Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Raiders prevail

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Derek Carr threw for 382 yards and two touchdowns as Las Vegas toppled Pittsburgh 26-17.

RAIDERS 26, STEELERS 17

PITTSBURGH — Jon Gruden’s long, arduous multi-state, multi-year rebuilding project may finally be nearing its end.

The swagger might be back for the Las Vegas Raiders. The deep ball certainly is.

Derek Carr threw for 382 yards and two touchdowns, including a 61-yard strike to Henry Ruggs midway through the fourth quarter, as the Raiders toppled Pittsburgh 26-17 on Sunday.

Not bad for a team playing on a short week on the other side of the country without its starting running back and any sort of offensive balance. It didn’t matter, particular­ly once the Steelers lost star outside linebacker T.J. Watt to a groin injury in the second quarter.

“Honestly, anytime [Watt] is on the field he wrecks everything,” Carr said, later adding, “When he’s out of the game you notice he’s out but that doesn’t mean that we can do this or we can do that. We run our stuff in Las Vegas and have full confidence in our guys.”

It certainly looked like it. Carr shredded the Pittsburgh secondary in Watt’s absence, completing 16 of 21 for 263 yards in the second half, including a 9-yard flip to Foster Moreau in the third quarter and a rainbow to Ruggs with 9:35 remaining that gave the Las Vegas defense all the cushion it would need.

“You just see this gear that not a lot of human beings have,” Carr said of Ruggs. “It makes it fun for me.”

Ben Roethlisbe­rger passed for 295 yards, including a 25yard catch-and-run early in the fourth quarter that rookie running back Najee Harris turned into the first touchdown of his career that drew the Steelers within 16-14.

The Raiders (2-0) responded immediatel­y. Facing third-and-10 on Las Vegas’ next possession, Carr had plenty of time to step up and heave it to a streaking Ruggs, who raced past Pittsburgh’s Minkah Fitzpatric­k and Ahkello Witherspoo­n and into the end zone as the Raiders beat the Steelers for the sixth time in their last eight meetings.

“Not many guys can run that fast and track the ball,” Gruden said of Ruggs. “It was certainly a big play. The protection, the revolving door we had up front in the critical moment and the throw … there was a lot of good stuff to go around.”

Ruggs finished with five receptions for 113 yards, one of four Raiders with five grabs as Carr spread it around.

“We’re loaded with playmakers,” Ruggs said. “We have guys ready to step up at any time.”

The Steelers held Las Vegas tight end Darren Waller relatively in check until it mattered. Waller’s 25-yard reception with just over 2 minutes to go set up Daniel Carlson’s fourth field goal that provided the final margin, sending the first full crowd at Heinz Field in nearly 21 months trudging toward the exit.

“I’m not going to say London Bridge is falling down, but we’ve got to grow from this,” Steelers defensive end Cam Heyward said. “We’ve got to keep harping on our mistakes and understand how big those (get off) plays are.”

A week after pulling off a stunner in Buffalo in the opener, Pittsburgh got off to another slow start.

This time, there would be no second-half surge.

Harris again found little room to run behind Pittsburgh’s retooled offensive line, managing just 39 yards on 10 carries. The first-round pick added five receptions for 43 yards, including an acrobatic stretch across the goal line for his first touchdown as a pro.

Still, the offense operated in only fits and starts. Roethlisbe­rger completed 27 of 40 passes and absorbed 10 hits and two sacks while playing behind an offensive line featuring two rookies in left tackle Dan Moore Jr. and center Kendrick Green.

“Right now my play is just not good enough,” Roethlisbe­rger said. “If I play better, we have a chance to win the football game.”

The offense’s inability to control the ball forced the Steelers’ suddenly injury-ravaged defense had to be on the field for long stretches. The Raiders held the ball for more than 34 minutes and had 286 of their 425 yards after halftime.

 ?? (AP/Matt Durisko) ?? Las Vegas Coach Jon Gruden celebrates with linebacker Cory Littleton after the Raiders defeated the Pittsburgh Steelers 26-17 on Sunday in Pittsburgh. Quarterbac­k Derek Carr led the Raiders with 382 yards through the air and two touchdowns.
(AP/Matt Durisko) Las Vegas Coach Jon Gruden celebrates with linebacker Cory Littleton after the Raiders defeated the Pittsburgh Steelers 26-17 on Sunday in Pittsburgh. Quarterbac­k Derek Carr led the Raiders with 382 yards through the air and two touchdowns.

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