Big Ben puts up big numbers


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Pittsburgh Steelers outside linebacker LaMarr Woodley sacks New York Jets quarterback Mark Sanchez in the third quarter of Sunday’s NFL game in Pittsburgh. The Steelers flattened the Jets, 27-10, behind quarterback Ben Roethlisberger, who completed 24-of-31 passes for 275 yards and two scores.

Associated Press

PITTSBURGH

So much for Todd Haley cramping Ben Roethlisberger’s style.

Showing complete mastery of his new offensive coordinator’s complex playbook, the Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback picked apart the New York Jets in a 27-10 victory on Sunday that doubled as a reality check for both teams.

Hold off on the talk about New York’s high-powered offense. Ditto the maybe-not-so-creaky-after-all Steelers.

Roethlisberger completed 24 of 31 passes for 275 yards and two scores as Pittsburgh (1-1) flattened the Jets (1-1) in the second half.

“Ben is one of the top in the game,” said Pittsburgh wide receiver Mike Wallace, whose leaping 37-yard touchdown grab in the third quarter broke it open. “I’ll ride with him against anybody.”

Roethlisberger hit Heath Miller for a 1-yard score to give the Steelers (1-1) the lead late in the first half, then avoided the blitz on third-and-16 early in the third quarter and found Wallace in the end zone. The Pro Bowl wide receiver let New York cornerback Antonio Cromartie fly by then snatched the ball out of the air before tucking both feet in bounds.

“That was a backbreaker obviously,” New York coach Rex Ryan said. “That was a killer play in the game.”

Isaac Redman added a late 2-yard touchdown run for Pittsburgh, which had little trouble avoiding its first 0-2 start in a decade.

The Jets did nothing offensively after a pair of early scoring drives. Mark Sanchez completed just 10 of 27 passes for 138 yards and a touchdown and New York hardly looked like the offensive juggernaut that piled up points in a 48-28 opening-week blowout win over Buffalo.

Tim Tebow appeared on just one drive early in the second half for the Jets, running for 22 yards on his first carry. It wasn’t nearly enough against a defense that did just fine without injured stars James Harrison and Troy Polamalu.

“We settled down,” Steelers cornerback Ike Taylor said. “I think everybody was hyped for this game. Looking at what them boys did last week, they handled their business on offense.”

The sledding got significantly tougher in a place the Jets have only won once in franchise history.

Sanchez completed just 6 of 17 passes in the second half, two of them in a stat-padding final drive with things well out of reach. The Jets only converted 4 of 12 third downs and didn’t take a snap inside the Pittsburgh 30 on their final eight drives.

“I think us not converting on third down was a big hit today,” Sanchez said. “We weren’t our best. The throws weren’t there at times. The catches weren’t there at times, so we just need to be on the same page with that. It was a great effort by their team; we just came up short.”

Then again, it’s not like the Jets had a ton of opportunities the way the Steelers owned the clock.

With Roethlisberger spreading his 24 completions to 10 different receivers against a New York secondary that badly missed injured All-Pro cornerback Darrelle Revis, the Steelers held the ball for more than 36 minutes. Not bad for an offense led by a quarterback who said during the spring that Haley’s system was akin to learning a new language.

Two weeks into the season, consider Roethlisberger fluent.

“Nobody can get too upset because everybody is touching the ball,” Wallace said. “You’re not just getting opportunities to go catch it, (the passes are) coming right on the money.”