The Telegram (St. John's)

Chargers, Steelers only looking at small picture

-

Philip Rivers didn’t exactly spend a lot of time poring over the most accurate performanc­e by a quarterbac­k in NFL history.

The longtime Chargers quarterbac­k understand­s there’s no time. Not with the Chargers (8-3) scrambling to stay ahead in the middle of a tight AFC playoff race and a trip to AFC North-leading Pittsburgh (7-3-1) looming, one that could erase all doubts about whether Los Angeles is for real.

“We’ve got a heck of a December ahead of us,” Rivers said.

So Rivers gave his 28 for 29 day in an almost comically easy 45-10 over Arizona last Sunday a cursory look, lingering over his one mistake - a secondquar­ter fumble on a play he audibled to - far longer than any of his three touchdown passes or his record-tying 25 straight completion­s.

The 15-year veteran is well aware miscues of any variety need to be avoided when Ben Roethlisbe­rger is on the other sideline just waiting to pounce in a place that’s not exactly hospitable to teams in visiting white jerseys, particular­ly as the calendar hits December.

The Steelers are an Nfl-best 18-3 in December since 2013 and 8-0 in December primetime games at Heinz Field since it opened in 2001.

“It’s one of those old-school

NFL atmosphere­s,” Rivers said. “Throw in fact it’s in December they are right there in the hunt in the AFC and you expect a heck of a game.”

One the Steelers need just as badly as the Chargers. Pittsburgh had its six-game winning streak end last week in Denver, a 24-17 setback littered with the kind of sloppy mistakes the Steelers largely avoided while righting their season following a 1-2-1 start.

Pittsburgh turned it over four times, three times in the red zone, the last one a Roethlisbe­rger pick at the goal line

on a pass intended for Antonio Brown.

The loss cost the Steelers the inside track at the No. 2 seed in the AFC playoffs and set up the possibilit­y that Los Angeles’ visit to Heinz Field could be the first of two such meetings.

Not that Pittsburgh is getting caught up in “what ifs,” not with a December schedule that includes games against the Chargers, New England and New Orleans.

“We’ve done it from all the different seeds,” Roethlisbe­rger said. “So just getting in is the most important. Getting one

of those first two byes is a big deal but there is still a handful of games left, so we have a lot of games in front of us we got to take care of first.”

Roethlisbe­rger and Rivers are seventh and eighth on the alltime list for career yards passing, throwing for a combined 108,196 yards - or 61.5 miles since they came into the league in 2004. The two understand they are inextricab­ly linked, though there’s one thing - two actually - that Roethlisbe­rger has that Rivers does not: a Super Bowl ring.

A victory on Sunday wouldn’t guarantee a shot at one, but it would stamp the Chargers as a team built to compete in January and perhaps beyond. Rivers isn’t consumed by the big picture, however. Focusing on the small one is tough enough.

“I’m trying to get a first down on Sunday night to be honest with you,” he said.

KEEP AN EYE ON:

The Chargers receivers, who will need to pick up the slack with running Melvin Gordon’s injury. Gordon is week to week with a sprained MCL in his right knee. Mike Williams had two touchdown catches last week while Keenan Allan has a TD in three straight games. Williams was a deep threat early in the season, but showed off his athleticis­m in last week’s win over Arizona with two catches near the boundary line at the back of the end zone.

OPTIONS APLENTY:

The emergence of Juju Smithschus­ter has taken some of the pressure off Steelers star wide receiver Antonio Brown. Smithschus­ter is taking advantage of defences who focus extensivel­y on Brown, one of the reasons the 22-year-old ranks sixth in the league in receptions (77) and yards receiving (1,055). Still, Roethlisbe­rger is quick to shoot down the notion Pittsburgh now has two No. 1 receivers. If anything, the number is far greater than that.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? In this Dec. 9, 2012, file photo, Pittsburgh Steelers quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger (7) talks with San Diego Chargers quarterbac­k Philip Rivers (17) after the Chargers won 34-24 in an NFL football game in Pittsburgh.
AP PHOTO In this Dec. 9, 2012, file photo, Pittsburgh Steelers quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger (7) talks with San Diego Chargers quarterbac­k Philip Rivers (17) after the Chargers won 34-24 in an NFL football game in Pittsburgh.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada