The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Steelers keep finding a way

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PITTSBURGH — By the middle of the second quarter, the adrenaline had faded.

By the start of the fourth, the emotionall­y drained Pittsburgh Steelers defense appeared to be teetering on the edge of complete collapse.

The group that spent the week trying to come to grips with linebacker Ryan Shazier’s life-altering spinal injury and vowed to play for their fallen teammate as he recovered from surgery in a nearby hospital was instead getting pushed around by the Baltimore Ravens.

At one point defensive end Cam Heyward tried to give a sideline pep talk he stressed wasn’t PG-rated. Didn’t work.

At another, coach Mike Tomlin tried to do the same. That didn’t work either. During one stretch, Heyward said the Steelers were “horrendous.”

And in the end, it didn’t matter for a group that’s found a way of turning adversity — be it self-inflicted or otherwise — into something more meaningful: a division title. When two stops were required to finish off a stunning rally, two stops is exactly what a defense trying to find a new identity without one of its leaders got.

The result? A giddy and cathartic 39-38 victory and a middle-of-the-night trip to visit Shazier and drop off his AFC North champions swag.

“We talk about being a close group from the time we start offseason workouts,” linebacker Arthur Moats said.

“We hang out off the field. When you know that man next to you personally, know how far he is willing to go, you’re willing to go there too. That’s what gets us out of these games like that. Something you can’t put a statistic on.”

Here’s something the Steelers (11-2) can put a statistic on: they’ve locked up a fourth straight playoff trip, their third division crown in four years and a long-anticipate­d showdown with longtime nemesis New England next Sunday that will likely determine homefield advantage in January.

Oh, and they’ve won eight straight games during a season in which wide receiver Antonio Brown KO’d a water cooler , the team “botched” an attempt to sidestep the controvers­y surroundin­g national anthem protests, quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger facetiousl­y questioned his own ability and wide receiver Martavis Bryant tried to pout his way onto the trading block.

The Steelers absorbed those issues and moved on. This last week, however, was different.

As Shazier began what looks to be a long, slow and uncertain recovery after injuring his back while trying to make a tackle last Monday in Cincinnati, his teammates tried to reconcile their grief with the knowledge their job requires them to move forward without him, at least in body if not in spirit.

“That’s the crazy part about the NFL, things constantly change and you’ve got to keep rolling,” said linebacker Vince Williams, one of Shazier’s closest friends on the team.

“So you’ve got to find a way to roll with the punches even though it may be a haymaker, got to find a way to recover.”

Pittsburgh found a way when it absolutely had to.

After Le’Veon Bell’s third touchdown pulled the Steelers within 38-36 with 3:29 left, the defense forced Baltimore into a three-andout. Roethlisbe­rger and Brown led a last-gasp drive to set up Chris Boswell’s 46-yard field goal with 42 seconds left.

Still, the Ravens had one more shot. Then the defense that spent much of the game futilely chasing Baltimore quarterbac­k Joe Flacco finally caught him.

Rookie linebacker T.J. Watt raced around Ravens right tackle Austin Howard and stripped Flacco of the ball.

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