Steelers worst team in league
LONDON — One of the worst teams in the league.
“And it hurts.”
ThatĢƵ what Ben Roethlisberger said after the Steelers lost to the Minnesota Vikings, 34-27, and fell to 0-4 for the first time since 1968, which was the year before the so-called modern era began with the hiring of Chuck Noll.
On Sunday, Steelers coach Mike Tomlin warned that heads will roll this time, too, if he doesn’t see “the belief and effort and continued improvement in detail,” he said. “If I don’t, they ain’t going to be a part of it, whoever it may be. ItĢƵ just that simple.”
Roethlisberger — who actually said “Right now you could say we’re the worst team in the league” — echoed Tomlin by saying, ” We have to believe that we can still be a part of something special, and if you don’t believe that, then you don’t need to be on this team or be out here.”
So, that was a warning first from the coach and then from the gutty quarterback who brought the Steelers back from a 17-point deficit to first-and-goal at the 6-yard line.
Does it mean thereĢƵ a problem in attitude?
“I think our attitude has started to change,” said Roethlisberger. “I just think that we need to continue to have the right attitude. By saying those things, I don’t say it in the terms of ‘someone needs to lose their job,’ but people need to continue to step up and be better. We need to be better as a whole team. We can’t have good parts on certain times, bad parts on certain times. We need to put it all together.”
Roethlisberger dodged pass-rusher Jared Allen often enough in the fourth quarter to put his team in position to tie the game at the 6-yard line with 24 seconds remaining. He spiked the ball on first down, threw away the second-down pass while under heavy pressure, and on the final play was sacked by Everson Griffen and fumbled when Roethlisberger didn’t see anyone open.
“I couldn’t manage to get it out,” Roethlisberger said. “Of course I’m holding it out like a loaf of bread because I’m trying not to take it to the ground. And they got it out late. I don’t know — even if I would’ve held on to it — I don’t know if we would’ve had enough time.”
It concluded yet another impressive performance by Roethlisberger, who completed 36 of 51 passes for 383 yards, but he was sacked 5 times, and all of that pressure — most of it from Allen — led to an interception and the fumble. The Steelers couldn’t record a turnover themselves for the fourth consecutive week.
The defense uncharacteristically allowed big plays that led to 21 Minnesota points.
In the first quarter, Matt Cassel hit Greg Jennings for a 70-yard touchdown. In the second quarter, Adrian Peterson ripped off a 60-yard run through right guard for a touchdown. Jerome Simpson caught a 51-yard pass from Cassel in the third quarter that set up PetersonĢƵ 7-yard touchdown run. Jennings’ 16-yard touchdown pass on the Vikings’ next series set the lead at 34-17 before the Steelers fought back.
“We just missed tackles,” said free safety Ryan Clark. “If you watch film around the NFL — even film of us — when you miss tackles, you have to have other people coming to the ball to make them. To have plays where people are overrunning and you miss three or four tackles on the play, thatĢƵ how you get the big plays, and thatĢƵ what we’re doing. We’ve had situations where individuals have missed tackles, but not where countless guys are missing them and allowing big plays to happen. We have to find a way to put that fire out. I think itĢƵ about getting more people to the ball. I don’t think itĢƵ lack of effort. I think itĢƵ us not doing the things we need to do to get people on the ground.”
Cornerback Cortez Allen, who missed the last two games with an ankle injury, missed tackling Jennings on the first touchdown and was also beaten by Jennings on the final Vikings score.
“The main thing is I’ve got to make my tackles and I’ve got to be better in coverage,” said Allen. “ThatĢƵ something I’ve got to correct, and I will correct because I don’t like this feeling.”
Clark was asked if the losing streak — the Steelers have lost nine of their last 11 games and also all four preseason games — has become a psychological snowball.
“ItĢƵ about getting off the snide,” Clark said. “I’m insane enough and crazy enough — even at 0-3 and the position we were in — that when the offense was driving the ball, I was thinking to myself ‘We’re going to win this game.’
“I think as long as we still have that feeling as a team, that we feel we can overcome most things to win, things will start changing.”
Clark said the key is to have fun, but how much fun can be had at 0-4?
“You have to understand the position you’re in. ThatĢƵ first and foremost,” Clark said. “You have to understand where you are as a team. More than understanding where you are as a team, you have to understand why you’re there as a team. ThatĢƵ the thing we need to go back and look at. ItĢƵ embarrassing what we did defensively. Giving up the long play to Greg Jennings, then Adrian busting a play, and we had another play in the second half, itĢƵ embarrassing. But be positive in that we fought, man. We had a chance to lay down. Guys had a chance to not compete, and they didn’t do that on either side of the ball or special teams, so thatĢƵ promising to leave here knowing that this team is going to fight. But itĢƵ about execution.
“Don’t get it wrong: ItĢƵ about executing, and we aren’t executing at a high enough level to win games in the NFL.”