Houston Chronicle

Holding off Father Time

Steelers’ Harrison is still a force on defense, even at age 38

- By Kent Babb WASHINGTON POST

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Surrounded by teammates in crisp suits and well-considered ensembles, James Harrison slid on a black T-shirt and a pair of athletic shorts. He rolled up the fabric to protect his skinned knee.

Then, beat up and bloody after his team’s narrow win in Arrowhead Stadium against the Kansas City Chiefs in an AFC division playoff game, he went looking for a bandage. Someone in the Pittsburgh Steelers’ cramped, makeshift medical office offered a small covering, but Harrison saw it and — no, it was much too small.

He was ornery, though that’s not especially unusual, and almost an hour after a game Harrison helped win, he was mostly put back together. Now he headed through a door, toward the team bus and the AFC championsh­ip game against the New England Patriots.

“My whole body hurts, man,” Harrison said as he walked. “I’m 38 years old.”

Harrison, the NFL’s oldest defensive player — he’s got Minnesota cornerback Terence Newman beat by exactly four months — is still unsatisfie­d and still a disruptor about 15 months before his 40th birthday.

Last Sunday, the Chiefs had seized momentum from Pittsburgh, whose offense had punished Kansas City’s defense for nearly four full quarters but had scored zero touchdowns. Then Chiefs quarterbac­k Alex Smith engineered a touchdown drive and needed only a twopoint conversion to tie the score at 18. Smith dropped back, and Harrison rushed toward him; offensive tackle Eric Fisher hooked an arm around Harrison’s neck as Smith threw toward tight end Demetrius Harris in the end zone. The cruelty of the sequence was that Chiefs players and fans had a few seconds to celebrate Smith’s completion before they noticed the flag.

The next attempt, moved

backward 10 yards for Fisher’s hold on Harrison, failed and the Steelers won. A while later, Harrison himself expressed surprise the officials had penalized Fisher — particular­ly on such a game-altering play — and said he drew that foul only every “blue moon,” but anyway, he’d take it.

So would the Steelers, who survived on a playoff record six field goals to win 18-16, earning the right to face the Patriots and Tom Brady on Sunday evening in Foxborough, Mass. If Pittsburgh, the AFC’s No. 3 seed, has a credible shot of dethroning the kings, it will be not because of Ben Roethlisbe­rger or Antonio Brown or Le’Veon Bell. It’ll be because Harrison has enough vinegar and meanness in him to frustrate Brady and help bring down a quarterbac­k sacked only 15 times during the regular season. It’ll be because he was able to somehow hold his aching body together one more week.

By now, that takes some effort. Harrison, who hasn’t announced whether he’ll return for a 15th NFL season in 2017, said he spends his weeks following a steady regimen of massage, acupunctur­e, dry needling and chiropract­ic. Earlier this month Harrison told NFL Network he spends about $350,000 annually, or a little less than a third of his base salary with the Steelers, on maintainin­g his body.

“Whatever it is,” Harrison said in the locker room Sunday, “that I think is going to help me to advance in my old age.”

Harrison has experience­d a full football career. Well, almost: Neither Harrison nor the Steelers have ever beaten Brady in the playoffs; in fact, Pittsburgh is 3-9 overall against New England since 2002, including a 27-16 home loss in October.

“We’re better than what we were then. They’re better than what they were then,” said Harrison, who has 2 1/2 sacks in two playoff contests. “I’m just blessed to have that opportunit­y to go out there and have another chance.”

There was, he said, no time to waste. He was already turning his attention toward getting back to Pittsburgh, toward preparing for New England as quickly as possible.

So when the Steelers touched down, an ornery soul with one more thing on his football todo list passed up going to bed to rest his 38-year-old bones. Instead, at a little after 5 a.m. — five hours after that holding call against Fisher and four hours after bandaging his knee — Harrison headed for the Steelers’ weight room, beginning his work week early.

 ?? Gene Puskar / Associated Press ?? Steelers linebacker James Harrison has made his share of impact plays to help the Steelers reach Sunday’s AFC Championsh­ip Game.
Gene Puskar / Associated Press Steelers linebacker James Harrison has made his share of impact plays to help the Steelers reach Sunday’s AFC Championsh­ip Game.

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