Weidman: Here's what's going to happen: Chiefs win the toss, they elect to receive, then they finally play like the Chiefs and turn the ball over. Suisham wins it with a field goal.
Me: Turnover could also be a pick six. That also works.
Weidman: No. Suisham needs to win it. That's what needs to happen.
Me: OK, then. That works, too.
The game played out exactly as Weidman had foreseen it. That was the coolest thing that happened last night.
Sure, the Steelers won, which was cool. But, it was cool like finding out that the girl you hooked up with at the bar last month isn't pregnant. Or cool like discovering that the Check Engine light in your car came on because it had been more than six months since your last oil change. It's more a feeling of relief than anything.
Good news first:
- A win is a win. Lest you forget, I am always here to point that fact out, especially after an especially ugly victory.
- The Steelers committed fewer penalties and allowed fewer sacks than Kansas City. I don't care if the Chiefs are 1-7, that's still something that's good to keep track of, especially this season.
- Even though the defense didn't force turnovers in the quantities we expected, they got one when it really mattered.
- You can talk all you want about how the defense choked and allowed a 4th and 15 conversion that led to Kansas City tying the game, but they also held Matt Cassel to a 46 quarterback rating and held Jamaal Charles in check in the second half. The game could've gotten out of hand early in the first or midway through the third, but the defense didn't allow that to happen.
- Lawrence Timmons is having himself one hell of a season.
- Looks like Ben Roethlisberger isn't done for the season, which is kind of what I expected to hear this morning after watching his right arm dangle at his side as he left the field last night.
- They didn't run the ball effectively. That allowed the secondary to play tight on the Steelers receivers, which allowed the cornerbacks to fill in hard in run support, which led to even less effective running. I think it was a combination of a strong effort by the Chiefs defensive line, a lackluster performance by the interior of the Steeler offensive line, and the fact that Mike Tomlin benched Isaac Redman after he fumbled in the first quarter. Redman came back, but neither he nor Jonathan Dwyer was able to find a rhythm. It was a little bit of all those factors, but deciding to take Redman out was the only thing that could really be controlled. I think it held the running game back, but I might also just be mad because Redman's on my fantasy team and I needed another big game out of him.
- Jon Gruden was droning on about the fact that the Chiefs were carving the left side of the Steeler defense up in the run game. At least he was in the first half, when they were. In the second half, when Ziggy Hood started staying in his lanes and engaging two blockers by shooting the gap like he's supposed to, Gruden didn't mention why they were no longer having success on that side. Hood didn't suddenly forget what he was supposed to do, he's just inconsistent. Gap discipline and tackling fundamentals had been two strong areas for the defense the last month. In the first half, they weren't there, which is part of the reason Kansas City jumped to a 10-0 lead. Again, not taking anything away from the Chiefs offensive line, but that's part of the reason they were successful.
- With five minutes remaining in the third quarter, Byron Leftwich decided he wanted to throw a pass. He's still winding up. Dear God, it takes forever for that man to throw a football. With the way the protection has been against quality pass rushers, that's going to be an issue. Oh, hey, look at that! They play the hated Ravens next week.
- They're going to have trouble throwing the ball and running the ball without Roethlisberger in the line-up, as evidenced by their production on offense in the second half.
- One turnover forced in 4+ quarters, zero turnovers forced in regulation, against one of the most generous offenses in the history of the NFL.
- Really, I could nit pick about a dozen or so different things, but the important thing is that the Chiefs managed to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory and the Steelers got a win.
As much as I like to kid Leftwich for taking 35 minutes to wind up and throw a pass and Charlie Batch for being 100 years old, they're not bad quarterbacks. Earlier today, I was talking to a couple of guys I work with and I described Leftwich as "about average" and Batch as "not awesome." What exactly that means is up for interpretation (hi there, Comments section!), but there's no getting around this fact: Neither of those guys is anywhere near as good as Ben Roethlisberger.
They'll be able to win some games with Leftwich or Batch under center -- they may, possibly, even be able to split with Baltimore -- but they're not winning the division with those guys and they're definitely not making a playoff run without Roethlisberger.
Basically, the really bad news is that we all just have to wait and see just how bad Ben's shoulder is hurt and how long it will take for him to come back.
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