National Post

Sturdy Steelers control destiny

Pittsburgh 24-12 in December since 2007

- By Will Graves

PITTSBURGH• Maybe the Cincinnati Bengals were trying to send a message. Mike Tomlin doesn’t know and doesn’t particular­ly care.

All the jawing, all the flags, all attempts at intimidati­on the Bengals tried to throw at the Steelers on Sunday, Pittsburgh and its not exactly wallflower of a head coach have seen many times before.

“It’s always us and somebody,” Tomlin said. “You know, we seem to attract that type of atmosphere. Maybe it’s us.”

Particular­ly in December, when the playoffs aren’t just an idea beyond the horizon but a tangible destinatio­n. While the Bengals lost their cool and their quarterbac­k to a freak injury, Pittsburgh rolled to a 33-20 victory that possibly altered the trajectory of both clubs.

The Steelers (8-5) have won nine straight December games, tied with Carolina for the longest active streak in the NFL. Pittsburgh is 24-12 in the final month of the calendar year since Tomlin took over in 2007.

“That’s just us,” quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger said. “(Coach Tomlin) doesn’t just sit there and say ‘ Hey, we’ve got to win now because it’s December football.’ We just know it’s that time of year. It’s crunch time and you’ve got to get hot at the right time.”

Something that typically hasn’t been an issue for Pittsburgh, even when there isn’t much on the line.

The current December winning streak started at the end of a forgettabl­e 2013. Faced with the franchise’s first losing season in a decade following a baffling home loss in the snow to the Miami Dolphins that dropped them to 5- 8, the Steelers responded by upsetting playoff-bound Cincinnati on the road, then followed with victories in Green Bay and at home against Cleveland in the regular season finale to scramble to 8-8.

Roethlisbe­rger stressed at the time the importance of finishing strong for pride’s sake and his team responded. The stakes are considerab­ly higher this time around, and Pittsburgh appears as dangerous as any team in the AFC provided it can keep it going. The remaining schedule doesn’t look as daunting as it did three months ago. Denver (10-3) visits Heinz Field on Sunday coming off an ugly second-half collapse at home against Oakland. The Steelers finish the regular season with road trips to reeling Baltimore and rudderless Cleveland. Hostile territory to be sure but not exactly an impossible task.

With the first-place Bengals forced to go without quarterbac­k Andy Dalton — who fractured his right thumb while trying to tackle Pittsburgh defensive lineman Stephon Tuitt after Tuitt’s first-quarter intercepti­on — suddenly things seem wide open.

“We feel like as long as we’re winning, everything is going to take care of itself,” linebacker Arthur Moats said. “If you want to turn on ESPN and see what the scores are that week, that’s cool ... but as long as we’re winning, we’re fine.”

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