ĢƵ

close

Steelers looking to stop run, get revenge against Jaguars

By Jim Wexell for The 10 min read
article image -

MEMORABLE SERIES MOMENT

Jaguars 34, Steelers 24

Nov. 19, 2000 at Three Rivers Stadium

We’re one day shy of the 18th anniversary of Fred TaylorĢƵ rushing record against the Steelers. ItĢƵ just a reminder that the Steelers must stop Leonard Fournette today. Last year he gained 290 yards and scored five touchdowns on 53 carries in two Jaguars’ wins over the Steelers. Taylor nearly matched that in this game at Three Rivers Stadium. He carried 30 times for 234 yards and scored four touchdowns during the days when these teams played in the same division. The defending AFC finalists then, as now, Jacksonville went on to a 7-9 finish in 2000 while showing the Steelers what to address in their next draft. The Steelers in 2001 passed on QB Drew Brees for NT Casey Hampton before choosing ILB Kendrell Bell in the second round.

TALE OF THE TAPE

“Their pass rush was interesting to me. You watch how they move these guys around, unlike last year when they were more settled into a specific type of pass rush.”

They were rushing with one side trying to overwhelm one side, almost funneling the quarterback toward Calais Campbell. He set a team record with 14.5 sacks last year, but itĢƵ not happening this year. Dante Fowler is gone and they keep moving the pieces around like they’re not sure what to do. They know they have Calais. He has five sacks in his 11th season. HeĢƵ still rushing well, but he lumbers more than he did last year, which you would expect from someone whoĢƵ 6-8, 300 pounds at this point in his career. Yannick Ngakoue is the scary guy. He just really motors. But this year their rush is more of a mush rush. EverybodyĢƵ bull-rushing out of a lot of one-on-ones. Last year there was more twisting and herding the quarterback to Campbell, who was bull-rushing.” — Steelers Radio analyst Craig Wolfley.

TOP QUESTION

Can the Steelers stop the run?

The problem the Steelers had stopping Fournette last season bled into the play-action passing and running skills of Jaguars QB Blake Bortles, who in the playoff game compiled a passer rating of 94.1, well up from his career average of 81.3. In watching film of this yearĢƵ team, Tunch Ilkin noticed Bortles not carrying out his play fakes with as much confidence as last season. Ilkin assumes that Bortles doesn’t trust the rebuilt offensive line, and that will become more difficult with new left tackle and New York Giants castoff Ereck Flowers currently holding the spot.

THREE QUESTIONS:

With CB MIKE HILTON

Q: What can you say about getting cut by Jacksonville a few years back? Did they give you a chance?

MH: “Yeah, they gave me a chance. I can’t really be upset about it because I know itĢƵ part of the business. Was it frustrating? Absolutely, but I don’t hold a grudge. Maybe if they never would’ve cut me things wouldn’t have worked out like they have now. Maybe it was a blessing in disguise.

Q: You came here and showed you could play right away. Was it all about size?

MH: “Personally, I think so. That was the year they drafted (Jalen) Ramsey and spent a lot of money on their defense. Maybe they were just focused on the guys they were bringing in and trying to find the guy who fit their system.”

Q: They are the No. 1 pass defense, so obviously they have a lot of talent at your position. Numbers are a good excuse. But then you went to New England and supposedly had the smartest coach in the world. Why didn’t Bill Belichick see your ability?

MH: “That one I feel a little differently than the Jacksonville situation. I was only there for a week, so I feel like they didn’t have much time to really get a good look at how I move and how I play. That one I definitely understood.”

GAME BREAKDOWN

What to look for from the Steelers this afternoon at TIAA Bank Field:

ON OFFENSE

HereĢƵ the full text of what Ramsey, the Jaguars’ star cornerback, had to say about Roethlisberger in the August edition of GQ the Magazine: “Big Ben, I think heĢƵ decent at best. … ItĢƵ not Big Ben, itĢƵ A.B. Big Ben slings the ball a lot of the time. He just slings it and receivers go get it. He has a strong arm, but he ain’t all that. I played him twice last year and he really disappointed me.” So, Roethlisberger will utilize his three-beast-and-a-superstar attack on a Jaguars team thatĢƵ ranked No. 1 against the pass, but doesn’t have DE Fowler, slot CB Aaron Colvin and possibly stud DT Marcell Dareus, whoĢƵ questionable with triceps and back injuries. ItĢƵ a tough, but not-as-tough-as-last-year defense against the focused and red-hot Roethlisberger.

ON DEFENSE

The Steelers will be without DT Stephon Tuitt (elbow), but the Jaguars’ offensive line is in tatters. Backup-turned-left tackle Josh Walker is injured and gives way to Flowers for his first Jaguars start. The former first-round pick of the New York Giants was cut last week and signed by the Jaguars. Center Brandon Linder went on IR this week and will be replaced by Tyler Shatley, whoĢƵ started eight games in five years. Right guard A.J. Cann will be a game-time decision after a late-week hamstring injury. The Steelers will start former Jaguars DT Tyson Alualu for Tuitt, but the rest of the unit is healthy, not to mention hungry to make amends for last year.

PREDICTION

Be warned: I went into this weekĢƵ handicapping research looking for statistics to confirm a bias that the Steelers will be the more emotional team because of elimination revenge on its home field. But, I was surprised at what I found. In next-season rematches among a non-division team that eliminated you at home off a bye in the playoffs, the team that won the previous year also won the rematch 12 of 18 times (since the playoff format was changed in 1990). But one of those six revenge-seeking teams was Pittsburgh, which bounced back from home playoff elimination to the Buffalo Bills in 1992 to beat Jim KellyĢƵ team in 1993, 23-0. It was the Steelers’ only appearance in such a situation, so thereĢƵ my confirmation bias … Steelers, 26-13.

BY THE NUMBERS

4: Passes defensed by Ramsey in last yearĢƵ regular-season game, in addition to his interception.

7: Consecutive games in which Antonio Brown has caught a touchdown pass.

8: Interceptions by Jaguars OLB Telvin Smith since he entered the league in 2014, tied for second among linebackers during that time. He scored two touchdowns against the Steelers last season.

14.8: Yards per kickoff return allowed by the Jaguars, best in the NFL. The Jaguars are second in punt coverage at 3.6 yards per return.

31: Sacks by the Steelers, putting them in a five-way tie for first in the NFL. They’re third on the other side of the ball, having allowed only 12 sacks.

DOWNLOADS

n Fournette had 109 scrimmage yards (56 rushing, 53 receiving) in his return last week from a hamstring injury. ThatĢƵ a good sign for the Jaguars, who’ve had their star runner active in only three games (2-1). HeĢƵ obviously the target of coordinator Keith ButlerĢƵ run defense, which hasn’t allowed a 100-yard rusher this season. “They ran the ball on us when they had to,” Butler said of last season. “I can’t say that we won’t miss Stephon, but it won’t matter. Nobody is going to say ‘Hey, letĢƵ wait a second. We’re going to wait for Stephon to get healed before we play you guys.’ It doesn’t happen like that. I wish it was but it doesn’t, so we’ve got to go out there and play.”

n Through nine games, the Steelers have given up only four plays of 40 yards or longer, and none in their last four games. They gave up three such plays to the Jaguars in their two games last season. One of the differences this season is the way Sean Davis is playing free safety. “Honestly, itĢƵ just SD putting his face on these running backs,” said Joe Haden. “SD these past three games – I’m calling it face time. HeĢƵ putting his face on these running backs. Catching them in the hole, catching them when they break through the hole. So I think his tackling has been top notch. ItĢƵ basically what we’ve been looking for and heĢƵ been doing a great job the last couple games.”

n The Jaguars (3-6) were second in the league in forcing turnovers last season, and forced seven (with three returned for TDs) in two games against the Steelers. This year, they’ve forced only eight turnovers, three fewer than the Steelers (6-2-1).

n Mike Tomlin was asked three weeks back whether he expected ConnerĢƵ showing this season. “Yes,” Tomlin said. “I’ve had a front-row seat for his college exploits.” Offensive coordinator Randy Fichtner was asked about any “eureka moments” about Conner, and Fichtner said, “There wasn’t a day (in the offseason) I didn’t see him in here. When everyone was gone and we were hanging out and kind of putzing around the office working, he was downstairs rehabbing. So maybe that was the first sign.” ConnerĢƵ third in the NFL with 771 rushing yards (4.7 ypc.)

n One matchup that should concern the Steelers is replacement right tackle Matt Feiler against Jaguars DE Campbell. But the Steelers are 4-0 with Feiler in for Marcus Gilbert, including the last three game. “It really hasn’t been a concern,” Fichtner said. “He got his first start at tackle down in Tampa and played exceptionally well then, and he just keeps doing that. I think thatĢƵ just another credit to that room, and that goes back to (OL Coach Mike) Munch(ak) and (assistant OL) Coach (Shaun) Sarrett. ThatĢƵ what they do. They keep developing and keep working with the guys.”

PARTING SHOT

“Nope. I don’t need to.” — Roethlisberger on whether he put RamseyĢƵ comments on a bulletin board.

CUSTOMER LOGIN

If you have an account and are registered for online access, sign in with your email address and password below.

NEW CUSTOMERS/UNREGISTERED ACCOUNTS

Never been a subscriber and want to subscribe, click the Subscribe button below.

Starting at $4.79/week.