Waterloo Region Record

Ben’s back

‘I’m still one of the best in the world’

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PITTSBURGH — On second thought, Ben Roethlisbe­rger believes he still has “it.”

In fact, the Pittsburgh Steelers quarterbac­k is pretty sure he’s never lost “it,” even if he found himself somewhat facetiousl­y wondering it out loud after his career-high five intercepti­ons led to a stunning loss to Jacksonvil­le on Sunday.

“I have that belief that I’m one of the best that’s ever done it, one of the best that’s ever played this position and you have to have that confidence,” Roethlisbe­rger said during his regular radio appearance on 93.7 The Fan in Pittsburgh.

Even if it didn’t look like it at times against the Jaguars. The Steelers were held without a touchdown at home for the first time in a decade on a day the franchise leader in every major statistica­l passing category threw five passes to the Jaguars, two of which Jacksonvil­le returned for touchdowns to turn Pittsburgh’s third-quarter lead into a its worst home loss since 2006.

A visibly frustrated Roethlisbe­rger placed the blame solely on his shoulders and said “maybe I don’t have it anymore” when asked if he could put his finger on what’s gone wrong. The Steelers (3-2) are averaging just 20 points a game heading into Sunday’s visit to Kansas City (5-0).

A day later, Roethlisbe­rger went back to work energized and insisted his brief flirtation with retirement in the off-season has nothing to do with his current struggles. Roethlisbe­rger has just six touchdowns against seven intercepti­ons through five games and his 75.8 quarterbac­k rating is nearly 20 points below his career average.

“If you’re asking me is my heart into it, I’ll say 100 per cent,” Roethlisbe­rger said. “I love this game, I love this sport, I love my teammates, the fans. I give it everything I have.”

Roethlisbe­rger said Sunday that he wasn’t concerned with his mechanics but added he wasn’t a “guru.” He did talk to his agent, Ryan Tollner, about his performanc­e. Tollner, who played quarterbac­k at the University of California, assured Roethlisbe­rger there was nothing wrong. Roethlisbe­rger is completing just 61.5 per cent of his passes. He hasn’t completed below 64 per cent over the course of a full season since 2012.

“I don’t think there’s anything there,” Roethlisbe­rger said. “Honestly, I don’t think your talent, it doesn’t go away. It goes awry sometimes, but it doesn’t go away.”

The two-time Super Bowl winner likened himself to a “cowboy,” one with plenty of drive left. Coach Mike Tomlin downplayed Roethlisbe­rger’s postgame comments, well attuned to his quarterbac­k’s tendency to blurt out his frustratio­ns, ones that dissipate when given proper time to cool off.

“I don’t overreact the way some of (the media) react,” Tomlin said Tuesday.

Tomlin said Roethlisbe­rger looked “like a guy who was ready to gun-sling and get back at it” while going through the usual Monday routine. Whatever moment of introspect­ion Roethlisbe­rger may have had appears to be over. It needs to be if the Steelers want to survive a difficult stretch.

Pittsburgh travels to Kansas City in a playoff rematch from January, hosts rapidly improving Cincinnati and visits Detroit before its bye week.

 ?? FRED VUICH, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ben Roethlisbe­rger says he still has it, despite his five intercepti­on performanc­e here against Jacksonvil­le.
FRED VUICH, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ben Roethlisbe­rger says he still has it, despite his five intercepti­on performanc­e here against Jacksonvil­le.

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