Super again? Not yet, but the Pittsburgh Steelers are surging
PITTSBURGH - The early season slide is over. Troy Polamalu(notes) is back from a four-week injury layoff. The edginess and self-assurance appear to be restored to the NFL's best defence over the last five seasons.
Ben Roethlisberger(notes) is second in the NFL in yards passing. James Harrison(notes) is threatening to break the team record for sacks again. Hines Ward(notes) is playing as if he's 23, not 33. Teams still can't run the ball effectively against the Pittsburgh Steelers.
In September, the rest of the NFL kept looking for the faults and fallacies in the defending Super Bowl champion. They were visible, too: an overtime win over still-winless Tennessee; a flurry of fourth-quarter points allowed; last-minute losses to the Bears and Bengals in successive weeks.
So much for a first impression being a lasting one. Right now, the Steelers (5-2) own the look of a team no opponent would willingly choose to play in January. They're hauling a four-game winning streak and growing confidence into their bye week, plus the mindset they're still the NFL's best team until somebody proves differently.
"We're stacking wins," Ward said. "(Going into) the month of November, we're heading in the right direction."
They don't own the NFL's best record, or even the undisputed lead in the AFC North - that might get decided when they play the Bengals (5-2) on Nov. 15. But the Steelers never were a team that needed the standings, outside experts, statistical breakdowns or fancy graphics to tell them where they rank or what they can be.
Their own state-of-the-Steelers analysis: not there yet, but getting there.
"We've put ourselves in a good position to go into this bye, but November, December, that's where the real teams start to separate themselves," defensive end Brett Keisel(notes) said. "Hopefully, if we're a real team around here, we can continue this win streak."
The Steelers' attitude, demeanour and confidence all looked to change during the last 1 1/2 quarters of their 27-17 victory over previously unbeaten Minnesota last Sunday.
First, they refused to allow a touchdown after Minnesota had a first down at their half-yard line during the third quarter. One failed run by Adrian Peterson and two incompletions by Brett Favre(notes) thrown into a tightly packed end zone made Minnesota settle for a field goal that kept the Steelers in the lead.
The Vikings blinked, and it potentially changed a pivotal game. Minnesota has arguably the NFL's best running back, yet apparently had so little confidence Peterson could gain 18 inches against Pittsburgh's defence that they ran him only once.
Maybe there's a reason: Peterson, Cedric Benson(notes) and Chris Johnson are three of the NFL's top five rushers, yet each was controlled by a Steelers defence that hasn't allowed a 100-yard rusher in its last 25 regular-season games. The challenge will be keeping that up without run-stuffing defensive end Aaron Smith(notes), who is out for the season with a torn rotator cuff.
Following the goal-line stand, the Steelers' defence outscored Minnesota's offence 14-0 as LaMarr Woodley(notes) scored on a 77-yard fumble return and Keyaron Fox(notes) returned an interception 82 yards for a touchdown. So much for the Steelers' inability to close out teams in the fourth quarter, where they were outscored 55-13 in their first five games.
"We don't do shootouts around here," safety Ryan Clark(notes) said. "It's been awesome how fast people forget this defence can actually play.
"We have pride. It's not ego, it's pride. And these guys have character."
What the Steelers really need is to keep Polamalu healthy. Their defence wasn't as aggressive or effective after he injured his left knee Sept. 10 against Tennessee, and they were only 2-2 without him. They're 3-0 when he plays, and 12-1 since mid-November a year ago, counting the postseason.
While the Steelers' defence isn't quite back yet - it's No. 8 overall after being No. 1 the last two seasons - the offence is unlike any other the Steelers have had during the Bill Cowher and Mike Tomlin eras.
Rather than being in the bottom third in passing and the top five in rushing, it's the other way around. The Steelers continue to evolve from being one of the NFL's most run-heavy offences to one of its more unpredictable ones. Roethlisberger has thrown for 2,062 yards, or only about 600 yards fewer than during his rookie season in 2004. No Steelers quarterback has led the NFL in passing, but he could do it.
Roethlisberger already has three 300-yard games, only one fewer than four-time Super Bowl winner Terry Bradshaw had during his career. Ward is second in the league in yards receiving.
"I guess if you go back to the '70s, we've been a grind-it, pound-it team," Roethlisberger said. "We're not that '70s team.
"We're our own identity. We're our own team."
A team that, as midseason approaches, apparently believes it can do something those teams of the '70s did by winning three Super Bowls in five seasons, during a run of four Super Bowl wins in six seasons.
"We know what we're capable of doing," Roethlisberger said.
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Behind the Steel Curtain
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I hadn't noticed until now that this was from the Canadian Press. So it would be correct for that sports writer. Also for Australia, New Zealand, India; probably just about everywhere the English language is written. Except for those of us from the United States. So I guess we are the ones who are wrong.
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Who pays these guys?
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