Steelers receiver Antonio Brown beats the Chiefs’ Terrance Mitchell to the end zone for a touchdown in the fourth quarter Sunday, Oct. 15, 2017 at Arrowhead Stadium. For more images from Week 6, visit the Trib’s photo gallery .
Photo by Chaz Palla
“They were the tougher team today,” Chiefs linebacker Derrick Johnson said. “We knew the mindset before the game. We knew it. They were not afraid of us. … Their game plan was very simple: go punch the Chiefs in the mouth and see what they can do. We didn’t respond enough early.” The Chiefs had 6 total yards in the first half and didn’t get a first down until less than two minutes remained. Still, the Steelers led by only nine points after a drive that began at their 1 covered 93 yards but sputtered after a first-and-goal from the 2. Chris Boswell kicked a 24-yard field goal. “You want to get it into the end zone, but obviously it was a good drive,” Bell said. “It gave us confidence we could move the ball on these guys.” Playing one week after throwing a career-high five interceptions and having two returned for touchdowns and proclaiming “maybe I don’t have it anymore,” Roethlisberger completed 17 of 25 passes for 252 yards, one touchdown and one interception. The 97.4 passer rating was his second best of the season. Since 2008, Roethlisberger is 7-0 in the game after he has thrown at least three interceptions. Lifetime, he is 9-3 in such games. “I guess this old cowboy has got a little bit left in him,” Roethlisberger said. His touchdown pass was a 51-yarder to Antonio Brown, whose acrobatic catch-and-run gave the Steelers a 19-10 lead with 3:24 remaining. On third-and-2 and while working out of the shotgun with an empty backfield, Roethlisberger looked for Brown in double coverage on the left sideline. Cornerback Phillip Gaines tipped the ball, but Brown gathered it with his left hand and took off down the field for his eighth and final reception of the day. It gave Brown a game-high 155 receiving yards. “I always bet on AB,” Tomlin said. “I’ve stood on the sideline over the years and watched him work. I can’t tell you that I’m surprised by it.” Tomlin also wasn’t surprised the Chiefs didn’t go down quietly. Smith, after throwing a 57-yard touchdown pass earlier in the quarter, directed a field-goal drive with 2:17 remaining that cut the Steelers’ lead to six points. The Chiefs got the ball back at their 44 with 1:42 remaining following Jordan Berry’s 62-yard punt and Tyreek Hill’s 30-yard return. The Chiefs moved to the Steelers 40 before James Harrison, splitting time with rookie T.J. Watt at right outside linebacker, sacked Smith for an 8-yard loss on third down. On fourth-and-18, Smith was forced into an incompletion, and the Steelers ran out the clock. The defense also stopped a fourth-and-goal from the 2 earlier in the quarter and held Hunt to 21 yards rushing. Smith had 246 yards passing, with almost all of it coming in the final quarter. “Guys pride themselves on getting wins,” Bell said. “That loss we had last week, guys couldn’t wait to come back and play again and recover from that loss. We had a great week of practice, and it showed today. “It wasn’t the prettiest game. We left some plays out on the field, but as a team we played good enough to get the job done.” Joe Rutter is a Tribune-Review staff writer. Reach him at jrutter@tribweb.com or via Twitter @tribjoerutter.
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