New York Daily News

It’s getting wild

Fish survive Steeler ‘miracle’; Ravens edge Vikes in thriller

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PITTSBURGH — Considerin­g everything the resilient Miami Dolphins have put themselves through over the last two months, a couple of snowflakes were hardly going to be a problem.

Not with Ryan Tannehill throwing and running like a guy who enjoys the white stuff. Not with Charles Clay muscling through the arm tackle of a likely Hall of Famer for the winning score. Not even with a Keystone Kops finale that ever so briefly appeared to be for real.

Clay bulled through Pittsburgh safety Troy Polamalu and cornerback Cortez Allen to score a 12-yard touchdown with 2:53 remaining to put the Dolphins in front to stay and Miami survived a wild finish to edge the Steelers, 34-28, on Sunday.

“I think I need some blood pressure medicine or something,” Dolphins defensive end Cameron Wake said. “That’s December football.”

Daniel Thomas ran for 105 yards and a score for Miami, including a zig-zag 55yard burst to set up Clay’s winner. Clay had seven receptions for 97 yards and two touchdowns. Tannehill, playing in wintry conditions for the first time in his life, completed 20 of 33 passes for 201 yards and three scores and also ripped off a career-long 48 yard run for the Dolphins (7-6).

Miami blew a pair of second-half leads but improved to 3-1 in its last four games. Heady territory for an organizati­on reeling a month ago after a bullying accusation against offensive lineman Richie Incognito by Jonathan Martin that threatened to rip the locker room apart.

One the Dolphins nearly saw both sides of in the final three minutes. Caleb Sturgis drilled a short field goal after Clay’s second touchdown to put Miami up six. The Steelers (5-8) got the ball back with 1:08 left but no timeouts.

Three plays went nowhere and on fourth-and-4 from the Pittsburgh 26 Ben Roethlisbe­rger took the snap just before the clock hit all zeroes.

Emmanuel Sanders caught the pass and made it 20 yards before things went haywire. Sanders flipped it to Jerricho Cotchery, who handed it to Le’Veon Bell, who then tossed it to 330-pound tackle Marcus Gilbert. Gilbert flipped it to Roethlisbe­rger, who ran to the Pittsburgh 33 before throwing what appeared to be an illegal forward pass to Brown. No flags were thrown, however, as Brown raced down the sideline.

As the Dolphins gave chase, Brown crossed the goal line. While he celebrated, an official pointed at the turf and ruled Brown’s left foot had stepped out of bounds at the Miami 12. That sent the resurgent Dolphins spilling onto the field after the franchise’s first win in Pittsburgh in 23 years.

“I thought I had it clean,” Brown said. “I thought I separated really good getting to the sideline, but it didn’t seem quite enough.”

 ?? AP ?? There’s nothing Immaculate about the final play of the game for Steelers as Antonio Brown steps out of bounds en route to a would-be, gametying touchdown Sunday against Dolpins.
AP There’s nothing Immaculate about the final play of the game for Steelers as Antonio Brown steps out of bounds en route to a would-be, gametying touchdown Sunday against Dolpins.

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