Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ravens likely to be Roethlisbe­rger’s final opponent

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The past week has been a whirlwind for Ben Roethlisbe­rger. The fans in Pittsburgh gave their quarterbac­k quite a retirement send-off, and the emotions from that night will surely linger for a while.

Now it’s time for a pretty compelling postscript: Roethlisbe­rger on the road against the rival Ravens, with both teams still barely in the mix for the playoffs.

This will likely be Roethlisbe­rger’s final game. Pittsburgh can make the postseason with a win, but only if Jacksonvil­le upsets Indianapol­is and the Raiders-Chargers game doesn’t end in a tie. Baltimore is in with a win, plus losses by the Colts and Chargers, and a loss or tie by Miami.

So the chance of either of these teams playing on past today is remote. Neverthele­ss, Steelers-Ravens always arrives with a good bit of buzz.

“You’d never walk out of one of these games feeling fresh or anything like that,” Roethlisbe­rger said. “You go to a place that is tricky to play, because it’s loud. The fans are passionate.”

The Ravens (8-8) picked this game to honor Terrell Suggs, another longtime mainstay in this rivalry. Suggs, Baltimore’s career sacks leader, played with the Ravens from 2003-18 and will be the team’s “legend of the game” today. He had 20 sacks against the Steelers, his most against any NFL team.

The current Ravens will try to put Roethlisbe­rger on the ground as much as possible this week.

“I’ve always appreciate­d playing against true competitor­s — guys I respect and admire — and on the football field, he’s one of the greatest to ever do it,” defensive tackle Calais Campbell said. “It’s always good going against another person that I feel like is a legend in the game.”

Baltimore quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson won’t be facing off against Roethlisbe­rger and the Steelers (8-7-1) this week. Jackson missed the past three games with an ankle injury, and has been ruled out for this week as well. Tyler Huntley is the starter in his place.

The Ravens were 8-3 when they went into Pittsburgh on Dec. 5. They haven’t won since. Jackson played in that 20-19 loss, throwing an incomplete pass on a two-point conversion with 12 seconds left that could have won the game.

The Steelers weren’t able to build on that win. They haven’t won consecutiv­e games since their four-game run was snapped by a tie against the then-winless Lions on Nov. 14.

Baltimore’s path to the playoffs would be a lot more plausible if the Ravens weren’t relying on Jacksonvil­le, a double-digit underdog to Indianapol­is. The Jaguars (2-14) have the worst record in the league.

“I definitely made a couple texts to my guys down in Jacksonvil­le,” said Campbell, who played three seasons with the Jaguars before coming to Baltimore. “Hopefully they come through for us.”

The Steelers put together their best rushing performanc­e since 2017 while piling up 190 yards in a win Monday night over the Browns. The Steelers did it with J.C. Hassenauer filling in for rookie Kendrick Green at center. Green missed practice time last week due to an ankle injury, and Hassenauer made a compelling argument to get a second look while getting the kind of push that Green has struggled to generate after transition­ing from playing guard in college to center in the NFL.

Coach Mike Tomlin said there was a lot to like about Hassenauer’s play, and not just his physicalit­y.

“He did a nice job of communicat­ing with the group and in identifyin­g people in both the run and the pass,” Tomlin said.

 ?? (AP/Don Wright) ?? Pittsburgh Steelers quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger will likely play his final NFL game today against the Baltimore Ravens. The Steelers are still mathematic­ally eligible for a playoff spot, but it’s a small chance.
(AP/Don Wright) Pittsburgh Steelers quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger will likely play his final NFL game today against the Baltimore Ravens. The Steelers are still mathematic­ally eligible for a playoff spot, but it’s a small chance.

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