Daily News (Los Angeles)

Boswell lets Steelers escape with victory

- By Mitch Stacy

CINCINNATI » Minkah Fitzpatric­k and the Pittsburgh Steelers kept kicking the door open against the Cincinnati Bengals. It took until the final whistle to finally walk on through.

Chris Boswell kicked a 53-yard field goal as time expired in overtime and the Steelers overcame T.J. Watt’s injury late in the fourth quarter to beat the Cincinnati Bengals 23-20 in a sloppy season opener for both teams Sunday.

Watt and Fitzpatric­k had two of four intercepti­ons off Joe Burrow, who rebounded from a lousy start and rallied Cincinnati from a 17-6 halftime deficit. His 6-yard touchdown pass to Ja’Marr Chase tied it at 20 with 2 seconds left in regulation

Fitzpatric­k kept the Steelers alive by blocking Evan McPherson’s point-after try, sending the game to overtime.

“It’s just good to come in here in a hostile environmen­t, man, and not blink, particular­ly with a number of new guys, whether they’re rookies or new to us,” Pittsburgh coach Mike Tomlin said.

McPherson and Boswell missed potential winning field goals in overtime before Steelers quarterbac­k Mitch Trubisky completed passes of 9, 26 and 10 yards in the final 56 seconds.

“That was pretty crazy — the backand-forth nature,” Trubisky said. “We found out a lot about this team. We battled, we stuck together. We have a lot to clean up, but we found a way in the end. Winning is fun.”

Watt, the Defensive Player of the Year, left the field and headed to the locker room shortly before the game went to overtime with a pectoral injury. Before that, he was his usual disruptive self, with a sack and a pick.

Burrow’s four intercepti­ons were a career worst, and he was sacked seven times in front of what was supposed to be an improved offensive line.

“It’s frustratin­g,” Burrow said. “We came back in the second half. We finished strong. Give them credit. They had a good plan.”

Burrow didn’t play in preseason games as he recovered from an appendecto­my, and he got a rude welcome back to the field. Cam Heyward sacked him on Cincinnati’s first offensive play, and Fitzpatric­k jumped Tyler Boyd’s route the next snap and returned it 31 yards for a TD.

McPherson made a 59-yard field goal in the first quarter, but Watt made a leaping intercepti­on at the line on the next series. That set up Trubisky’s 2-yard TD pass to Najee Harris for a 17-3 edge.

Trubisky, the first quarterbac­k to start for the Steelers after Ben Roethlisbe­rger’s retirement, was 21 for 38 for 194 yards.

When asked about his offense, Tomlin said: “It was enough — we’re 1-0.”

The Bengals wasted a solid performanc­e by the their defense, which limited the big plays and did a good job containing running back Harris, who finished with 23 yards on 10 carries before leaving late with a foot injury.

For much of the day, Burrow looked as if he was struggling to get back on track. He finished 33 for 53 for 338 yards and two TDs. Chase had 10 catches for 129 yards.

Asked if he was still trying to shake off the effects of his July surgery, he would only say, “I felt good.”

“We don’t overreact when things go well. We don’t overreact when things don’t go well,” Burrow said. “We’re evenkeeled. We got into position to win the game.”

Bears quarterbac­k Justin Fields is lifted by guard Lucas Patrick following a touchdown on Sunday.

 ?? JEFF DEAN – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Steelers’ Chris Boswell, second from left, celebrates with teammates after kicking the winning 53-yard field goal in overtime against the Bengals on Sunday.
JEFF DEAN – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Steelers’ Chris Boswell, second from left, celebrates with teammates after kicking the winning 53-yard field goal in overtime against the Bengals on Sunday.

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