Austin American-Statesman

Jacksonvil­le earns respect, win

Jags take 21-0 lead, hold off late rally by Roethlisbe­rger.

- By Will Graves

The Jacksonvil­le Jaguars heard the chatter, read the tweets and Instagram posts. And they got a little confused.

Why were the Pittsburgh Steelers talking about the New England Patriots? Didn’t they have to face the Jaguars first before reaching a rematch with the Super Bowl champions?

“I don’t know if they misread the schedule or didn’t play us this week, but they didn’t acknowledg­e us at all,” Jacksonvil­le linebacker Myles Jack said. “And we didn’t take that too kindly.”

Not at all. That shouldn’t be a problem going forward.

The Jaguars have the NFL’s full attention now. A trip to Foxborough on the horizon, too.

Dominant at the start and resilient at the finish, Jacksonvil­le stunned the Steelers 45-42 on Sunday to advance to the AFC title game for the third time in franchise history and maybe, finally, earn a bit of respect.

Leonard Fournette ran 25 times for 109 yards and three scores. Embattled quarterbac­k Blake Bortles added 214 yards passing and a pivotal fourth-quarter touchdown as the third-seeded Jaguars (12-6) beat the second-seeded Steelers (13-4) at Heinz Field for the second time in three months.

The victory in October served notice Jacksonvil­le was ready to put a decade of losing firmly behind. This one sent an even bigger message: overlook the Jaguars at your own peril, something Pittsburgh appeared to do in the run-up. Coach Mike Tomlin hinted at facing the Patriots twice back in December. Running back Le’Veon Bell posted on Twitter about the pair of “round 2s” the Steelers will face in coming weeks.

Turns out, one rematch is all the Steelers will get.

“We knew we had this team’s number,” Jacksonvil­le safety Barry Church said. “All we did was feed on the fuel that everybody was providing, the media, everybody was talking about how they’re going to run through us, it’s not going to be like last (time). Blake Bortles this. Blake Bortles that. All he did was dominate their defense.”

A week removed from an ugly performanc­e in a wild-card round win over Buffalo in which he passed for 87 yards and struggled with the easiest of throws, Bortles went 14 of 26 for a touchdown without an intercepti­on. He ran for 35 more and wasn’t sacked by a defense that led the NFL and set a franchise record with 55 during the season. Jacksonvil­le’s 45 points tied the most ever allowed by the Steelers in the playoffs.

“The guys played with confidence all day long,” Bortles said. “... We knew we were going to have to be efficient, hold on to the ball for a little bit, so we did it.”

Ben Roethlisbe­rger (37 of 58) threw for 469 yards and set a franchise record with five TD passes, but was also intercepte­d once and had a fumble returned for a score. All-Pro Antonio Brown caught seven passes for 132 yards and two touchdowns in his return from a left calf injury. Bell had 155 yards of total offense and two scores.

Pittsburgh rolled up 545 yards of offense, but it’s 2 yards the Steelers didn’t get that helped send them into an offseason filled with questions.

Twice Pittsburgh had fourth-and-1 in Jacksonvil­le territory. Twice the Steelers did something other than have the 6-foot-5 Roethlisbe­rger sneak. Pittsburgh ran wide in the first quarter and Bell was stuffed for a 4-yard loss. The Jaguars responded immediatel­y by going 75 yards in 11 plays, the final one a 4-yard sprint by T.J. Yeldon that put them up 21-0.

The Steelers were down a TD early in the fourth quarter and had fourth-and-inches at the Jacksonvil­le 39. Roethlisbe­rger checked at the line of scrimmage, faked a handoff to Bell and instead threw incomplete to diving rookie JuJu Smith-Schuster.

“It’s been a while since I’ve run a quarterbac­k sneak. I’m for it,” said Roethlisbe­rger, who added he will return in 2018. “That’s kind of over my head when it comes to why we don’t do it. I’m not going to sit here and second guess why we didn’t quarterbac­k sneak.”

 ?? KEVIN C. COX / GETTY IMAGES ?? Jaguars running back Leonard Fournette dives into the end zone in the first quarter for the first of his three TDs in Sunday’s victory. He ran for 109 yards on 25 carries and caught two passes for 10 yards.
KEVIN C. COX / GETTY IMAGES Jaguars running back Leonard Fournette dives into the end zone in the first quarter for the first of his three TDs in Sunday’s victory. He ran for 109 yards on 25 carries and caught two passes for 10 yards.

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