Santa Fe New Mexican

Washington surprises Steelers with end to perfect season

Washington ends Pittsburgh’s perfect season, improbably eyes run for NFC East title

- By Will Graves

TPITTSBURG­H he Pittsburgh Steelers spent three months shaking off whatever 2020 threw at them. Schedule changes. Injuries to a handful of impact players. The ever-present threat of COVID-19.

Through the chaos, they kept winning. Sometimes pretty. Sometimes ugly. Sometimes a little of both in the same game. Through it all, they insisted they were well aware of their flaws. Pointing out time and again the only thing perfect about them was their record.

So much for that. Pittsburgh’s bid for an unbeaten season is over. Washington’s — yes, Washington’s — quest for an unlikely division title may just be starting.

Alex Smith threw for 296 yards and a touchdown, Dustin Hopkins kicked a tiebreakin­g 45-yard field goal with 2:04 remaining, and Washington rallied for a 23-17 victory on Monday in one of the biggest surprises of the NFL season.

“We’ve been down for such a long time and we’re trying to rebuild ourselves and build up,” first-year coach Ron Rivera said. “This is something we can build off of.”

The Steelers (11-1) missed a chance to clinch a playoff berth and dropped into a tie with defending Super Bowl champion Kansas City for the best record in the AFC with four weeks remaining. They squandered a 14-point lead.

“It stinks,” Pittsburgh quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger said. “Been a while since we lost a game. It’s not a good feeling.”

The Steelers were 10-point favorites while facing a team that hadn’t won three straight since 2018 and hadn’t won in Pittsburgh since 1991. Washington won the Super Bowl that season. The club’s expectatio­ns this year are far more modest. Yet a day after the New York Giants won at Seattle, Washington (5-7) kept pace while giving the lowly NFC East its second marquee victory in 25ish hours.

“We’re on a roll,” said defensive end Montez Sweat, who knocked down three Roethlisbe­rger passes. “This is the kind of football we’ve been wanting to play since Game 1.”

It’s the kind of football the Steelers had played since Game 1. The best start in the franchise’s 87-year history came to an abrupt halt on a rare Monday late afternoon game. The NFL pushed the contest back a day as part of the fallout from a COVID-19 outbreak in Baltimore that forced the league to postpone the Ravens’ visit to Heinz Field three times.

Pittsburgh coach Mike Tomlin insisted his club would not use the disruption as an excuse. But the weight of what the Steelers have been dealing with, combined with second-half injuries to inside linebacker Robert Spillane and cornerback Joe Haden, made for a tough day.

Roethlisbe­rger passed for 305 yards and two touchdowns, but was picked off by Jon Bostic — a former Steeler — with 1:59 remaining. Hopkins added another 45-yard field goal and Pittsburgh’s last-gasp drive ended with the ball near midfield and Washington’s players sprinting off in celebratio­n while the Steelers trudged to the locker room.

“We’re getting to that point of the season when you’ve got to be sharp in all areas, your whole team, both sides of the ball,” Roethlisbe­rger said. “There can be all kinds of distractio­ns, changes of this, that and the other. At the end of the day, we’ve got to go play good football.”

For the first time in a long time, the Steelers didn’t. At least not enough of it.

Still, even after Smith hit Logan Thomas for a 15-yard touchdown pass to tie the game at 17, the Steelers had a chance. They drove into field goal range but rather than have fill-in Matthew Wright — promoted from the practice squad due to an injury to Chris Boswell — attempt a 45-yard field goal into the open end at Heinz, the Steelers went for it. Roethlisbe­rger’s heave to rookie running back Anthony McFarland Jr. fell incomplete and Smith calmly drove Washington 45 yards in nine plays to set up the winning score.

“I didn’t feel good about putting that [kick] on him,” Tomlin said of Wright.

BILLS 34, 49ERS 24

In Glendale, Ariz., Josh Allen threw for 375 yards, tied a career high with four touchdown passes and Buffalo stayed in sole possession of first place in the AFC East with a victory over San Francisco.

Buffalo (9-3) moved a step closer to winning its division for the first time since 1995 thanks to a nearly flawless performanc­e from Allen. The 24-yearold quarterbac­k was stellar against the 49ers, completing 32 of 40 passes with no intercepti­ons.

He threw touchdown passes to Cole Beasley, Dawson Knox, Isaiah McKenzie and Gabriel Davis as the Bills built a 17-7 halftime lead and controlled the majority of the second half.

The Bills are one game ahead of the Miami Dolphins with four games left for both teams.

San Francisco (5-7) lost in its first game at its adopted home in Arizona. The 49ers will be based in Glendale for at least the next three weeks after Santa Clara County issued strict new coronaviru­s protocols that forced the team to find a temporary new home.

It was Allen’s fourth game of the season with at least 300 yards passing and three touchdowns, which set a franchise record. Jim Kelly did it three times in 1991 and Drew Bledsoe three times in 2002.

 ?? BARRY REEGER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Washington Football Team quarterbac­k Alex Smith throws a pass during the second half of Monday’s game against the Steelers in Pittsburgh. Smith threw for 296 yards and a touchdown, Dustin Hopkins kicked a tiebreakin­g 45-yard field goal with 2:04 remaining, and Washington won 23-17.
BARRY REEGER/ASSOCIATED PRESS Washington Football Team quarterbac­k Alex Smith throws a pass during the second half of Monday’s game against the Steelers in Pittsburgh. Smith threw for 296 yards and a touchdown, Dustin Hopkins kicked a tiebreakin­g 45-yard field goal with 2:04 remaining, and Washington won 23-17.

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