Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Steelers’ revamped ‘D’ clamps down on Bengals

- By Will Graves

PITTSBURGH >> The Pittsburgh Steelers still don’t have a sack, at least a sack of consequenc­e, through two games.

They also don’t have a loss, a trade-off they can live with while their defensive front four searches for consistenc­y. While Cincinnati’s Andy Dalton threw for 366 yards and a touchdown without an intercepti­on in Pittsburgh’s 24-16 victory on Sunday, the overwhelmi­ng majority of Dalton’s 31 completion­s were dump offs to running backs and tight ends. Superstar wide receiver A.J. Green was kept under wraps.

Green finished with just two receptions for 38 yards while getting shadowed by Pittsburgh’s Ross Cockrell.

“I felt like it was a pretty dominant performanc­e,” Steelers safety Mike Mitchell said. “I felt like it was a pretty dominant performanc­e by the group ... We were able to take (Green) out of the game.”

Pittsburgh disguised a lot of its coverages, but the primary responsibi­lity for covering Green at the line of scrimmage fell to Cockrell, who spent most of last season as a backup after getting cut by Buffalo at the end of training camp. And yet there he was, marking one of the best players in the league and more than holding his own.

“We threw the bus at them,” Cockrell said. “We played zone, man, blitz. We threw it all at them to try to limit (Green’s) touches because the more he touches the ball, the more chances he has to change the game. That’s all we wanted to do.”

Pittsburgh’s only “sack” came when Dalton was touched down by linebacker Arthur Moats while scrambling for no gain in the third quarter. The Steelers forced Dalton to make quick decisions, and he chose to play it safe rather than force something to Green.

“We’re not getting the sacks we want, but Andy Dalton wasn’t comfortabl­e back there,” Cockrell said.

GETTING IT RIGHT?

The Bengals (1-1) never led but twice appeared to be on the wrong side of a potentiall­y game-changing call. Tight end C.J. Uzomah was ruled out of bounds after making a leaping grab in the back of the end zone in the third quarter; replays suggested Uzomah may have gotten his knee down. Bengals coach Marvin Lewis didn’t challenge, saying he was told Uzomah was out.

Cincinnati was driving with a chance to tie with less than two minutes to play when the ball squirted loose from rookie wide receiver Tyler Boyd after Boyd was hit by linebacker James Harrison. The call stood upon review even though it seemed Boyd’s right knee was down before he lost control.

“I was told it was down even by officials on our sideline,” Bengals coach Marvin Lewis said. “They didn’t see it that way overall, so that’s all that matters.”

 ?? DON WRIGHT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Steelers running back DeAngelo Williams (34) is tackled by Cincinnati Bengals cornerback Dre Kirkpatric­k (27) during the second half of an NFL game Sunday in Pittsburgh.
DON WRIGHT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Steelers running back DeAngelo Williams (34) is tackled by Cincinnati Bengals cornerback Dre Kirkpatric­k (27) during the second half of an NFL game Sunday in Pittsburgh.

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