Cape Breton Post

Measuring stick

Stakes are high as streaking Steelers host Brady, Patriots

- BY WILL GRAVES

The soul searching began the moment the Pittsburgh Steelers walked off the field last January at snowy Foxborough following painful three hours watching Tom Brady and the New England Patriots toy with them in a one-sided 36-17 victory in the AFC title game that didn’t even feel that close.

While the Patriots moved on to the Super Bowl and ultimately another championsh­ip parade through Boston, the Steelers lurched into an off-season wondering what it was going to take to end nearly two decades of torment at the hands Brady, Bill Belichick and New England’s seemingly endless string of role players turned difference makers.

Quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger openly pondered retirement while simultaneo­usly challengin­g the front office to upgrade the talent around him.

Coach Mike Tomlin and defensive co-ordinator Keith Butler set about revamping a secondary that looked confused and overmatche­d as Brady picked it apart.

Roethlisbe­rger opted to return for a 14th season. Pittsburgh grabbed wide receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster in the second round of the draft and welcomed Martavis Bryant back from a year-long suspension and signed two-time Pro Bowl cornerback Joe Haden in August with an eye specifical­ly on New England.

A chance to see how far the Steelers have come over the past 11 months — and how far

they may still have to go — arrives Sunday when the AFC North champions host the Patriots (10-3).

And while Roethlisbe­rger tries to downplay the importance, Tomlin does not.

“It’s better to be in big games than ones that nobody is watching,” Tomlin said. “We better be appreciati­ve of this spot and not resist it in any way, but embrace it because this is what we’ve been fighting for since March.”

Or, you know, way before that.

The Steelers (11-2) haven’t lost since Oct. 1 but have beaten Brady just twice in 17 years and only once since 2004, a 25-17 victory in 2011 that Roethlisbe­rger jokingly admits he barely remembers. Maybe

that’s because the sting of New England’s dominance remains so fresh.

The defending Super Bowl champions have won the past four meetings by an average of 15 points. And while New England’s early season defensive hiccups resurfaced in a 27-20 setback to Miami on Monday night that ended an eight-game winning streak, the Patriots rarely let the failures of one week carry over into the next. They are 40-11 following a loss since Brady took over in 2001.

If anything, getting pushed around by the Dolphins provided New England with a bit of a reality check. Another setback and their path through the post-season could include at least one game on the road.

Not that they’re ready to think that far ahead just yet. That’s really not their thing. “It’s just if we worry about the playoffs, we’ll go down there and we’ll get killed, honestly,” New England defensive back Devin McCourty said. “This is too good of a football team to worry about anything else that surrounds the game, the implicatio­ns.”

Some things to look for as New England tries to clinch a ninth straight AFC East title while Pittsburgh attempts to clinch home-field advantage in the playoffs for the first time since 2004.

GRONK’S BACK, BRITT ARRIVES: Tight end Rob Gronkowski missed the loss in Miami while serving a onegame suspension for elbowing Buffalo’s Tre’Davious White. Gronkowski, who went to high school in the Pittsburgh suburbs, has been a nightmare matchup for the Steelers. Gronkowski is averaging 99 yards receiving and has scored eight touchdowns in five games against Pittsburgh. He won’t be the only downfield field threat in the lineup. The Patriots signed Kenny Britt this week from Cleveland. The 6-foot-3 Britt is averaging 15.6 yards per catch during his career.

BRADY’S BUNCH: Brady remains at the top of his game even on the other side of 40 and appears on his way to a third Most Valuable Player award. The future Hall of Famer seems to save his best for Pittsburgh. Brady has thrown 24 touchdowns against three intercepti­ons against the Steelers. The most recent Pittsburgh player to pick him off? Chris Hope in 2005.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? In this September 2015 file photo, New England Patriots quarterbac­k Tom Brady (left) speaks with Pittsburgh Steelers quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger before an NFL game in Foxborough, Mass.
AP PHOTO In this September 2015 file photo, New England Patriots quarterbac­k Tom Brady (left) speaks with Pittsburgh Steelers quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger before an NFL game in Foxborough, Mass.

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