to settle for Field Goals three times, while stopping them on 4th down, right before halftime, on the other one.
  • Front 7: Allowing 39 rushing yards from a Chiefs offense featuring Jamaal Charles, and getting 6 sacks. Tuitt recorded his 1st sack and a forced fumble, while Heyward had 1.5 sacks and several hurries. If they continue to play like this, Heyward and Tuitt have the potential to become anchors of the defense. Today, they did an Aaron Smith-Brett Kiesel impression. Timmons and Harrison combined to stop Charles on 4th and 1 from the Steelers 12 yardline, negating a score to the Chiefs on what became a turning point for the game (instead of heading 10-9 to halftime, when the Chiefs would receive the 2nd half kickoff, they kept It 10-6, and stopped KC’s first drive in the 2nd half). Worilds and Harrison combined for 3.5 sacks, and both of them had big stops on running plays. Harrison had his best performance as a Steeler since 2012. He faced a former #1 overall draft pick in LT Eric Fisher, and abused him frequently. Timmons had another great performance, with huge stops on 3rd down (one of them, negated by a very questionable –at least- call by the referee on William Gay, for taunting –on his own teammate? Really?).
  • A shorthanded secondary, playing without Polamalu (Will Allen took his place) and Ike Taylor (who I wonder, if healthy, if he’s still the starter) allowed KC to pass for more than 300 yards, most of them on short routes (longest pass was a short catch and run). Credit to Blake, for breaking up what could have been a go ahead TD to Bowe, to Will Allen, who was frequently tackling close to the line of scrimmage, and to the DBs as a unit, keeping the ball in front of them and not allowing the big play. While 312 yards from Alex Smith sound like being torched, most of them were on scheme: short passes and bubble screens were frequently used, while the Steelers secondary was showing respect to their WR corp, playing with enough separation to let that happen.

Special Teams. Other than Suisham, not so special

  • Wing punted just two times, one of them an extremely short 34 yarder, and a long 56 yarder, providing no consistency (which was an issue at the start of the season). Suisham converted two short FGs (both from 23 yards). The kick block unit was caught off guard on a 4th down trick play, which allowed KC to get a first down. The Steelers didn’t allow big returns from KC, which was good news, keeping the Chiefs away from starting their drives with good field position.

Just Wondering

  • And with a legitimate shot at #3, all the Steelers have to do is win their season finale. And then, most probably, play host to an AFC North foe in the Wild Card round.
  • Losses against 3-12 Jets and 2-13 Buccaneers are the difference between facing season finale playing for #3 seed, and for #1 seed.
  • Credit to DBs for not allowing Chiefs’ WRs to score their 1st TD of the Season. Since 1950, no team has gone an entire season without their WRs scoring a TD. Honestly, the Steelers DBs provided a good chance to be the first ones to allow it.
  • Great call, first series long pass to Bryant. Like that approach, and both showed great tempo, again.
  • While I like what Bell brings to the table, Harris should be getting some reps. It won’t happen while games are on the line, but the Steelers have no proven backup behind him. Playing January football means it’s pretty relevant to have a 2nd running back, especially when playing in the elements (if the Steelers win out and go through the SB, their path could be: at Heinz Field season finale, at Heinz Field Wild Card round, at Denver for the Divisional Playoff game, and at Foxboro for Division Championship).
  • Why isn’t Shamarko Thomas getting reps? With Polamalu sidelined, it was supposed to be his turn. Will Allen made some plays, but he’s not the future at the position. Shamarko should be.
  • Any chance Harrison thinks twice after the season about retirement? Interesting story about his kids not letting him come back, just to listen to one of them say “I didn’t say so”.
  • And how can that effect decision time with Worilds next season?
  • Tuitt needed a chance to grow while getting reps. This kid will make things happen (he’s already moving that way).
  • And next week could be the last regular Season game in Heinz Field as a Steeler for… Troy Polamalu?
  • How much credit does our Defense deserve? While the Defense recently locked games against Jacksonville (scoring a TD on a low-scoring, close game) and Atlanta (stopping them on the 4th quarter), this game against KC could be seen as the best Defensive performance so far this season. At least, league-wide it’s been pointed as an exception performance. How about remembering how they set the tone against Carolina, Houston, Indianapolis, Baltimore, Tennessee, Cincinnati and Atlanta (early, on Gay’s pick six)? Weren’t those good, tone-setting performances from the defense, too?
  • Memo to Colbert: Time to open the wallet and think about Heyward’s extension.
  • Underrated, and flying under the radar, A. Blake and McCain have made several plays on defense this season. Is Cortez Allen now expendable? And what about Ike? Not that they seem to be the future at the position (Blake and McCain), but could pretty much complement with Gay and draft picks to replace former starters Taylor and C Allen.
  • Who will cover AJ Green next week? Gay, Blake or McCain? All three seem an upgrade from what Taylor did (or did not) against him the last time the Steelers faced him.
  • Another heavy dose of 3-7 counter on the Bengals, probable? Last time, it accounted for 100 yards. If the Bengals adjust, it could open up the playaction game, once again.
  • Two very questionable judgment calls from the referees: One call, a taunting penalty on Gay, which kept a Chiefs drive alive, and a non-call on what was a clear tripping penalty on Ben’s TD pass to Brown.
  • Coach Tomlin has shown his emotions recently, and was really fired up after Gay’s penalty. Also, after the Steelers recovered the final onside kick, he was jubilant on the sidelines. That attitude makes me wonder if he thought he’d be on the hot seat if not getting into the playoffs.
  • An AFC North rematch looks probable: If the Steelers finish as a Wild Card, it means Cincinatti will be #4, hosting the Steelers. If the Steelers win the Division as #3, they could be receiving either Baltimore or Cincinnati.

What comes next?

Regular Season finale at Heinz Field, a flexed primetime game vs the Bengals, Sunday December 28th. If the Steelers win or tie, they’ll be Divison Champs and AFC #3 seed. If they lose, they’ll be in as a Wild Card, no worse than #5 AFC seed. Current record on primetime games this season: Steelers 4-1, Bengals 1-2.

By the Numbers

0 TDs allowed by the Steelers, 2nd time it happens this season (vs Chiefs, at Jacksonville)

3rd time this season the Steelers have held the opponents to under 20 points

6 Primetime games for the Steelers this Season, league high

6 Sacks by the Steelers defense, Season high (and most since December 23, 2013).

11 times the Steelers have scored 20 points this Season.

12 Receiving TDs by Antonio Brown, tying a Steelers Record (with no others than Ward, Lipps and Dial)

17 Steelers NFL rank in Penalties, after leading the league for the first stretch of the season.

31 consecutive games with 5+ receptions and 50+ receiving yards by Antonio Brown, an NFL record

365 passing yards needed by Roethlisberger on season finale to surpass 5,000 (only 5 QBs in NFL history have accomplished that: Manning, Brees, Brady, Marino and Stafford).

le'veon bell

Le’Veon Bell Named 2014 Steelers MVP

Steelers running back Le’Veon Bell has been voted team MVP by his teammates, the Steelers announced today. The selection of Bell shouldn’t come as a surprise, as Bell, Antonio Brown or Ben Roethlisberger seemed like logical front runners.

Bell is the fifth running back in team history to receive the nomination, marking seven times a back has been named MVP. The other 4 were Franco Harris, Barry Foster, Jerome Bettis and Willie Parker in 2006. Bell has already set a single season record for most yards from scrimmage at 2,115 and has the 5th most rushing yards in team history at 1,341 with one game to go.

Earlier in the 2014 season, the second year running back totaled 200 yards from scrimmage in three consecutive games. Walter Payton was the only other player in league history to do such a thing.

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Coach Tomlin On The Victory Over The Chiefs

Here is a transcript from Coach Tomlin’s post game press conference today after the Steelers clinched a playoff spot.

A big fight by our football team today. Did what was necessary to secure victory. A lot of efforts to point out. Really just loved the spirit of the defense. We challenged those guys this week. Kansas City has the number-one red zone defense in football so we knew that points could be tough down there for our offense.

Our defense had to play tough in the red area to keep the playing field level. I thought that they responded to that challenge. We talked openly about it all week. The red zone stops where we forced them to kick field goals and then ultimately that fourth-down stop was big in the football game from a big perspective. Just largely, a lot of good efforts by a lot of people. We came out of this thing relatively injury free. We realize what next week is. It’s a big week for us. We’ll enjoy this today, but we’ll start the preparation tomorrow for our AFC North finale.

Were you surprised that the Chiefs went for it on fourth-and-one? How did you stop them?

I was not surprised. Coach Reid is an aggressive guy. He doesn’t live in his fears. He’s always been that guy. Nothing special in terms of stopping it to be honest with you. Just played good, sound football and guys did a nice job of being strong at the point of attack.

What does it say for your team to make the playoffs despite playing young guys and dealing with injuries?

The big thing is that we’ve evolved throughout. We were young at the early stages of the year. Same guys but they’ve matured through the process. That maturation process is sometimes not easy. We were a highly penalized group early. We got control of that. Started minimizing big plays. We’re doing what teams need to do this time of year which is ratcheting it up and being a more difficult team to beat. We’re beating ourselves less which is good.

Was the plan at right outside linebacker to have a rotation and did the performance of Harrison change that?

James was healthy today. We were going to let James play and we did. He was a significant factor but obviously all of those guys are capable of being reasons why we win. That’s one of the things that the challenges that injuries present. When you come through the other side of it you get people back…you have quality depth. We’ve missed some time with a number of people, Jarvis and James Harrison and so forth. But what that’s given us now is that we have everybody healthy. We have good depth and we can play a lot of people and guys can play with great energy.

How important would it be to win the division?

Very. I mean that’s what we came here for is hardware that we pick up along the way in terms of our ultimate goal. But we realize how significant division play is. We’re supporters and proponents of division play.

Did you get an explanation on the William Gay unsportsmanlike penalty?

I don’t even want to get into that. I really don’t. Ridiculous.

On the team’s discipline:

We’re not going to apologize for caring. We’re not.

Was that the team’s best defensive effort of the season?

I could say that because as we sit here right now those are the feelings. But we’re just trying to do what’s required for us to win. It was very necessary today. We’ll appreciate it today. I’m sure we have some bigger, tougher challenges and battles that lie ahead. That need to be our focus as opposed to looking back and admiring our work.

What has the return of Harrison meant to the team?

Besides the play, the demeanor, the approach to business, the singular focus; he’s a legitimate, real leader for the group. Besides the play, he’s a compass. He’s a football lover.

Does it mean more to make the playoffs this season after missing it the last two seasons?

No. We don’t carry bags from past performances. We’re singularly focused on this one.

Steelers sign

Steelers Inactives Vs The Kansas City Chiefs

Here are the inactives for today’s game against the Kansas City Chiefs.

QB Landry Jones, WR Justin Brown, CB Ike Taylor, SS Troy Polamalu; DE C. Geathers, G Chris Hubbard, TE Matt Spaeth.

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This is the second week that Ike Taylor is kept out of the lineup. Troy Polamalu is out due to a knee injury that he sustained last week. Matt Spaeth will miss the first game of the season due to an elbow injury. Marcus Gilbert, who missed the last 3 games, returns today and is expected to start.

Here are the Chiefs inactives:

QB Aaron Murray, WR Donnie Avery, CB Marcus Cooper,  RB Charcandrick West, OL Eric Kush, OL Laurent Duvernay-Tardif, DE Nick Williams.

Steelers news

Polamalu, Mitchell, And Spaeth Sit Out For Wednesday’s Practice

Troy Polamalu, Mike Mitchell, and Matt Spaeth were all sidelined today due to injuries they sustained during the Falcons game on Sunday. Polamalu is nursing a knee injury and Mitchell is out due to a groin injury. Tomlin said yesterday that Spaeth hyper-extended his elbow and will have it in a protective brace this week.

Maurkice Pouncey and Ike Taylor were limited today in practice. Pouncey due to an ankle injury, and Ike because of his lingering shoulder and forearm injuries.

Some good news on the injury front- both James Harrison (knee) and Marcus Gilbert (ankle) were full participants today. Tomlin told the media yesterday that Gilbert’s participation in practice would be their guide towards his starting against the Chiefs. If Gilbert finishes the week without any setbacks, you’d have to imagine he’ll start on Sunday.

steelers inactives

Steelers Lose Practice Squad Guard; Sign G Ronald Patrick With Opening

The New York Giants signed center Adam Gettis from the Steelers practice squad yesterday. To fill the practice squad vacancy, the Steelers have signed guard Ronald Patrick.

Gettis was with the team for the past two months. The Steelers signed the former Redskins guard when they released Derek Moye and placed Shaquille Richardson on practice squad IR.

Patrick went undrafted out of South Carolina this Spring. The 6’01”, 318 lb guard was with the Cowboys throughout preseason, and later signed to their practice squad.