Texarkana Gazette

Steelers can relax after outlasting Lions

- By Noah Trister

DETROIT—For much of the second half, it felt like the Pittsburgh Steelers were just holding on, trying to make it to their bye week before the Detroit Lions could reach the end zone.

Afterward, Ben Roethlisbe­rger and his teammates could relax a bit. This wasn’t their best performanc­e, but it was a win.

The Steelers made one big play offensivel­y—a 97-yard touchdown pass from Roethlisbe­rger to JuJu Smith-Schuster in the third quarter—and that was enough for a 20-15 victory Sunday night. Now Pittsburgh heads into its open date with its two-game lead in the AFC North still intact.

“We find ways to bounce back even when guys aren’t necessaril­y doing everything right,” Roethlisbe­rger said.

Three times in the second half, the Lions (3-4) had the ball inside the Pittsburgh 10-yard line, but they came away with only three points total from those drives.

“We’ve got to maximize our opportunit­ies when we’re down there. Just very poor, very poor,” Detroit running back Ameer Abdullah said. “Got to find a way to score.”

The Lions were down 13-12 in the third when they were stopped on fourth-andgoal from the 1. Then Roethlisbe­rger found Smith-Schuster deep over the middle for the 97-yard touchdown.

Detroit later had to settle for a 19-yard field goal after again failing near the goal line, and at the end, the Lions turned the ball over on downs when Matthew Stafford threw incomplete from the Pittsburgh 8.

The Steelers (6-2) have won three in a row, and Detroit has lost three straight.

Here are a few things we learned from Pittsburgh’s victory:

WR DEPTH

Smith-Schuster is a capable deep threat if the opponent contains Antonio Brown. Detroit held Brown to five catches for 70 yards, and Pittsburgh receiver Martavis Bryant was inactive after his social media outburst following a victory over Cincinnati the previous weekend. SmithSchus­ter, however, finished with seven catches for 193 yards, including the long TD in the third quarter.

“The reason I kept looking back, because of ‘Madden’ my speed is like 82, 83. So I was like, ‘Nah, I think they’re going to catch me, they’re going to catch me,’” he said. “And then next, you know, I pulled away and I swerved to the right and I was able to get the touchdown.”

RUNNING WOES

Part of the reason the Lions struggled near the goal line was because their running game isn’t enough of a threat. Detroit finished with 71 yards on 22 carries, and it was hard for the Lions to move the ball near the end zone in situations when the defense could expect a run.

 ?? AP Photo/Rick Osentoski ?? Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster (19) breaks downfield for a 97-yard touchdown run Sunday during the second half against the Detroit Lions in Detroit.
AP Photo/Rick Osentoski Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster (19) breaks downfield for a 97-yard touchdown run Sunday during the second half against the Detroit Lions in Detroit.

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