The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Be prepared or be ready for unexpected test in NFL

- By Barry Wilner

Be prepared, or be ready for an unexpected challenge.

That’s an NFL mantra that seems to always be in play. Perfect proof was provided Sunday in Big D, where the unbeaten Steelers nearly had a Big Debacle against the woeful Cowboys.

Sure, the resilient and versatile Steelers came back after trailing all day to win, 2419, against an opponent they should have shoved aside without breaking a sweat. Instead, because they were as flat as the turf in Jerry

Jones’ palace, they had to sweat out everything. Such as a bumbling beginning. A knee injury for Ben Roethlisbe­rger when the quarterbac­k was sandwiched by two Cowboys pass rushers, slowing but not stopping him. And a pair of missed extra points — even though Chris Boswell made a 59-yard field goal.

Still, these Steelers are the only squad in franchise history to go 8-0, though they weren’t kidding themselves about how they got there.

“We’re humbled and honored to be in that group,” coach Mike Tomlin said. “It’s not without its trials today, obviously. Some of it was created by us. We can’t keep having these conversati­ons every week because one of these weeks we’ll be doing it with an ‘L’ if we’re not careful.”

Perhaps it was understand­able. After all, the Steelers were coming off one emotional victory after another, against long-time rival (and, apparently, playoff pretender) Cleveland, unbeaten Tennessee and archrival Baltimore. They were facing the most underachie­ving, albeit bangedup, squad in pro football, with journeyman quarterbac­k Garrett Gilbert in his first NFL start, and on a three-game slide.

Certainly it was more understand­able than what the Buccaneers came up with against their top division and possibly conference foe, the Saints, on Sunday night. That motivation and undivided attention should have been a no-brainer. Yet Tampa Bay played a pretty brainless first half, falling behind 31-0, even putting his young daughter who was at the game to sleep.

That Pittsburgh overcame it’s own languor and the Cowboys’ most spirited performanc­e all season is a tribute to the Steelers’ resourcefu­lness. And guts.

Roethlisbe­rger easily could have sat out the second half, his eye on further prizes. He’s not built that way, and neither is his team.

And he believes the Steelers will learn from struggling like they did Sunday.

“I hope so. It’s the NFL. There are no easy games,” he said. “We’re the Pittsburgh Steelers. We know everybody is coming for us.”

As the Steelers and everyone else move into the second half of the schedule, they should look at Sunday as a cautionary tale. It surely was that for the Buccaneers, who looked lethargic and confused in only their biggest test so far this season.

Same for Seattle, which had a difficult chore in traveling cross-country to Buffalo and then having an early kickoff. But the Bills, who have struggled a bit the last month, blew away the Seahawks in the first half, toying with a defense that was practicall­y invisible for the first half of a 44-34 Buffalo win.

“What I will tell you is I don’t recognize that game. We haven’t seen us look like that, and it’s a game that I don’t have any place in my brain for it,” Coach Pete Carroll said.

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