Minnesota Vikings, Jacksonville Jaguars move on.
PITTSBURGH — The shout-out ended in a shootout.
Three months after the Pittsburgh Steelers crowed about how they were dying to see Jacksonville again — embarrassed by a lopsided home loss to the Jaguars — they got their wish. And the results were painfully familiar.
Jacksonville stormed into Heinz Field again, built a huge early lead, then held on for a 45-42 victory to secure a spot in the AFC championship game.
In the week leading up to Sunday’s game, a tweet that got under the skin of the Jaguars came from Steelers running back Le’Veon Bell: “I love round 2’s...we’ll have two round 2’s in back to back weeks...”
That was a reference to a rematch with the Jaguars, and then — because there was no way the Steelers would lose — a rematch with the Patriots, Pittsburgh’s opponent in last year’s AFC title game. Oh, really? “For us, it wasn’t about getting into talking matches, trying to fight them, trying to do anything,” Jacksonville defensive tackle Malik Jackson said. “We’re just trying to let the clock run out and go home and prepare for New England that they’re about to play next week in Imaginary Land.”
Even though the Steelers had the gaudiest numbers — 545 yards of offense, five touchdowns by Ben Roethlisberger — the Jaguars left with the big prize. They will be playing in the third conference championship in club history, at New England on Sunday, and their
first Super Bowl berth is a distinct possibility.
“The media, everybody was talking about how it’s not going to be like last week, Blake Bortles this, Blake Bortles that,” said Jaguars defensive back Barry Church, referring to his team’s widely disparaged quarterback. “All he did was dominate their defense.”
While not everyone would describe Bortles as dominating, he was rock-solid. He completed 14 of 26 passes for 214 yards and directed a critical, clock-consuming touchdown drive in the fourth quarter that put Pittsburgh’s offense in deep freeze on the sideline.
The real workhorse for the Jaguars was rookie running back Leonard Fournette, who ran for a gamehigh 109 yards in 25 carries and scored three touchdowns. What’s more, he left the game for a chunk of the second quarter with an ankle injury so excruciating he had to crawl off the field. He would return after halftime and score his third touchdown.
“For a rookie to come in and play football for a year straight now, and to go through everything that he’s been going through, is really impressive,” Bortles said. “People talk about hitting a rookie wall. He’s powered right through it.”
Similarly, this was a breakthrough performance for the Jaguars, a franchise that was pretty much an afterthought after getting to the AFC title game twice in its first five seasons, in 1996 and ’99. In the 17 years that followed, the Jaguars made the postseason just twice, never getting past the divisional round.
Outside the Jacksonville locker room after the game, there was an impromptu Jaguars reunion with former stars Mark Brunell, Tony Boselli and Maurice JonesDrew — all of whom are now in the media to some degree — basking in the afterglow of victory.
“It’s been so long since we’ve had a season like this,” said Brunell, Jacksonville’s quarterback during those early successful years. “It’s been a long drought. For the organization, the franchise, and the fans, it’s been a long time coming. It’s been bad. It’s been really bad. So this is exciting.”
Pittsburgh fans were excited, too. Then, the game started.
Jacksonville scored in rapid-fire succession. There were two touchdowns by Fournette, one at the end of a long opening drive, the other set up by a Myles Jack interception. Then, a touchdown run by T.J. Yeldon. By the start of the second quarter, the Jaguars had a 21-0 lead and Heinz Field was a library. For the Steelers, it was the kind of start that gave new meaning to Terrible Towels.
The Steelers finally got on the board with a 23-yard touchdown reception by Brown. But the Jaguars counterpunched with a strip-sack of Roethlisberger, with linebacker Telvin Smith running back the fumble 50 yards for a touchdown.
But every time the Steelers would almost claw their way out of the hole, the Jaguars would respond with a big play of their own to stay ahead.
“In the first half, we didn’t stop the run at all,” Steelers defensive end Cameron Heyward said. “Second half, we didn’t convert on third down. It’s just disappointing. Everyone’s disappointed.”