Steelers fans show their colors against the Bears on Sunday, Sept. 24, 2017, at Soldier Field in Chicago. For more images from Week 3, visit the Trib's photo gallery.
Photo by Chaz Palla
They did appear poised to pull to within four as the first half was winding down when Chris Boswell attempted a 35-yard field goal. Boswell and holder Jordan Berry said that the snap and hold were crisp. But McManis came clean from around the far left side of the Steelers' field-goal formation, around Xavier Grimble. "A miss by me," Grimble said. What followed were several bizarre minutes — the details of the ensuing return, fumble and penalties are not germane to the ultimate result of a Bears field goal that turned what would have been a 14-10 score into a 17-7 Bears halftime lead. Put together with the touchdown soon after the Rogers punt-return muff, and that's a minus-13 for the Steelers when it comes to net point margin from its special teams gaffes in the first half. "If you look at it that way," Berry said, "we wouldn't have been in an overtime situation." "We lacked a little bit of execution there, obviously," said tight end Jesse James, who's typically part of the field goal team but was not on the field for that one because he suffered a minor shoulder injury. "In the NFL, field-goal blocks will kill you every time. Big play. And the game is not defined with one play, one phase, but we got to get better so something like that doesn't kill us down the road." Special teams errors have killed the Steelers in losses to inferior teams — not unlike how big special teams plays the past two weeks helped them win games against the Browns and Vikings. "We know that to be a good team, things like (what happened Sunday) can't happen," Berry said. Chris Adamski is a Tribune-Review staff writer. Reach him at cadamski@tribweb.com or via Twitter @C_AdamskiTrib.
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