The Palm Beach Post

AFC North, ‘profession­al hate’ on line

Baltimore visits Pittsburgh with familiar high stakes.

- Associated Press

PITTSBURGH — When safety Mike Mitchell arrived in Pittsburgh in 2014, it didn’t take long to get indoctrina­ted into his new team’s particular distaste for the Baltimore Ravens.

“It was just you don’t like Baltimore,” Mitchell said. “It was like growing up in the Cold War, you don’t like Russia.”

Call it the byproduct of a decade-plus of trying to wrest the AFC North title from the other (save for the occasional intrusion by Cincinnati). The two teams that have claimed 10 of the 14 division crowns since the AFC North was formed in 2002 meet at Heinz Field on Christmas night. The winner earns a very direct path to the playoffs. The loser is almost certainly out.

“I’m assuming this is what the NFL wanted,” Steelers quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger said.

Considerin­g the occasional­ly wayward paths Pittsburgh (9-5) and Baltimore (8-6) took to get here, they’ll take it, too. Both teams have endured four-game losing streaks that evaporated their early-season momentum. Both have rebounded late in the year. The Steelers have won five straight while Baltimore is 5-2 since its bye week, the two setbacks coming in competitiv­e losses on the road to New England and Dallas.

Baltimore is 6-1 in its last seven meetings with Pittsburgh, including a playoff win at Heinz Field in 2014. In a 21-14 victory at home on Nov. 6, the Ravens completely shut down Roethlisbe­rger, Le’Veon Bell and Antonio Brown for three quarters in Roethlisbe­rger’s first game back from knee surgery. The Steelers insist they’re far better than they were six weeks ago. Then again, so is Baltimore, a team that seems to thrive when playing in front of a sea of yellow Terrible Towels.

“I t i s n o t a b o u t b e i n g comfortabl­e there or not being comfortabl­e there,” said quarterbac­k Joe Flacco, who is a respectabl­e 5-6 in Pittsburgh. “It is just about the fact that it is a big game in a high-pressure situation. They don’t like us, and that is what it is all about.”

The Steelers can lock up the division and earn a third straight playoff berth with a win. Baltimore needs to top Pittsburgh, then win in Cincinnati on New Year’s Day to return to the postseason after missing out in 2015. Just another layer to add to a combustibl­e mix on a day designed to celebrate peace and joy.

“There is a profession­al h a t e w i t h e a c h o t h e r, ” Ravens wide receiver Steve Smith said. “It is also (that) the Pittsburgh and Ravens rivalry is pretty fierce, pretty intense, hard hitting. It has been that way for a long time. Our fans hate them. Their fans hate us. It is a great divorce.” Merry Christmas. The Ravens will be without cornerback Jimmy Smith, who also sat out last week’s game with a sprained ankle. Smith is Baltimore’s best cover man, which means the Ravens will have to alter coverage on Brown.

“It’s going to be tough with Jimmy or without,” safety Eric Weddle said.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Quarterbac­ks Joe Flacco of the Ravens (left) and Ben Roethlisbe­rger of the Steelers are veterans of one of the NFL’s most intense rivalries. “They don’t like us, and that is what it is all about,” Flacco said.
GETTY IMAGES Quarterbac­ks Joe Flacco of the Ravens (left) and Ben Roethlisbe­rger of the Steelers are veterans of one of the NFL’s most intense rivalries. “They don’t like us, and that is what it is all about,” Flacco said.

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