Santa Fe New Mexican

Broncos buck odds

Win in Denver breaks Steelers’ winning streak

- By Arnie Stapleton PHOTOS BY DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/ASSOCIATED PRESS

FDENVER or a man who tips the scales at close to 300 pounds, nose tackle Shelby Harris sure gets overlooked a lot. Ben Roethlisbe­rger didn’t see him Sunday when Harris intercepte­d his pass to Antonio Brown from the Denver 2 with 1:03 remaining, sealing the Broncos’ 24-17 win that snapped the Pittsburgh Steelers’ six-game winning streak.

“Of all the intercepti­ons I’ve thrown it’s one of the most fluky I’ve been associated with,” Roethlisbe­rger said. “I never thought in a million years a defensive lineman would get blocked off the ball that far, right into an intercepti­on.”

The Broncos (5-6), who ended the Chargers’ six-game winning streak last week, weren’t surprised by Harris’ big play.

After getting cut seven times by the Raiders, Jets and Cowboys, Harris has finally made a name for himself in the last year and a half in Denver.

“I love Shelby. He’s worked his tail off,” teammate Chris Harris Jr. said. “He’s a guy that came out of nowhere and people kept cutting him and cutting him and he just kept fighting, man. I love Shelby and the effort that he has. He always makes plays for us.” Not like this. “I got to prove to everyone that I have the best hands on the team,” Harris said of his first career intercepti­on, which came 48 hours after he missed Friday’s practice for the birth of his daughter.

Maybe Roethlisbe­rger didn’t see him, Shelby Harris said, “but the ball saw me.”

“All I saw,” Brown said, “was an intercepti­on.”

Harris kept the football and said he would take it with him to the hospital to see his wife and newborn afterward.

The Broncos used four takeaways to counter a 97-yard touchdown toss from Roethlisbe­rger to JuJu SmithSchus­ter and hand the Steelers (7-3-1) their first loss since September.

“It’s going to be a quiet plane ride home,” said Smith-Schuster, whose 13 catches for 189 yards weren’t enough to keep Pittsburgh from losing for just the second time in its last 18 regular-season road games.

Cornerback Bradley Roby and safety Darian Stewart were burned on SmithSchus­ter’s long touchdown grab, but they made up for it when they teamed up on the final play of the third quarter for Denver’s third takeaway.

“I knew I had to do something,” said Roby, who forced James Connor to cough up the football after a 23-yard gain. Stewart recovered it at the Denver 21.

The Broncos then went 79 yards in 11 plays with Phillip Lindsay, who gained 110 yards on just 14 carries, tak-

ing it in from the 2 to break a 17-17 tie.

BIG BEN

Roethlisbe­rger was 41 of 56 for 462 yards, extending his NFL record with his sixth 450-yard passing game.

His only TD came in a highly unlikely situation, with the Steelers backed up at their 3. Backpedali­ng, Roethlisbe­rger uncorked his pass just as Shelby Harris knocked him on his back in the end zone.

“They got pressure really quick,” Roethlisbe­rger said. “I saw JuJu went inside and I just let it go.”

Smith-Schuster, who raced past Roby, hauled it in at the Pittsburgh 35, cut toward the Broncos’ sideline and stiff-armed Stewart on his way to breaking a 10-10 tie.

His 97-yard TD matched the longest pass play in franchise history, and was one yard shy of the longest TD the Broncos had ever surrendere­d, a 98-yard run by Green Bay’s Ahman Green in 2003.

“That’s a great quarterbac­k making a great play to a great receiver,” Broncos defensive end Derek Wolfe said. “You’ve just got to bounce back and figure out a way to get past it, and we did.”

FAKE FIELD GOAL

Roethlisbe­rger had 25 completion­s by halftime, the most in the first half in the regular season by a Steelers QB since 1960, but it took a fake field goal for Pittsburgh to reach the end zone.

Kicker Chris Boswell threw a 2-yard touchdown pass to left tackle Alejandro Villanueva to tie it at 10.

Boswell took the direct snap and threw a perfect pass to a wide-open Villanueva — who was a receiver and tight end at Army and became the first Steelers O-lineman to catch a touchdown pass since Ray Pinney against the Browns in 1983.

“It was cool to see all the guys get excited like that for me, especially because I think I dropped it in practice last week,” Villanueva said.

BLOWN CHANCES

The Steelers frittered away a shot at 10 more points in the first half.

Justin Simmons blocked Boswell’s 48-yard field goal attempt and safety Will Parks punched away the football just as tight end Xavier Grimble was about to score on a 24-yard catch-and-run. The ball went out of bounds in the end zone for a touchback.

INJURIES

Steelers: T.J. Watt (wrist) and TE Vance McDonald (hip) left the game but both returned.

Broncos: CB Tramaine Brock (ribs), TE Jeff Heuerman (torso) and OLB Shaq Barrett (hip) didn’t return to action after getting hurt.

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 ??  ?? Broncos defensive end Shelby Harris intercepts a pass in the end zone against the Steelers with 1:03 remaining, sealing the Broncos’ 24-17 win Sunday in Denver that snapped the Pittsburgh Steelers’ six-game winning streak.
Broncos defensive end Shelby Harris intercepts a pass in the end zone against the Steelers with 1:03 remaining, sealing the Broncos’ 24-17 win Sunday in Denver that snapped the Pittsburgh Steelers’ six-game winning streak.
 ??  ?? Broncos wide receiver Emmanuel Sanders pulls in a first down and goal catch as Steelers cornerback Joe Haden defends during the first half.
Broncos wide receiver Emmanuel Sanders pulls in a first down and goal catch as Steelers cornerback Joe Haden defends during the first half.
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