Steelers remain in playoff mix
Associated Press
PITTSBURGH
The similarities are there if you look hard enough, though the Pittsburgh Steelers aren’t ones to dwell on the past.
Is this year’s team like the one in 2005 that needed a strong finish just to make the postseason, then won three games on the road in the playoffs before capturing the franchise’s fifth Super Bowl title?
Or maybe it’s like the 2008 group that faced a ridiculously brutal schedule over the final weeks, survived and raised the Lombardi Trophy in triumph.
“You could probably draw comparisons to a lot of seasons,” quarterback Ben Roethlisberger said.
Roethlisberger and his teammates, however, prefer to live in the now. And considering the nearly laughable run of bad luck the Steelers have endured over the last three months, they’re not exactly complaining.
The defending AFC North champions are in the thick of the wild-card race at 6-4 and haven’t given up hope of catching first-place Cincinnati despite a series of setbacks that left them wondering if there’s a voodoo doll somewhere wearing a Steelers jersey and stuck full of pins.
Center Maurkice Pouncey seems destined to miss the entire season after getting his ankle rolled on in the preseason. Left tackle Kelvin Beachum shredded his left knee against the Cardinals in October. Roethlisberger and running back Le’Veon Bell have played all of three quarters together. Bell missed the first two games while serving a suspension, then saw Roethlisberger leave in Week 3 against St. Louis with a sprained left knee. Roethlisberger returned in Week 8 against Cincinnati only to watch Bell’s right knee twist awkwardly beneath him in the second quarter, Bell’s 2015 ending right along with it.
“We’ve had injuries but never like this to your ‘two best guys,’ the left tackle and the center,” said offensive line coach Mike Munchak, who has been in the league since 1982. “They’ve meant so much to the football team, not just the offensive line.”
Yet Pittsburgh has persevered, winning on the road in San Diego on a Monday night when head coach Mike Tomlin brazenly passed up a chip-shot field goal that would have sent the game to overtime in favor of a gutsy touchdown run by Bell as the clock hit zero. When whatever magic Michael Vick had left appeared to vanish — and a gimpy hamstring appeared — against Arizona, third-stringer Landry Jones came off the bench. He hardly looked like the player who had struggled for three training camps to make any significant inroads on the primary backup spot.
All Jones did was toss a pair of second-half touchdowns to lead a rally against one of the NFC’s best teams.