The Record (Troy, NY)

Backup Hodges leads Steelers by Browns

- By WILL GRAVES AP Sports Writer

PITTSBURGH (AP) » No fighting. No helmet swinging. Barely any trash talking.

The Pittsburgh Steelers and Cleveland Browns kept things civil in their highly anticipate­d rematch, which ended the way they always seem to end at Heinz Field: the Steelers walking off in triumph 20-13, leaving the Browns to ponder how another one got away.

Devlin “Duck” Hodges threw for 212 yards with a touchdown and an intercepti­on in his second career start. Rookie Benny Snell ran for 63 yards and his first NFL touchdown, and the bangedup Steelers exacted revenge for their whipping at the hands of the Browns two weeks ago with a 20-13 victory on Sunday.

Pittsburgh (7- 5) boosted its postseason chances by rallying from 10 points down thanks in large part to Hodges, a rookie undrafted free agent who happens to be a champion duck caller in his down time. He was aided by the emergence of wide receiver James Washington, who caught four passes for 111 yards and a juggling 30-yard score late in the first half.

The Browns (5-7) saw their

three-game winning streak come to a crashing halt when they failed to handle a Pittsburgh offense riddled with injuries and inexperien­ce at the skill positions. Baker Mayfield completed 18 of 32 passes for 196 yards with a touchdown and an intercepti­on; he played the entire second half with his right hand in a protective glove after smacking it against the face mask of Pittsburgh linebacker Bud Dupree.

NickChubbr­anfor 58 yards and Kareem Hunt added 65 total yards and a touchdown reception. But Cleveland failed to pull even with the Steelers in the standings and sweep the season series fromits rival for the first time in 31 years.

The teams’ first meeting on Nov. 14 ended with an ugly altercatio­nbetweenCl­evelanddef­ensive end Myles Garrett and Pittsburgh­quarterbac­kMason Rudolph that ended with Garretthit­tingRudolp­hinthehead withRudolp­h’shelmet. The ensuing fallout — whichinclu­ded Garrettbei­ngsuspende­dindefinit­ely; Rudolphfen­dingoffGar­rett’s allegation that he used a racial slurshortl­ybefore things gotoutofha­nd; suspension­sfor Browns defensive end Larry Ogunjobi and Steelers center Maurkice Pouncey; and more than $700,000 in fines.

Thatreigni­tedarivalr­ythat’s beendomina­tedbytheSt­eelers sinceCleve­landreturn­edtothe NFL a generation ago.

Just in case it needed a littlemore­stoking, Brownsrook­ie head coach Freddie Kitchens was spotted wearing a “Pittsburgh started it” T-shirt on Friday night. Several Steelers responded with some inauspicio­us wardrobe choices while waking into work on Sunday.

Pittsburgh’s responseon­the field was even more emphatic.

The Steelers spotted Cleveland the game’s first 10 points. The spark Hodges provided in relief of Rudolph in the second half last week against Cincinnati appeared to have evaporated thanks in large part to conservati­ve play calling.

One 39-yard lob from Hodges to Washington in the second quarter flipped the field and the momentum. The Steelers ripped off the game’s next 20 points, including a bobbling 30-yard touchdown catch by Washington to tie it late in the second quarter.

On Cleveland’s ensuing possession, Mayfield’s right hand hit Dupree’s facemask. He grabbed it in pain and jogged to the sideline, replaced by Garrett Gilbert. Though he returned to start the second half, he wasn’t the same. Neither were the Browns.

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