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Ben, AB say relationship isn’t fractured

By Jim Downey 5 min read
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PITTSBURGH — An alleged fractured relationship Ben Roethlisberger and Antonio Brown really isn’t fractured.

So they say.

As the two worked on two-point conversion plays after ThursdayĢƵ practice, offensive coordinator Randy Fichtner was adamant that the most prolific passing duo in the NFL are just fine.

“They do (talk),” said Fichtner. “And they work hard. They worked hard again today. You probably saw a lot of balls go his way. Not that they’re trying to do anything thatĢƵ not normal. Usually a lot of balls go his way. A lot of balls been going his way now. We just haven’t hooked up on them all. I think they’re coming.”

BrownĢƵ 53 targets are second most in the NFL and the most heĢƵ had after four games in his nine-year career. But BrownĢƵ only caught 29 of them, and at a career-low average of 9.4 yards per catch.

He had two in-game eruptions against Kansas City, and in last SundayĢƵ game against Baltimore he and Roethlisberger made hand gestures to each other after a couple of incompletions, but many fans noticed the two didn’t talk on the sideline. Fichtner feels thatĢƵ a mischaracterization.

“They talk a lot,” Fichtner said. “ThereĢƵ a lot of communication, GOOD communication.”

Roethlisberger agreed that there isn’t an issue between the two.

“No, goodness no,” he said. “ItĢƵ funny, because Tuesday night someone said thereĢƵ this big dysfunction between us. We started texting and laughing about it. We thought it was hilarious.”

The two stayed after practice and seemed fine. Brown remained longer to catch passes from Mason Rudolph as Roethlisberger hit the showers.

“ThereĢƵ no issue,” Roethlisberger said. “Truthfully, and I told him this, I said, ‘Listen, when you speak to the media on Friday, tell them I just need to be better.'”

Roethlisberger said the same right after the loss to the Ravens when he took the blame for a scoreless second half.

Brown finished the game with five catches for 62 yards and a first-half touchdown, but several third-down misses in the second half doomed the Steelers.

“It has nothing to do with us as a connection,” Roethlisberger said. “It just has to do with me playing better. Truthfully, thatĢƵ all I think it is. But we’re great. ThereĢƵ nothing to that. Listen, we laughed about people wanting to create things that aren’t there. There isn’t anything there.

“What I think it is, and I said this on my show, too, that when you do it at such a high level for X amount of years, the second that thereĢƵ even a little bit of a hiccup people are going to freak out. Is it worth freaking out over? HeĢƵ still getting a lot of targets, but itĢƵ just not connecting for big yards. Our production is probably what a lot of quarterback-wide receiver combos are satisfied with. Obviously we’re not because we’ve been at a higher level. I just think itĢƵ a little too early to panic for people, but I understand why they are because they expect gaudiness.”

LARRY LINEBACKER

Teammates call L.J. Fort “Larry,” which caught defensive coordinator Keith Butler off guard.

“Larry?” Butler repeated to his questioner.

Fort. The guy whoĢƵ receiving more practice reps this week with the injury to Vince Williams.

Fort looks like the coverage backer for whom the Steelers have been searching, so Butler was asked why he never gives Fort a chance to play.

“HeĢƵ gonna get his chance,” said Butler. “HeĢƵ gonna get his chance here this week probably. Yeah, I think heĢƵ played well for us. So we’ll see this week how he does. This is a big week for him. I hope he plays well because I think heĢƵ a legitimate linebacker in the National Football League.”

Fort came out of Northern Iowa with 356 career tackles and was the 2011 FCS Defensive Player of the Year after making 184 tackles. He ran an impressive 4.67 40 at his pro day but went undrafted. He bounced around to five teams before the Steelers claimed him on waivers in August of 2015. HeĢƵ been with the team — roster or practice squad — ever since, and has become a core member of the special teams.

But heĢƵ still quick enough to perhaps give the Steelers the coverage backer they’ve missed since Ryan Shazier went down, and after an outstanding preseason Fort was wondering if he would ever get a chance.

“ItĢƵ definitely frustrating at times,” Fort said. “I felt like I played well enough in preseason. But, live actionĢƵ a whole different ball game. ThatĢƵ where you need to prove it, and thatĢƵ what I’m looking forward to.”

Fort expects to be used at inside linebacker in sub-packages Sunday against the Falcons.

INJURY REPORT

Along with Williams (hamstring), Steelers missing ThursdayĢƵ practice were left guard Ramon Foster (coachĢƵ decision), right tackle Marcus Gilbert (knee), receiver Darrius Heyward-Bey (ankle) and safety Morgan Burnett (groin), who once again fell off from WednesdayĢƵ limited participation.

Missing practice for the Falcons were cornerback Justin Bethel (knee) and defensive tackle Grady Jarrett (ankle/knee). Limited were OLB Vic Beasley, WR Julio Jones (hand/ankle), LB Foyesade Oluokun (ankle) and DE Derrick Shelby (groin).

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