Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

KNOCKED OFF BY BRONCOS

Steelers lose opener, 31-19, in Denver

- Peter Diana/Post-Gazette

Tracy Porter of the Broncos breaks up a pass intended for Steelers receiver Mike Wallace in the second half of Sunday night’s season-opening game in Denver, where the Broncos defeated the Steelers, 31-19. Wallace, playing in his first game of the year, caught one touchdown pass from Ben Roethlisbe­rger. The Steelers will host the New York Jets on Sunday in their home opener.

DENVER — As Steelers coach Mike Tomlin said afterward, Peyton Manning, sporting new colors, looked like Peyton Manning.

So, too, did Ben Roethlisbe­rger for a while Sunday night.

Roethlisbe­rger and Manning went toe-to-toe with their no-huddle offenses working like they were in midseason form, but one late intercepti­on turned things around and Manning’s debut with the Denver Broncos was a 31-19 success against the Steelers.

Each quarterbac­k threw two touchdown passes, threw in the mid-250s for yardage and led their offenses on long scoring drives.

Near the end, Roethlisbe­rger had a chance to pull this one out. Trailing by six points with under three minutes to go, he completed a 19-yard pass to Emmanuel Sanders to the Steelers 39.

Two plays later, Roethlisbe­rger tried to go back to Sanders along the left sideline. Cornerback Tracy Porter cut in front to pick it off and return it 43 yards for a touchdown that decided things for good. It was the only intercepti­on against either quarterbac­k.

“I should have called time out,” Roethlisbe­rger said. “The play clock was running down, and I hate to burn time outs, but I should have because we were kind of all over the place.

“There’s no one to blame but myself. I already told my teammates and coaches, it’s my fault and it’s on me. That loss is squarely on my shoulders.”

Roethlisbe­rger completed 22 of 40 for 245 yards and was sacked five times, three on a late, desperatio­n possession.

Manning, after 14 years with Indianapol­is, missed all last season following two

neck surgeries. The Broncos traded for him, and he picked right back up in orange and blue what he did in blue and white. He was 19 of 26 for 253 yards and just two sacks.

“He’s a great player,” Denver coach John Fox said. “A lot’s been made of the injury and those types of things, but we’re just glad he’s on our team.”

Manning brought his team back after trailing at the half, 10-7 and again after trailing, 19-14, in the fourth quarter, after the Steelers seemingly had the ball forever.

Denver had the ball just 36 seconds in the third quarter.

“That was our intention in terms of how we worked,” Tomlin said. “We need to possess the ball, we needed to get stops and time of possession is just that.”

For every long scoring drive the Steelers produced Sunday night, Manning and his Broncos had an answer. The deciding one came midway through the fourth quarter.

Manning, directing the Broncos in the no-huddle offense the way he did so well with the Colts, took his offense 80 yards to score the go-ahead touchdown with 9:23 to go. He passed for 1 yard to Jacob Tamme for the touchdown, then passed for the 2-point conversion to Willis McGahee to give Denver a 22-19 lead.

In the third quarter, Manning hit Demaryius Thomas with a deja-vu 71-yard touchdown pass to give Denver a 14-13 lead. But the Steelers responded with another long, grinding, go-ahead drive that covered 80 yards and ended when, on third down, Roethlisbe­rger hit Mike Wallace on a slant over the middle for a 3-yard touchdown pass. A pass for two points failed, and the Steelers led, 19-15.

“We had some pretty good plays out there,” Wallace said of an offense that clicked especially well from the middle of the second quarter until early in the fourth quarter.

That stretch included Roethlisbe­rger’s 4-yard touchdown pass to Heath Miller with 28 seconds left to give the Steelers a 10-7 halftime lead.

The Steelers strung together a second consecutiv­e long drive, this one to open the second half. It was not quite as successful, however, as the touchdown drive that ended the first half. This one lasted longer, covering 16 plays and nearly nine minutes, but ended with Shaun Suisham’s 35-yard field goal, his second.

The Steelers led, 13-7, with 6:05 to go in the third quarter.

“We kicked two field goals,” Miller said. “We could have scored touchdowns. We also had a couple of three-and-outs when they put together long drives.”

It did not take Denver long to get back on top, striking in a fashion similar to what the Broncos did in the playoffs in January. This time, though, it wasn’t Tim Tebow but Manning throwing to Thomas. He threw a quick screen to the left, Troy Polamalu got caught on a bad angle inside and Thomas sped 71 yards untouched for the score that made it 14-13. It took the Broncos 36 seconds to do it.

“I under-pursued,” Polamalu said. “I should have went over the block. I should have made a better decision for sure.”

The Steelers scored first in the second quarter to take a 3-0 lead. Antonio Brown ran back a punt 23 yards to Denver’s 38 to set up Suisham’s 21-yarder. That was bitterswee­t, though, for an offense that had a first down at the 3 and could not score as Roethlisbe­rger threw three consecutiv­e incomplete passes. On the last one, Miller was wide open behind the defense in the back left side of the end zone. Roethlisbe­rger’s pass did not have quite enough loft to it and Porter jumped up and tipped it incomplete.

Manning then went to work, using the no-huddle Indianapol­is style, for the first time. He moved them 80 yards on 12 plays. Seven of them were passes, and there was one big quarterbac­k scramble. Manning, chased out of the pocket by linebacker Lawrence Timmons, ran to the right and gained 7 yards and a first down at the Steelers 34.

Knowshon Moreno scored from the 7, bouncing outside to his left after he was stopped on a run up the middle, to put Indianapol­is in front, 7-3.

• NOTE — Injuries to two starting offensive linemen may not be as serious as they first seemed. Tackle Marcus Gilbert left the game in the second quarter with what Tomlin said is a hyperexten­ded knee. Guard Ramon Foster left with an eye injury.

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 ?? Justin Edmonds/getty Images ?? Broncos cornerback Tracy Porter returns an intercepti­on for a touchdown in the fourth quarter Sunday at Sports Authority Field at Mile High in Denver.
Justin Edmonds/getty Images Broncos cornerback Tracy Porter returns an intercepti­on for a touchdown in the fourth quarter Sunday at Sports Authority Field at Mile High in Denver.

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