The Evening Leader

Steelers, Browns treat fans with meeting on Halloween

- By TOM WITHERS AP Sports Writer

CLEVELAND — The last time Ben Roethlisbe­rger played the Browns, his night began with a frantic chase after the ball was snapped over his head into the end zone. He ended it sitting on the bench contemplat­ing his future.

On Sunday, the Steelers quarterbac­k returns to the rivalry he tilted decidedly for nearly two decades.

“It will be fun,” Big Ben said. “And, it’s Halloween.”

That’s a little scary. There’s already plenty of bad blood.

The Steelers (3-3) swear they won’t have vengeance in mind as much as keeping their season rolling in the right direction when they face the Browns (43), who put an exclamatio­n point on their turnaround in January by winning at Pittsburgh in the playoffs.

Cleveland’s 48-37 wild-card victory — a game quarantine­d Browns coach Kevin Stefanski watched from his home basement after a positive COVID-19 test — was the Browns’ first in the postseason since 1994 and seemed to signal that one of pro football’s fiercest football feuds was evening out some.

And although he’s 242-1 against the Browns since 2004, Roethlisbe­rger, who grew up in

Ohio and is nearing the end of his Hall of Fame career, feels his personal record doesn’t reflect the permanent competitiv­eness in the ClevelandP­ittsburgh series.

“I don’t know this rivalry ever went away,” he said. “Rivalries are great.”

And just to add some spice to this matchup, Roethlisbe­rger took a playful swipe at the Browns by extolling his dominance over them while pointing out Cleveland’s many struggles in recent years.

“I’m just glad I’m not the most winning quarterbac­k in their stadium history anymore,” he cracked.

Roethlisbe­rger hasn’t said if this will be his last season. Whether it is or not, he won’t be making many more trips to Cleveland, where he has gone 11-2-1 and in some ways symbolized the Browns’ lack of success as a player they passed on in the draft.

How different things could have been.

The roles were reversed in last season’s playoff meeting as Roethlisbe­rger couldn’t recover the early errant snap, which the Browns recovered for a TD just 14 seconds in and built an almost unimaginab­le 28-0 lead.

Steelers coach Mike Tomlin said his team won’t use that loss, painful as it may have been, as motivation.

“We’ve got a lot riding on this game,” he said. “We’re going to play a really good team in their venue. It’s 2021 . ... In the game of football, things change year in and year out and seemingly low-hanging fruit is oftentimes irrelevant to some of the people in the room.

“We don’t spend a lot of time talking about old stories or old news.”

TOUGH QUARTERBAC­K

Browns QB Baker Mayfield will give it a go and start after missing last week with a damaged left shoulder

Mayfield, who has a torn labrum and fracture in his nonthrowin­g shoulder, practiced this week with a new stabilizin­g harness anchoring his injured left shoulder, which has become something of a focal point for Cleveland’s season.

Mayfield understand­s the risk in exposing his shoulder to Steelers sack specialist T.J. Watt, but he’s determined to stay on the field.

“I’m not about missing practice or playing time,” he said.

If Mayfield gets hurt again, the Browns can turn to Case Keenum, who led the Browns to a win over Denver.

Browns offensive coordinato­r Alex Van Pelt was asked how much confidence he has in Keenum.

“Tons,” he said.

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