Dayton Daily News

Jags' defense to test Roethlisbe­rger

QB threw five picks against Jacksonvil­le in October loss.

- By Will Graves

PITTSBURGH - The words that threatened to define Ben Roethlisbe­rger's season were uttered almost as an afterthoug­ht and with more than a hint of frustrated sarcasm. It just didn't read that way as it made the rounds on social media, or sound that way during a three-second sound bite played endlessly on a loop. "Maybe I don't have it anymore," the Pittsburgh Steelers quarterbac­k sasid in a somber locker room three months ago after throwing five intercepti­ons in a 30-9 loss to Jacksonvil­le.

Roethlisbe­rger didn’t mean it. Call it a visceral reaction to having two of his 55 passes returned the other way for game-decid- ing touchdowns. Three days later the 35-year-old was back to calling himself one of the “best in the world.” It wasn’t just idle talk. He followed it up by spending the better part of the next 10 weeks playing like it.

The quarterbac­k who will stride onto the field today for a rematch against the Jaguars in the divisional round of the playoffs has his swagger back. Wide receiver Darrius Heyward-Bey jokingly gave credit to the beard Roethlisbe­rger began growing in the aftermath of one of the most forget- table performanc­es of his career. Of course, that’s not the reality. The guys who surround Roethlisbe­rger in the huddle know the swag- ger never really left.

“Ben is the most talented guy I’ve ever been around,” Heyward-Bey said. “I’m not talking quarterbac­k. I’m talking about talent. He can do a lot of differ- ent things. He believes in his ability, and he’s going to show people on Sunday that he believes in himself.”

The player who openly pondered retirement last spring, the one who quar- terbacks coach Randy Fichtner said in November will occasional­ly uncork a flut-ter ball while looking very much his age, heads to his 21st career playoff game at the height of his pow-ers. Roethlisbe­rger is aver-aging 298 yards passing since that forgettabl­e three hours against the NFL's top defense. Roethlisbe­rger's thrown multiple touchdown passes in seven straight games, and the Steelers ended the season with a 9-1 sprint, the lone setback a loss to New England on Dec. 17 in which his only mistake came on a poorly executed fake spike that resulted in a game-ending pick. What's working? Nearly everything. Having two of the top skill position players in the league in wide receiver Antonio Brown and run-ning back Le'Veon Bell helps. So does the contin-ued evolution of rookie juju Smith-Schuster and Marta-vis Bryant's immersion into the offense following an ill-advised trade demand.

Yet Pittsburgh's offense will only go as far over the next month as Roethlis-berger can take it. Though he downplayed looking for payback after the Jaguars shut him down in ways that few teams have in recent years, not everyone is buy-ing it.

"I'm sure just as any com-petitor would, when you go and have a bad outing or a difficult, tough outing against a team, you want that revenge," Jacksonvil­le quarterbac­k Blake Bortles said. "You want to go prove that it was a fluke or what-ever it might be. I'm sure that's probably what he's thinking."

Not that Roethlisbe­rger would admit it even if he is. Never one to go into great detail about how he goes about his job, Roeth-lisberger insists he's focused simply on playing well. The fact it's against the Jaguars is coincident­al.

There is no looking ahead to a potential shot at New England in the AFC title game, or a third Super Bowl that would provide an excla-mation point on a potential Hall of Fame career.

"I am not worried about what's going on up there (with the Patriots)," Roeth-lisberger said. "All I can think about and worry about is this defense that we are playing."

A defense that will likely need to find a way to repli-cate its October dominance to extend its season. The Steelers have been forced to revisit the loss this week, one that put their journey from that moment to this one in perspectiv­e.

"That game for our entire group was kind of a water-shed moment," offensive coordinato­r Todd Haley said Thursday. "We stayed together, but there was a lot of pressure from the out-side. A lot of outside fac-tors that could have been divisive in some way for our group, but I take my hat off to the guys. They stuck together. They pulled together tighter. We knew that wasn't our best foot-- ball, and we knew it prob-ably really wasn't as bad as it appeared."

Or, as Roethlisbe­rger can attest, as bad as it sounded afterward. The sound bite was just that, a bite, one that in a way played a role in his resurgence. One that ended with his sixth Pro Bowl selection and a very real shot to become the fourth quarterbac­k in NFL history with three Super Bowl titles. "He's confident in his ability, and he's confident in his receivers," Hey-ward-Bey said.

"He knows that we're going to go out there and try and make plays for him. That's what a quarterbac­k needs. He has to have confidence in his guys."

Roethlisbe­rger's confi-dence in himself was never an issue.

Notes: CB Artis Burns (hyperexten­ded light knee) did not practice Thursday but is hoping to play today. DE Stephon Tuitt (elbow) also did not practice but plans to play.

 ?? FRED VUICH / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Steelers quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger was intercepte­d five times, including two picks that were returned for touchdowns, in a 30-9 loss at home to the Jaguars on Oct. 8.
FRED VUICH / ASSOCIATED PRESS Steelers quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger was intercepte­d five times, including two picks that were returned for touchdowns, in a 30-9 loss at home to the Jaguars on Oct. 8.

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