Dayton Daily News

Steelers’ fallout: Coordinato­r, 2 assistants gone

- By Will Graves

The Pittsburgh PITTSBURGH — Steelers’ playoff flameout cost offensive coordinato­r Randy Fichtner and two assistants their jobs.

The team announced Thursday it would not renew the contracts of Fichtner, offensive line coach Shaun Sarrett, and secondary coach Tom Bradley following a 48-37 loss to Cleveland on Sunday night.

Head coach Mike Tomlin hinted at major changes on Wednesday after Pittsburgh dropped five of its final six games following an 11-0 start and didn’t waste time getting started. While quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger played well for long stretches in his return from right elbow surgery, the running game disappeare­d over the second half of the season and finished dead last in the NFL in both yards rushing and yards per carry.

“I think when you are dead last in anything, it is (personnel and scheme),” Tomlin said. “We better assess it as such. We will not accept our current position in that area. We cannot. We have to attack that and we will.”

That inability to generate any sense of balance allowed opponents to key on Pittsburgh’s short passing game. Roethlisbe­rger threw at least one intercepti­on in six of his last seven starts, including four against the Browns.

The decision ends a long profession­al relationsh­ip between Tomlin and Fichtner. The two met as assistants at Arkansas State in the late 1990s and Tomlin hired Fichtner as a wide receivers coach shortly after replacing Bill Cowher in January 2007. Fichtner was promoted to quarterbac­ks coach in 2010 before being elevated to offensive coordinato­r three years ago after the team let go of Todd Haley following a playoff loss to Jacksonvil­le.

Pittsburgh’s offense finished fourth in the league during Fichtner’s first season calling the plays in 2018, thanks in large part to the highly productive partnershi­p between Roethlisbe­rger and wide receiver Antonio Brown. The offense took a significan­t and expected step backward in 2019 with Roethlisbe­rger missing all but six quarters of the season.

Roethlisbe­rger returned to form this season and briefly thrust himself into the Most Valuable Player discussion as the Steelers put together the best start in franchise history. Yet even as Pittsburgh won games, there were signs the offense continued to have

issues, particular­ly in the running game. The Steelers relied heavily on short fields generated by turnovers created by the defense, and when that stopped happening with regularity over the second half of the year, the offense began to regress.

Pittsburgh averaged 29.8 points during its first 10 games and just 22.1 over its final seven, numbers boosted a bit by COVID-19-ravaged Cleveland going to a prevent defense after taking a four-touchdown lead.

The decision could play a factor in whether Roethlisbe­rger comes back for an 18th season. Roethlisbe­rger is under contract through next season with a $41.25 million salary-cap hit. While he expressed interest in returning and Tomlin said it’s “reasonable” to expect there’s a “chance” Roethlisbe­rger could be back, Roethlisbe­rger and Fichtner, whom Roethlisbe­rger often referred to as “Coach Randy” are close.

Sarrett joined the Steelers in 2012 and was promoted in January 2019 to replace Hall of Fame offensive line coach Mike Munchak, who spent five years building Pittsburgh’s front into one of the best in the NFL. Munchak left for the same job in Denver, but Sarrett struggled to get an aging line to play with the physicalit­y required to help create holes for running backs James Conner and Benny Snell Jr., among others.

While the group excelled in pass protection, it never found any sense of momentum running the ball after a solid start. Pittsburgh topped 100 yards rushing just once over its final 12 games.

The offensive line is in flux. Left tackle Alejandro Villanueva and left guard Matt Feiler both become free agents in March, and it’s unclear whether perennial Pro Bowl center Maurkice Pouncey will return.

 ?? AP ?? Steelers quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger reacts after throwing his third intercepti­on Sunday.
AP Steelers quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger reacts after throwing his third intercepti­on Sunday.

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