Daily Press (Sunday)

Steelers’ stingy defense gets test from Browns’ run game

- By Will Graves

PITTSBURGH — Mike Tomlin has seen this before. The dynamic playmakers. The physical offensive line. The commitment to the run that simultaneo­usly protects leads and wears down opponents.

The longtime Pittsburgh Steelers coach, a Denbigh High and William & Mary graduate, got an up-close look back in 2006 when he was the defensive coordinato­r for Minnesota and current Browns coach Kevin Stefanski was an assistant to then-Vikings coach Brad Childress.

The Vikings finished 610 that season, but Chester Taylor piled up a careerhigh 1,216 yards. Adrian Peterson arrived in the draft the following April, and as Stefanski quietly rose through the organizati­on’s coaching ranks, Minnesota’s ability to run the ball rarely wavered.

It’s much the same for Cleveland, where Stefanski has the Browns rolling — yes, really — heading into today’s visit to Heinz Field. Cleveland (4-1) has done it behind running backs Nick Chubb and Kareem Hunt, with the occasional pitch to wide receiver Odell Beck

Cleveland at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m. (WTKR)

ham Jr. thrown in for good measure.

So while the Steelers (4-0) have put together the league’s second-ranked run defense during their best start since 1979 — a stretch in which they shut down New York Giants star Saquon Barkley and Houston’s David Johnson, among others — Tomlin is well aware the challenge wi l l b e c o n s i d e ra b l y tougher when the Browns make their annual 2-hour trip to Pittsburgh with the NFL’s top rushing offense in tow.

“They have quality players. They have quality schematics,” Tomlin said. “Kevin Stefanski has been around solid run games all of his career. He spent a lot of time up in Minnesota during the Adrian Peterson years and even after. The Minnesota Vikings have always been a group that is capable of running the ball. There is a commitment there.”

And i n P i t t s b u rg h , there’s a commitment to stopping it. Only Tampa Bay is allowing fewer rushing yards per game and per attempt than the Steelers, who have been stout against the run while also maintainin­g one of the league’s best pass rushes.

On the surface, the concepts would seem at odds. Yet Pittsburgh has managed to drop running backs and quarterbac­ks with equal aplomb. The Steelers are tied for the NFL lead in sacks (20) and have recorded at least one sack in 61 straight games, the fourthlong­est streak in NFL history.

“Sometimes when you look at these pass-rushing teams, they tend to get upfield and expose themselves in the run game,” Pittsburgh defensive tackle Cam Heyward said. “We have a great group of guys that know how to get off the blocks.”

The Browns, meanwhile, have a group of guys that know how to deliver them, including former Virginia Tech player Wyatt Teller — whom Pro Football Focus rated as the NFL’s top guard early in the season. Cleveland is tops in the league in yards per rush, no matter who is in the backfield, while also doing a solid job of protecting Mayfield. Though the former Heisman Trophy winner is dealing with a rib issue that’s limited him in practice this week, he’s only been sacked seven times.

“They do a good job of playing together,” Steelers defensive coordinato­r Keith Butler said. “You rarely see them make any mistakes. ... They don’t do that. They do a good job of getting a hat on a hat and running plays and cutting off people on the back side. They do a real good job of that. As a consequenc­e, their running game has been really good.”

And while Chubb will miss his second straight game with a sprained right knee, Hunt carried the ball 20 times in last week’s win over Indianapol­is, his highest single-game total in two years.

“The strength of their pack is in the pack,” Tomlin said. “They’ve got quality depth throughout all positional groups.”

So do the Steelers, though the defense looked vulnerable at times against Philadelph­ia, particular­ly on third down. The Eagles — missing their top two wide receivers — converted 10 straight third downs to nearly rally from a 17-point deficit, three of them coming on third-and-10 or more.

 ?? DON WRIGHT/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Philadelph­ia Eagles quarterbac­k Carson Wentz (11) is sacked by Pittsburgh cornerback Mike Hilton and Cameron Heyward (97) last Sunday. The Steelers (4-0) have the league’s second-ranked run defense this season.
DON WRIGHT/ASSOCIATED PRESS Philadelph­ia Eagles quarterbac­k Carson Wentz (11) is sacked by Pittsburgh cornerback Mike Hilton and Cameron Heyward (97) last Sunday. The Steelers (4-0) have the league’s second-ranked run defense this season.

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