reflections
Roethlisberger leads Steelers to 35-7 win over…

PITTSBURGH — The Pittsburgh Steelers needed just 15 minutes to provide the Cincinnati Bengals a refresher course on what it takes to win in December.

Run the ball. Create turnovers. A big play or two on special teams helps. So does having a quarterback who knows what he’s doing when the games dwindle to a precious few.

It’s a formula the defending AFC champions have used for years. It has rarely looked as effective as it did in a 35-7 win Sunday.

Ben Roethlisberger threw two touchdown passes to Mike Wallace, Rashard Mendenhall ran for two more and the Steelers used an explosive second quarter to crush error-prone Cincinnati.

“We’re in it now,” linebacker James Farrior said. “Right now is our time. … We already started our playoffs.”

It certainly looked like it as Pittsburgh (9-3) swept the season series from Cincinnati (7-5) for the second straight year to end any realistic hopes the Bengals have of winning the AFC North.

“It’s tough,” said Cincinnati wide receiver A.J. Green, who caught an 11-yard touchdown pass but also committed a false start penalty that wiped out another score. “We shot ourselves in the foot sometimes. Being the veteran team they are, they capitalized on everything we did.”

It’s what the Steelers do this time of year.

Pittsburgh has been a mixed bag at times this season, often playing to the level of the competition, regardless of who it is.

The same team that handled New England with ease six weeks ago is the same one that barely escaped woeful Kansas City with a win last Sunday night, raising concerns about Roethlisberger’s fractured right thumb, the running game and a defense nursing injuries to safety Troy Polamalu (concussion) and LaMarr Woodley (hamstring).

There were no anxious final moments against the Bengals. Pittsburgh’s best quarter of the season left little room for doubt, scoring four touchdowns in a span of less than 12 minutes to break it open.

“Finally,” Wallace said. “We always make it harder than it has to be. Today, we came out with a lot of emotion and a lot of energy. The guys just wanted to win. We knew what we had to do. It’s getting closer to the playoffs and it’s time for us to get better.”

While the Bengals appear to be getting worse.

Rookie quarterback Andy Dalton passed for just 135 yards, was sacked three times by Pittsburgh linebacker James Harrison and spent the fourth quarter on the bench as a preventative measure with the game out of reach.

“We can’t let this hurt us,” Dalton said. “We can’t let this affect the next four.”

Blocking it out might be tough.

Cincinnati coach Marvin Lewis did little to downplay the game’s importance, practically admitting his team’s hopes for an outside shot at a divisional title would all but disappear if his surprising team couldn’t earn a split with the Steelers.

The Bengals hung tough in a 24-17 loss to Pittsburgh three weeks ago, the kind of gritty performance that gave them hope they could earn a split with their division rivals and stay alive in their quest for a second division title in three seasons.

No chance.

Thrust into the role of contender, the Bengals wilted in the spotlight, reverting back to the kind of mistakes they’ve avoided while rebuilding on the fly behind the tandem of Dalton and Green. Cincinnati committed 10 penalties for 109 yards and offered little resistance to lose for the third time in four games.

“They beat us in every area today — beat us on offense, beat us on defense, beat us in special teams,” Lewis said.

Roethlisberger, who aggravated his injured thumb in practice during the week, overcame a slow start to complete 15 of 23 passes for 176 yards and the two scores to Wallace. His final completion, a 9-yard toss to tight end David Johnson in the fourth quarter, was the 2,026th of his career, breaking Hall of Famer Terry Bradshaw’s club record.

“It’s obviously an awesome honor,” Roethlisberger said. “Anytime you break a guy like that’s record, it’s a great thing.”

It was that kind of day for Pittsburgh. Wide receiver Hines Ward became the 19th player in NFL history to eclipse 12,000 career yards while Harrison joined Chad Brown and Mike Merriweather as the only players in team history to record at least two three-sack games in the same season.

“You have to start playing good, all-around football,” Ward said. “Today, we displayed that.”

The Bengals did not.

Cincinnati’s miscues started early. Green flinched ever so slightly just before the snap to negate a 4-yard touchdown pass from Dalton to Jermaine Gresham on the Bengals’ opening possession.

Mike Nugent came out to kick a short field goal only to have it called back after being flagged for delay of game. Nugent’s kick never had a shot the second time around. Rookie Cam Heyward swatted it out of harm’s way to record Pittsburgh’s first blocked kick in more than two years.

It’s as close as the Bengals would get to making it interesting.

Mendenhall, who has been erratic, gave the Steelers the lead with a 3-yard touchdown run early in the second quarter. He upped the lead to 14-0 with a nifty 5-yard cutback run.

The Bengals continued to self-destruct on the ensuing kickoff when Brandon Tate fumbled and the Steelers recovered at the Cincinnati 23. Roethlisberger needed just three plays to hit Wallace for a 12-yard score to make it 21-0.

Dalton found Green for an 11-yard score to briefly give the Bengals life, but Antonio Brown extinguished any momentum with a scintillating 60-yard punt return just before the half that gave the Steelers a 28-7 lead at the break.

The Bengals came in with an NFL-record three double-digit second half rallies, but not this time. Playing with a lead Pittsburgh’s defense teed off on Dalton and sent fans sprinting to the exits early with victory in hand.

“It’s just embarrassing,” Cincinnati defensive back Chris Crocker said. “You don’t feel good at all. When they’re beating you so bad that their fans leave, that’s just a bad feeling.”

Notes: The Steelers have swept the Bengals seven times in the last 11 seasons. … Woodley started for the first time since getting hurt against New England on Oct. 30, but left in the first half after “tweaking” his left hamstring according to Tomlin. … Pittsburgh hosts Cleveland on Thursday night, while the Bengals host Houston on Sunday.

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Cedric Benson Fantasy Stats: Cincinnati Bengals RB…

Cincinnati Bengals running back Cedric Benson had a quiet afternoon against the Pittsburgh Steelers. He wound up running the ball just 13 times for 52 yards. The Steelers’ strong defense held the Bengals to just seven points, an Andy Dalton touchdown pass to A.J. Green.

His one-game suspension just a distant memory, Benson played a big part in the Cincinnati Bengals surprising resurgence this season. Last week, Benson rolled up 106 rushing yards on 21 carries. He also scored a touchdown in win over the Cleveland Browns. 

Running gets a little tougher in Week 13. Benson was ranked 30th out of all NFL running backs this week, according to Fake Teams, SB Nation’s fantasy sports site. Through 12 weeks of play, Benson had 740 rushing yards on 188 carries with five touchdowns. 

For more on Benson and the Bengals, check out Cincy Jungle. Be sure to follow @SBNationFantasy on Twitter as well. 

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Surging Steelers stay hot, crush Bengals, 35-7

PITTSBURGH — The Pittsburgh Steelers needed just 15 minutes to provide the Cincinnati Bengals a refresher course on what it takes to win in December.

Run the ball. Create turnovers. A big play or two on special teams helps. So does having a quarterback who knows what he’s doing when the games dwindle to a precious few.

It’s a formula the defending AFC champions have used for years. It has rarely looked as effective as it did in a 35-7 win Sunday.

Ben Roethlisberger threw two touchdown passes to Mike Wallace, Rashard Mendenhall ran for two more and the Steelers used an explosive second quarter to crush error-prone Cincinnati.

“We’re in it now,” linebacker James Farrior said. “Right now is our time. … We already started our playoffs.”

It certainly looked like it as Pittsburgh (9-3) swept the season series from Cincinnati (7-5) for the second straight year to end any realistic hopes the Bengals have of winning the AFC North.

“It’s tough,” said Cincinnati wide receiver A.J. Green, who caught an 11-yard touchdown pass but also committed a false start penalty that wiped out another score. “We shot ourselves in the foot sometimes. Being the veteran team they are, they capitalized on everything we did.”

It’s what the Steelers do this time of year.

Pittsburgh has been a mixed bag at times this season, often playing to the level of the competition, regardless of who it is.

The same team that handled New England with ease six weeks ago is the same one that barely escaped woeful Kansas City with a win last Sunday night, raising concerns about Roethlisberger’s fractured right thumb, the running game and a defense nursing injuries to safety Troy Polamalu (concussion) and LaMarr Woodley (hamstring).

There were no anxious final moments against the Bengals. Pittsburgh’s best quarter of the season left little room for doubt, scoring four touchdowns in a span of less than 12 minutes to break it open.

“Finally,” Wallace said. “We always make it harder than it has to be. Today, we came out with a lot of emotion and a lot of energy. The guys just wanted to win. We knew what we had to do. It’s getting closer to the playoffs and it’s time for us to get better.”

While the Bengals appear to be getting worse.

Rookie quarterback Andy Dalton passed for just 135 yards, was sacked three times by Pittsburgh linebacker James Harrison and spent the fourth quarter on the bench as a preventative measure with the game out of reach.

“We can’t let this hurt us,” Dalton said. “We can’t let this affect the next four.”

Blocking it out might be tough.

Cincinnati coach Marvin Lewis did little to downplay the game’s importance, practically admitting his team’s hopes for an outside shot at a divisional title would all but disappear if his surprising team couldn’t earn a split with the Steelers.

The Bengals hung tough in a 24-17 loss to Pittsburgh three weeks ago, the kind of gritty performance that gave them hope they could earn a split with their division rivals and stay alive in their quest for a second division title in three seasons.

No chance.

Thrust into the role of contender, the Bengals wilted in the spotlight, reverting back to the kind of mistakes they’ve avoided while rebuilding on the fly behind the tandem of Dalton and Green. Cincinnati committed 10 penalties for 109 yards and offered little resistance to lose for the third time in four games.

“They beat us in every area today — beat us on offense, beat us on defense, beat us in special teams,” Lewis said.

Roethlisberger, who aggravated his injured thumb in practice during the week, overcame a slow start to complete 15 of 23 passes for 176 yards and the two scores to Wallace. His final completion, a 9-yard toss to tight end David Johnson in the fourth quarter, was the 2,026th of his career, breaking Hall of Famer Terry Bradshaw’s club record.

“It’s obviously an awesome honor,” Roethlisberger said. “Anytime you break a guy like that’s record, it’s a great thing.”

It was that kind of day for Pittsburgh. Wide receiver Hines Ward became the 19th player in NFL history to eclipse 12,000 career yards while Harrison joined Chad Brown and Mike Merriweather as the only players in team history to record at least two three-sack games in the same season.

“You have to start playing good, all-around football,” Ward said. “Today, we displayed that.”

The Bengals did not.

Cincinnati’s miscues started early. Green flinched ever so slightly just before the snap to negate a 4-yard touchdown pass from Dalton to Jermaine Gresham on the Bengals’ opening possession.

Mike Nugent came out to kick a short field goal only to have it called back after being flagged for delay of game. Nugent’s kick never had a shot the second time around. Rookie Cam Heyward swatted it out of harm’s way to record Pittsburgh’s first blocked kick in more than two years.

It’s as close as the Bengals would get to making it interesting.

Mendenhall, who has been erratic, gave the Steelers the lead with a 3-yard touchdown run early in the second quarter. He upped the lead to 14-0 with a nifty 5-yard cutback run.

The Bengals continued to self-destruct on the ensuing kickoff when Brandon Tate fumbled and the Steelers recovered at the Cincinnati 23. Roethlisberger needed just three plays to hit Wallace for a 12-yard score to make it 21-0.

Dalton found Green for an 11-yard score to briefly give the Bengals life, but Brown extinguished any momentum with a scintillating 60-yard punt return just before the half that gave the Steelers a 28-7 lead at the break.

The Bengals came in with an NFL-record three double-digit second half rallies, but not this time. Playing with a lead Pittsburgh’s defense teed off on Dalton and sent fans sprinting to the exits early with victory in hand.

“It’s just embarrassing,” Cincinnati defensive back Chris Crocker said. “You don’t feel good at all. When they’re beating you so bad that their fans leave, that’s just a bad feeling.”

Notes: The Steelers have swept the Bengals seven times in the last 11 seasons. … Woodley started for the first time since getting hurt against New England on Oct. 30, but left in the first half after “tweaking” his left hamstring according to Tomlin. … Pittsburgh hosts Cleveland on Thursday night, while the Bengals host Houston on Sunday.

That’s all for today guys, i’ll be back to blog you tomorrow.

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It’s up to A.J. Green to spark Bengals
A.J. GREEN
Cincinnati Bengals’ spectacular rookie wide receiver A.J. Green (18) catches a 36-yard touchdown pass under pressure from Pittsburgh Steelers’ Troy Polamalu (43) and Ryan Clark (25) during a game earlier this month. (REUTERS)

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Here it is already, another measuring stick type of game for the wannabe Cincinnati Bengals.

Three weeks back the Bengals were 6-2, had won five consecutive games and had the Pittsburgh Steelers at home.

It was time, the thinking went, for this Cincinnati team to take that next bold step and beat one of the big boys in their division.

They didn’t, dropping a 24-17 decision, a game in which they trailed 14-0, tied it at 17 and then after giving up the go-ahead touchdown, watched rookie quarterback Andy Dalton throw two fourth-quarter interceptions.

The next week they had a second, are-we-ready game, this one in Baltimore against the Ravens and they lost that one by a TD as well, 31-24.

Last week the Bengals staged a rally against the offensively challenged Cleveland Browns to win 23-20 to put them at 7-4 and against the Steelers again, this time on the road at Heinz Field.

You figure that one of these days this Bengals team will break through and on Sunday it may well be a big game from rookie wide receiver A.J. Green that provides the spark they are looking for.

In the first game against Pittsburgh, Green injured his right knee making a leaping TD grab between two Steelers defenders and didn’t play in the second half or the following game against Baltimore.

He came back to help the comeback against Cleveland and the hope for Cincinnati fans is that he will provide the big game-changing plays on Sunday.

Green already has proved that the Bengals found a sure thing by plucking him in the first round and fourth overall.

“He is the best first-round draft pick that I’ve ever been around,” Cincinnati coach Marvin Lewis said of Green. “He continues to amaze me every day.”

In the Bengals’ wins this season, Green has 29 catches for 556 yards and four touchdowns. In their losses, he has 15 receptions for 189 yards and two touchdowns.

“Whenever my number’s called, I’m going to try and make the play,” Green said. “When that ball is in the air, I feel it’s mine.”

He has made enough plays to gain the confidence of Dalton. He can throw a jump ball and have the faith that Green will come down with it like he did in the end zone in the first meeting.

“You can take chances with him,” Dalton said. “If I put the ball around him, he will go and make a play on it. A.J. is a special player.”

He has shown enough to impress Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin.

“He plays big, particularly down the field,” Tomlin said. “He has great top-end speed, which also creates problems down the field. He has unique short area quickness for a guy of his stature. He has a lot of special talents that warrant special consideration.”

On Sunday, Green could be the difference.

TOUGH IN TEXAS

You have to wonder if the football gods just love messing with the Houston Texans.

After apparently giving the Texans the keys to the kingdom by having Texans-killer Peyton Manning out for the season, the football gods are now reeling in their playoff hopes by knocking out starting quarterback Matt Schaub two weeks ago and last week, kicking backup Matt Leinart to the sidelines for the rest of the season with a broken collarbone.

So now it’s up to rookie quarterback T.J Yates to lead the Texans to their first playoff game in the 10-year history of the franchise.

Last week against Jacksonville, Yates took over in the second half after Leinart went down and in nine series, produced just one first down. On the plus side, he completed 8 of 15 passes for 70 yards and did not commit a turnover.

The Texans boast a stiff defence and a tremendous running game but in the Atlanta Falcons and Matt Ryan they couldn’t have picked a tougher opponent for Yates to make his first start against — this side of the Green Bay Packers anyway.

The Texans will be looking to keep it on the ground, grind it out and keep Ryan and company on the sidelines.

Their worst nightmare is for the Falcons to build a lead and force Yates to win the game through the air.

Due to their 8-3 record, the Texans can afford a stumble or two as they are two games up on the 6-5 Titans.

They don’t, however, want their season to come down to the final week of the regular season, a home match against the Titans.

 

That’s all for today.

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Bengals seeking to gain ground on division-leading…

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