The Morning Call

In slump, Steelers search of answers

- By Will Graves

PITTSBURGH — Mike Tomlin, to borrow a phrase, trusts the process. So does Ben Roethlisbe­rger and everyone else on the Steelers.

Yet trusting the reeling AFC North leaders will get things turned around following a third straight loss — this one a 27-17 clunker in Cincinnati on Monday night in which the Steelers (11-3) never led against a team that hadn’t won since before Election Day — and actually doing it are two different matters entirely.

A week ago, Roethlisbe­rger channeled his inner Aaron Rodgers and said in so many words that everyone needed to just relax. Tomlin pointed to having a normal practice schedule for the first time in a while would help the Steelers regain momentum.

Not so much. Not after three first-half turnovers. Not after the banged-up Bengals and third-string quarterbac­k Ryan Finley mashed the Steelers’ depleted defensive front seven in the fourth quarter. Not after the worst first-half performanc­e (statistica­lly) of Roethlisbe­rger’s Hall of Fame-worthy career.

Now the division title that looked like a lock at the start of December feels considerab­ly more tenuous. The Steelers finish the regular season with a visit from the surging Colts (10-4) on Sunday then head to Cleveland to face the Browns (10-4) in what could be a showdown for one of the top four seeds in the AFC.

While stressing whatever has transpired on the field over the past month isn’t good enough, Tomlin added Tuesday that “there won’t be sweeping changes to what we’re doing. ... We’ve got to have better performanc­e.” It’s the “how” that’s tricky.

Roethlisbe­rger admitted in the aftermath Monday night that like most players in December, he’s not 100%. For years the Steelers have been careful about Roethlisbe­rger’s participat­ion during the week. He typically doesn’t practice on Wednesdays to avoid wear and tear.

“I’m not opposed to changing it if the circumstan­ces dictate it,” Tomlin said.

The circumstan­ces coming off a game in which Roethlisbe­rger completed just 20 of 38 passes for 170 yards with a touchdown and a pick would seem to dictate nothing should be off the table.

“I’m a firm believer that things won’t change just because we think they will,” defensive end Cameron Heyward said.

He’s not wrong. In the big picture “The Steeler Way” has worked far more often than not over the past five decades. Yet the recent history doesn’t seem to care much about the franchise’s Super Bowl-laden resume.

The upset loss to the Jaguars in the 2017 playoffs. A 2-4 stretch to close 2018 that cost them a postseason berth. An 0-3 finish last season to thwart an unlikely playoff berth that Roethlisbe­rger watched from afar while rehabbing his surgically repaired right elbow.

What’sworking: Not much, though the running game did receive a bit of a jolt by the play of Benny Snell Jr. With starter James Conner out because of a quadriceps injury, Snell ran for 84 yards on 18 carries, the most by a running back since Conner rolled up 89 yards in a victory over the Jags on Nov. 22.

What’s not: The defense, thanks in large part to attrition, is not what it was a month ago. Injuries to inside linebacker­s Devin Bush and Robert Spillane and Vince Williams’ trip to the reserve/COVID-19 list put the majority of the workload on the shoulders of recently acquired Avery Williamson and Marcus Allen, a converted safety.

Stockup: Snell likely earned himself an extended look even if Conner is able to play against the Colts. When given at least 10 carries during his brief career, Snell has been effective, averaging 4.7 yards per carry. Might be time to just stick with him and see if it works.

Stock down: Wide receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster’s days of dancing on the logo at midfield during pregame might be over. A week after the Bills took exception to the practice, the Bengals did too. It didn’t help that Smith-Schuster fumbled near the logo on Monday as the Bengals built a 17-0 lead.

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