Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Steelers keep Browns winless

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That hadn’t been the case for several postseason­s lately, but they expect injured receiver Antonio Brown to rejoin them as well for their first playoff game, which would leave them only without Ryan Shazier, who took in his second game Sunday from a private box.

They hope the cold lingers as well because their ultimate destinatio­n is Minneapoli­s the first week of February, home to the Super Bowl, a place they have not visited in seven years.

Their 13-3 record tied for the best in the NFL, their best since 15-1 in 2004 and their third-most victories in a year filled with drama, heartache and just strange goings-on.

“There’s been so much speculatio­n on what we were supposed to do and we actually did it,’’ Ramon Foster said. “Everybody’s done their job collective­ly throughout the season to live up to what we thought we’d do.”

The No. 2 seed has served them well in the past. They were No. 2 in each of their most recent Super Bowl visits in 2010 and 2008. They have not reached the Super Bowl as a No. 1 seed since their 1970s dynasty.

“I think it’s perfect for us,’’ Heyward said. “Nobody’s expecting us because we’re not No. 1 and we’re just ready to play football now.”

They were ready at the start of the game Sunday against the lowly Browns, whom they helped shove into NFL infamy with their 16th loss. That left Cleveland with the 2008 Detroit Lions as the only 0-16 teams in NFL history. Tampa Bay went 014 in 1976.

The Steelers ran out to a 14-0 lead on Darrius Heyward-Bey’s 29-yard run on a handoff from Fitz Toussaint and JuJu Smith-Schuster’s 20-yard touchdown catch from Landry Jones.

But the Browns caught up. Duke Johnson scored on a 2yard run, and after Stevan Ridley ran 4 yards for his first Steelers touchdown to make it 21-7, Rashard Higgins caught touchdown passes of 56and 5 yards to tie it.

Smith-Schuster’s hot performanc­e on a frigid day continued with a 96-yard kickoff return, the first since Brown returned one as a rookie in 2010.

But Zane Gonzalez kicked a 51-yard field goal to close the Browns within 28-24.

Rookie quarterbac­k Deshone Kizer drove Cleveland to the Steelers 27 with just less than two minutes left but on fourth down, Corey Coleman dropped a pass at the 11 to end that drama in typical Browns fashion.

Jones had his best day in his five NFL seasons. He completed 23 of 27 passes for 239 yards, one touchdown, one intercepti­on and a 100.5 passer rating in his fifth career start.

Smith-Schuster hauled in nine passes for 143 yards and scored those two touchdowns. He threw snowballs to celebrate his first and mimicked a snow angel in the end zone’s green grass after his second.

“It was a cold game,’’ the rookie from Southern California said. “It was probably the coldest game I have ever played.”

They of course want more cold, although the Super Bowl will be played in a dome.

“Just a three-game winning streak we have to go on,’’ Heyward said. “You have three games and you’re in, and to already say you won one game [the bye] and advanced to the second round of the playoffs is huge.

“I think we have the most talent in the NFL, but it doesn’t mean anything if you don’t do it in the playoffs.”

And that is a cold, hard fact.

 ?? Peter Diana/Post-Gazette ?? Steelers receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster caught nine passes for 143 yards in Sunday’s 28-24 victory against the Cleveland Browns at Heinz Field.
Peter Diana/Post-Gazette Steelers receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster caught nine passes for 143 yards in Sunday’s 28-24 victory against the Cleveland Browns at Heinz Field.
 ?? Matt Freed/Post-Gazette photos ?? Steelers linebacker­s Vince Williams, left, and T.J. Watt take down the Browns’ Duke Johnson in the second quarter Sunday at Heinz Field.
Matt Freed/Post-Gazette photos Steelers linebacker­s Vince Williams, left, and T.J. Watt take down the Browns’ Duke Johnson in the second quarter Sunday at Heinz Field.

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