Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Chiefs want some revenge

Memory of earlier debacle lingers

- DAVE SKRETTA ASSOCIATED PRESS

Kansas City, Mo. — Alex Smith endured watching film of the Kansas City Chiefs’ meltdown in Pittsburgh earlier this season “a bunch of times” last week, still trying to figure out where everything went wrong.

As if he hasn’t relived it enough in his nightmares.

Ben Roethlisbe­rger threw five touchdown passes. Le’Veon Bell starred in his return from a threegame suspension.

The Steelers scored 22 first-quarter points; led, 36-0, before the Chiefs finally scored; and they proceeded to rout the eventual AFC West champions, 43-14, that October night.

“It’s been a long time,” Smith said, “so they’ve changed. Over the course of the season, they’ve progressed and gone a certain direction. There’s a lot they change week-to-week as well.”

But the Chiefs (12-4) are a different team, too.

Wide receiver Tyreek Hill has made a name for himself as one of the National Football League’s most dynamic rookies, going from specialtea­ms standout to offensive difference-maker.

Top pass rusher Justin Houston is also expected to be available after missing the first meeting while recovering from knee surgery.

Oh, and this matchup with the Steelers (12-5) will be at loud Arrowhead Stadium rather than Heinz Field, and a spot in the AFC title game awaits the winner.

“We got embarrasse­d in the first meeting,” Chiefs center Mitch Morse said, “and we had to come back and kind of take a step back and realize, ‘We’re a good football team.’ We had to understand where we were. We learned a lot from that game and we were able to take the next step.”

Indeed, the Chiefs ripped off five straight wins after that loss in Pittsburgh, a stretch that turned around their season.

They wound up overtaking Oakland for the division title on the final day of the regular season, earning a first-round bye and a home playoff game.

The Steelers basically had a bye, too: They routed Miami last weekend to advance.

“I think a postseason challenge on the road is one thing,” Steelers coach Mike Tomlin said, “but at a legendary venue like that is something else. We’re excited about it. We respect it.”

But they aren’t going to be intimidate­d by it. The Steelers have been in enough big games over the years that it takes more than a trip to Kansas City, where the Chiefs have not won a playoff game since the 1993 season, to leave them quaking in their cleats.

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