The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Deja vu? Roethlisbe­rger hoping for Bettis-style send-off

- By Will Graves

PITTSBURGH » There was no speech. No galvanizin­g moment.

There didn’t really need to be one. The Pittsburgh Steelers knew the 2005 playoffs would be the last go-round for Jerome Bettis. The star running back didn’t need to point out the Super Bowl that year was in his hometown of Detroit. Or that a ring was the only thing missing on his Hall of Fame resume. Or that the pain from a loss to New England in the AFC championsh­ip game a year before provided the main motivation for “The Bus” to return for a 13th and final season.

Ben Roethlisbe­rger was just 23 back then. A second-year quarterbac­k in the nascent stages of a career that will almost certainly end with his bust being placed alongside Bettis’ in Canton, Ohio.

While the exact details of that run that started with a wild card-round win over Cincinnati and ended with Roethlisbe­rger and Bettis embracing on the confetti-strewn Ford Field with the Lombardi Trophy in tow are foggy, the vibe pulsating through the locker

room during that magical ride remains fresh.

“I wanted to go win for Jerome, because you know what he meant,” Roethlisbe­rger said.

The better part of two decades later, Roethlisbe­rger, 39, finds himself in the same position — the franchise icon eyeing one last ride.

The symmetry is not lost on him. Like the 2005 Steelers, the 2021 version enters the playoffs as the AFC’s last seed. So the 2021 version also would need to navigate three road games to reach the Super Bowl; that starts Sunday in Kansas City when Pittsburgh (9-7-1) faces the surging AFC Westchampi­on Chiefs (12-5).

Is this group trying to win one for Roethlisbe­rger the same way the 2005 team did for Bettis? Roethlisbe­rger, who has given every indication he will not return in 2022, believes they all want to win. He’s not sure how much his presence plays a part in that motivation.

The first of his two Super Bowl titles was a long time ago, even longer for the vast majority of a roster. Only a handful of players are in their 30s.

“These guys were what, in middle school or elementary school when that was going on?” Roethlisbe­rger said with a laugh.

And while it would easy for Roethlisbe­rger to lean into nostalgia, he’s well aware the circumstan­ces between 2021 and 2005 only go so far. That group included four future Hall of Famers, an offense ranked in the top half of the league and a defense that finished third.

This group — with its minus-55 point differenti­al, its rookie-laden offense and a defense that has gotten pushed around with alarming ease at times — is not like that one.

“I don’t want to take away from this team, but that was a pretty good football team,” Roethlisbe­rger said. “We had some Hall of Famers on it and stuff. Not that we don’t have some really good football players here, but we have a long way to go to compare ourselves to that team in my opinion.”

A string of upsets, starting against the defending AFC champion and heavily favored Chiefs, would go a long way toward closing the gap. Kansas City drilled the Steelers at Arrowhead Stadium last month, and Pittsburgh head coach Mike Tomlin admitted his team got “smashed.”

Three weeks later Pittsburgh heads back as a 13-point underdog after a mixed bag of a regular season in which it rarely looked good, even in victory. Much of the year was a slog. Roethlisbe­rger played behind an inexperien­ced and at times overwhelme­d offensive line. The defense struggled to overcome the loss of nose tackle Tyson Alualu in Week 2, and the absence of defensive end Stephon Tuitt, who didn’t play a down after undergoing knee surgery over the summer.

 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Steelers quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger, left, and Jerome Bettis celebrate after the Steelers’ 21-10win over the Seattle Seahawks in Super Bowl XL on Feb. 5, 2006, in Detroit.
GENE J. PUSKAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Steelers quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger, left, and Jerome Bettis celebrate after the Steelers’ 21-10win over the Seattle Seahawks in Super Bowl XL on Feb. 5, 2006, in Detroit.

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