Starkville Daily News

Matchup between Patriots, Steelers still big game

- By BARRY WILNER Associated Press

Shout it from the top of Mount Washington: It’s the Game of the Year!

Perhaps the Game of the Decade!! Maybe the Game of the Millennium!!!

Or, very possibly, a big dud.

Until their flop in Miami on Monday night, the way the New England Patriots were performing was the way so many predicted they would heading into the season: a powerhouse. And how the Pittsburgh Steelers were squeezing past inferior foes brought into question whether they could slow down the Foxborough freight train.

Then the Dolphins did so one day after the Steelers needed another late rally to edge archrival Baltimore and clinch the AFC North.

So while today’s contest at Heinz Field will almost certainly decide the top seed in the AFC, it’s not exactly Ali-Frazier, two undefeated heavyweigh­ts facing off.

“It’s good to be in big games than be in ones nobody’s watching,” Steelers coach Mike Tomlin says. “We better be appreciati­ve of this spot and not resist it in any way. This is what we’ve been fighting for since March. Why would you fight that? It’s an awesome thing.”

Forget their ‘A’ game, which the Steelers (11-2) seem to have misplaced for much of the past two months despite winning eight straight, with a half-dozen of them close (decided by one, three, three, three, five and six points.

They will need their ‘AAA game’ against New England (10-3), which knows a loss eliminates it from topping the conference heading into the postseason.

“It’s all about us being prepared to play Pittsburgh,” Patriots safety Devin McCourty says, mimicking his coach. “All the extra stuff comes with it, but it’s just if we worry about the playoffs, we’ll go down there and we’ll get killed, honestly.”

Oakland might need to win out for any shot at the postseason. Same for Dallas, chasing a wild card in the much-stronger NFC.

With star running back Zeke Elliott suspended for one more game, the combinatio­n of Dak Prescott throwing to Jason Witten and Dez Bryant has been the focal point on offense. Prescott’s coming off his first 300-yard passing game of the season with a career-high 332 against the woeful Giants.

After fizzling in Kansas City, Oakland needs to rediscover its offense and get pressure on Prescott from Bruce Irvin and Khalil Mack.

The Rams lost two of four in the midst of a very difficult stretch. Now, the key division matchup with the banged-up, penalty-prone Seahawks.

Seattle, whose air of invincibil­ity at home has been punctured with two losses in the past three, won the first meeting and would have the tiebreaker with a repeat. This easily could come down to Russell Wilson, making a late run for league Most Valuable Player, lighting up the skies against Rams quarterbac­k Jared Goff, one of the NFL’s most-improved players in 2017.

LA is 3-0 after a loss; the Eagles beat the Rams last Sunday.

Huge one for both sides, and this time the Packers head into it with Aaron Rodgers back at quarterbac­k.

Recovered from his broken collarbone — Green Bay stayed relevant without him, going 3-4 — Rodgers might have some rust. Still, was there ever any doubt he would replace Brett Hundley when his wing was healed?

“Hopefully it gives a lift to some of the guys but I’m not coming back to save this team,” Rodgers said. “I’m coming back to play quarterbac­k the way I know how to play it.”

Rodgers will face a formidable defense that includes end Julius Peppers, who left Green Bay for a return to Carolina this season and has 5 sacks in the past four games against his former team, and linebacker Luke Kuechly (100 tackles in six straight seasons.)

New Orleans owns the tiebreaker over Carolina thanks to a season sweep, and gets fortunate here. Josh McCown, having the best season of his lengthy, vagabond pro career, has a broken hand, so untested Bryce Petty gets the start.

The Saints lost two of their past three, against top-level opponents, so they aren’t likely to fall into any traps. Their wellbalanc­ed and top-ranked offense could go wild against the inconsiste­nt Jets, and no team has improved more on defense than Nawlins.

Vikings will secure NFC North crown for second time in three seasons by winning, and the Bengals have never won in five trips to Minnesota. Cincinnati didn’t even show up at home last Sunday in being routed by the Bears. Yes, the Bears.

Minnesota’s defense had an off day at Carolina, but is formidable enough to win big. The combined record of teams the Vikings have lost to is 27-12. Combined record of teams the Bengals have beaten, counting the Browns twice, is 14-51.

Vikings coach Mike Zimmer was the defensive coordinato­r for the Bengals under current coach Marvin Lewis from 2008-2013. And here’s a strange stat: Lewis has never lost to any former assistant, going 6-0-1.

An Eagles victory and a Vikings loss makes Philly the place to go through in the NFC playoffs. Of course, Eagles fans mostly are looking at the bleak side: Carson Wentz, the superb young quarterbac­k who has engineered much of this year’s turnaround, tore his left ACL at the Rams and is done for the season.

Then again, Philly probably could suit up Ron Jaworski instead of Nick Foles and win this by letting its top-notch defense loose against the beleaguere­d Giants. The Eagles have won six of seven and 15 of the past 19 against the Giants.

OK, take a deep breath and listen: Jacksonvil­le clinches a playoff berth with a win. It can even get in with help in other cities despite a loss.

Not only that, the Jaguars, with their terrific pass rush and strong ground game, have a shot at a first-round playoff bye.

“To be at the bottom and to finally fight our way, work our way and get back up, just to be in the position that we’re at now, it’s great and it shows you that we’ve finally started to earn the right to win,” linebacker Paul Posluszny says. “Now we want more.”

Houston might have been in position for more in 2017 had the injury bug not ravaged the roster. The Texans, already minus brilliant DE J.J. Watt and excellent linebacker Whitney Mercilus, are down to their third quarterbac­k, T.J. Yates.

The Titans can’t afford a stumble against the suddenly competitiv­e Niners.

San Francisco lost its first nine, but now has won three of four. Jimmy Garoppolo is playing like he will fill that franchise quarterbac­k role the Niners hoped he would when they dealt with New England to get him.

Tennessee has a showdown in Music City in Week 17 with the Jaguars. The Titans can make that a winner-take-the-division matchup if they beat San Francisco and then the Rams in Nashville next week.

After stunning New England, the Dolphins go to a place they don’t much like, particular­ly in December. Rinning back Kenyan Drake has emerged and receiver Jarvis Landry remains steady. The defense befuddled Brady last Monday night, and expected starter Tyrod Taylor is no Brady.

Bills star LeSean McCoy probably has been doing a snow dance all week. He was dominant in last weekend’s 13-7 overtime win a blizzard against Indianapol­is, the second time in his career the running back has dashed through the snow like that.

A sputtering offense came to life for the Ravens at Pittsburgh, where they should have won to make them a solid leader for a wild card. Even if that attack goes back to its previous ways, seeing Baltimore destroy much of its postseason chances in this one is unlikely. A 3-0 finish gets the Ravens in.

A 3-0 finish would be miraculous for the Browns, the first team in NFL history to start 0-13 in consecutiv­e seasons.

Of interest here — wait, we’ll find something — is Cardinals running back Adrian Peterson, who needs one rushing touchdown to reach 100 and 37 yards to pass the great Jim Brown (12,312) on the career rushing list. But Peterson is battling a neck problem that could sideline him for the final three games.

 ?? (Photo by Paul Sancya, AP) ?? Detroit Lions cornerback and former Mississipp­i State player Darius Slay (23) runs off the field after an intercepti­on during the second half of Saturday’s game against the Chicago Bears.
(Photo by Paul Sancya, AP) Detroit Lions cornerback and former Mississipp­i State player Darius Slay (23) runs off the field after an intercepti­on during the second half of Saturday’s game against the Chicago Bears.

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