Orlando Sentinel

Obstacles, injuries not slowing Steelers.

- By Sam Farmer Tribune Newspapers sam.farmer@latimes.com

Pittsburgh snatched a victory from the grasp of the Arizona Cardinals on Sunday, six days after heisting one from the San Diego Chargers.

Two games in a week. On opposite sides of the country. With two different backup quarterbac­ks. Talk about Steal City. “I just can’t believe I got in the game,” said Steelers quarterbac­k Landry Jones, who made the most of his first appearance in an NFL regular-season game, throwing a pair of touchdown passes to lead his team to a 25-13 comefrom-behind victory over the favored Cardinals.

On a day when Carolina stayed undefeated by winning at Seattle and when San Diego nearly toppled undefeated Green Bay at Lambeau Field, the Steelers fiercely protected their home turf.

Jones, a fourth-round pick in 2013, replaced the injured Michael Vick, who had been playing in place of the injured Ben Roethlisbe­rger. It was Vick who guided Pittsburgh to a 24-20 win at San Diego last Monday with the Steelers scoring the deciding touchdown as the clock expired.

Vick, who was briefly sent to the sideline after absorbing a knee to the head (later reported to be dirt in his eye), completed three of eight passes for six yards against the Cardinals. He left in the third quarter with a hamstring injury. The Steelers also lost left tackle Kelvin Beachum to a seasonendi­ng torn knee ligament.

“It wasn’t perfect by any stretch,” Pittsburgh Coach Mike Tomlin said of Sunday’s win. “But with the state that we’re in, we’re not expecting perfection. We just need to do what’s required for us to win.”

The hero on the other end of Jones’ passes Sunday was receiver Martavis Bryant, active for the first time this season after serving a four-game suspension for violating the league’s substance-abuse policy, then sitting out the San Diego game with a sore knee.

The Steelers trailed at the half 10-3 but bounced back with two field goals and a touchdown in the third quarter to take a 15-10 lead. The touchdown covered eight yards and was a spectacula­r leaping grab by Bryant, the first of his two huge highlights from the game.

The second was a short reception that Bryant turned into an 88-yard touchdown in the fourth quarter, a knockout blow to the Cardinals, whose coach, Bruce Arians, was returning to face the franchise that fired him as offensive coordinato­r three years earlier.

The Steelers will face a similar situation when they play at Kansas City on Sunday because Steelers offensive coordinato­r Todd Haley was fired as coach of the Chiefs during the 2011 season.

Roethlisbe­rger, who left a Week 3 game against St. Louis with a knee injury, could be back as soon as Sunday.

His team has fared better without him than many people expected, going 2-1 to improve to 4-2. The Cardinals, who have lost two of three, slipped to 4-2.

Rivers in the flow

That’s back-to-back heartbreak­ing losses for the Chargers, who gave the Packers a huge scare Sunday before falling 27-20.

San Diego QB Philip Rivers was phenomenal, completing 43 of 65 passes for an astounding 503 yards, with two touchdowns and no intercepti­ons. Rivers set single-game franchise records for attempts, completion­s and yards passing, but the game came down to four plays within three yards of Green Bay’s end zone in the last 33 seconds. A one-yard run by Danny Woodhead, an incomplete pass by Rivers, a loss of one by Woodhead, and finally a fourth-down pass that was knocked away just before it got to Woodhead denied the Chargers.

Still unblemishe­d

Carolina came into Sunday as one of five undefeated teams, although the Panthers still had a way to go to truly prove themselves.

Their first four victories came against Jacksonvil­le, Houston, New Orleans and Tampa Bay, teams that are currently a combined 7-16.

The 5-0 Panthers answered their doubters in resounding fashion with a 27-23 victory at Seattle, handing the two-time defending NFC champs their first home loss since Week 6 of last season.

The game proved to be a battle of big men, with Seattle tight end Jimmy Graham catching eight passes for 140 yards, and Carolina tight end Greg Olsen pulling down seven for 131 yards and the winning touchdown.

For the 27th time in his career, Carolina’s Cam Newton both ran and threw for a touchdown.

Breaking ground

Cincinnati stayed undefeated with a 34-21 victory at Buffalo. The Bengals are the first AFC North team to start 6-0 since divisional realignmen­t in 2002.

Then again, 6-0 is a familiar start for Denver’s Peyton Manning. He’s done that six times in his career, more than any other NFL quarterbac­k. That includes this year; the Broncos improved to 6-0 with a 26-23 overtime win at Cleveland.

Putting D in Denver

Manning came into Week 6 as the only starting AFC quarterbac­k with more intercepti­ons than touchdowns. That trend continued Sunday with one touchdown and three intercepti­ons for the NFL’s only five-time most valuable player.

The Broncos stayed undefeated, however, largely on the strength of their top-ranked defense.

 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Third-string Steelers quarterbac­k Landry Jones, top, celebrates with guard David DeCastro after throwing a touchdown pass against Arizona on Sunday. It was Jones’ first appearance in an NFL regular-season game.
GENE J. PUSKAR/ASSOCIATED PRESS Third-string Steelers quarterbac­k Landry Jones, top, celebrates with guard David DeCastro after throwing a touchdown pass against Arizona on Sunday. It was Jones’ first appearance in an NFL regular-season game.

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