REVERSAL OF FORTUNE
A steady diet of passes to Rob Gronkowski helped the Patriots fend off the Steelers, who lost a controversial review and star receiver,
PITTSBURGH— The New England Patriots have built a dynasty on second chances. Miss an opportunity to bury the Super Bowl champions and they will find a way to find a way, usually behind a mix of Tom Brady and Rob Gronkowski, and defensive playmaking at just the right time.
It’s a lesson the Pittsburgh Steelers have learned through the years, one they were determined to finally learn from this time around. Instead, more of the same.
Ben Roethlisberger was intercepted in the end zone with 5 seconds remaining, securing New England’s 27-24 comeback victory Sunday built on more Brady and Gronkowski magic.
Another AFC East title, a record ninth in a row.
Another shot at home-field advantage throughout the AFC playoffs.
This one came with an assist from the NFL rulebook that will add “surviving the ground” to the league’s ever-expanding and ever-perplexing lexicon.
Plus, the risky decision by the Steelers quarterback not to spike the ball and set up a tying field goal, which could reverberate well into January.
“It was a tight game,” said Brady, who fed Gronkowski repeatedly to set up Dion Lewis’ go-ahead 8-yard touchdown with 56 seconds remaining. “We just made one more play than they did.” Same as it ever was. The Patriots (11-3) can make sure they don’t have to leave Foxborough in January if they finish up the regular season with wins over Buffalo and the New York Jets. Brady finished with 298 yards passing with two touchdowns and an interception.
Gronkowski, fresh off a one-game suspension, finished with nine receptions for 168 yards, including three on the winning drive.
That drive, by the way, started with Pittsburgh safety Sean Davis letting a tipped pass slip off his fingertips. Instead of a game-sealing interception, the Steelers gave New England another shot. Brady responded by finding Gronkowski for gains of 26, 26 and 17 yards.
“I think they were trying to challenge us and he made a lot of good plays,” Brady said. “Other guys make a lot of good plays, too, but when he’s open, he gets it.”
It briefly looked like it wouldn’t be enough.
The Steelers (11-3) played most of the game without star wide receiver Antonio Brown, who left in the second quarter with a left calf injury. Still, the AFC North champions gamely hung in and appeared to take the lead when Roethlisberger connected with tight end Jesse James for a 10-yard touchdown with 28 sec- onds to go.
The play was overturned on review, with official Tony Corrente explaining that because the ball shifted as James twisted his way into the end zone, it did not “survive the ground” and therefore wasn’t a catch.
“He lost complete control of the football,” Corrente told a pool re- porter.
That decision that left James stunned.
“I guess I don’t know a lot of things about football,” James said.
“I can’t call it, obviously. They think they made the right call. I’m sure we’ll see it over the next couple days.”
Probably far longer than that.