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12/21/05
12/21/05
Steelers have a lot riding on Cleveland visit
Wednesday, December 21, 2005
<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD>[FONT=Verdana, Times New Roman, arial, helvetica, sans-serif]By Steve Doerschuk REPOSITORY SPORTS WRITER [/FONT]
STEELERS AT BROWNS
Saturday, 1 p.m.
Cleveland Browns Stadium
TV Channel 19
In an eternity of not quite three years, the Steelers crashed and self-repaired.
Meanwhile, the Browns crashed and junked a regime.
On Jan. 5, 2003, Cleveland had a statement victory in its clutches. Dennis Northcutt needed to make a simple sideline catch with time almost gone, and Pittsburgh would be toast in a playoff game.
Northcutt dropped the ball. The Steelers forced a punt and overturned a 33-28 Cleveland lead.
Pittsburgh fell to 6-10 the next year, but rebounded to 15-1 in 2004 and is 9-5 heading into a Christmas Eve game at Cleveland.
The Browns are 14-32 since that snowy day.
Pittsburgh Head Coach Bill Cowher champions the Browns-Steelers rivalry as much as any Pennsylvanian. It’s doubtful his team will look past Cleveland.
“This may be the stiffest challenge we’ve faced,” Cowher said. “It’s a divisional rivalry, an away game on a short week.”
Romeo Crennel’s Browns are 2-3 since getting manhandled at Pittsburgh in November.
“Any time you’re looking at a first-year coach,” Cowher said, “you don’t look at the record as much as what they’re trying to build.”
The Browns’ tenuous optimism after Charlie Frye’s first NFL win butts with a reality check against Pittsburgh.
For the last time, perhaps, it’s a butt against “The Bus.” Power back Jerome Bettis is running on fumes, but could be busy against the Browns’ soft run defense.
GRAND AGAINST BROWNS
Going on 34, Bettis can become the only man to personally rush for 1,000 yards against Cleveland. He has 935 yards in 12 previous games against the Browns.
In last year’s game at Cleveland, in mid-November, Bettis ran for 103 yards and two touchdowns.
The teams’ first 2005 meeting was in mid-November at Pittsburgh. The Steelers repelled an early threat and won convincingly, 34-21. They were 7-2, had won at Cincinnati, and looked like championship material. That excited Bettis, since Super Bowl XL will be in Detroit, his hometown.
Then Pittsburgh plunged. Consecutive losses at Baltimore (20-19), at Indianapolis (26-7) and at home against the Bengals (38-31) left them at 7-5.
They rebounded against Chicago and its rookie quarterback, Kyle Orton, winning 21-9, then cooled off Minnesota, 18-3, on Sunday in the Metrodome.
Speedy Willie Parker missed mid-season time due to injury, but has resumed being the main runner. He needs 63 yards at Cleveland to reach 1,000 for 2005.
FRYE’S OLD FRIEND
Quarterback Ben Roethlisberger is back from an injury, and eager to face his Mid-American Conference pal, Frye, for the first time.
Friends? Frye was Roethlisberger’s guest at a Steelers home playoff game in January, before the Browns drafted Frye.
“Every game now is like a playoff game,” Roethlisberger told Pittsburgh writers. “If we do make the playoffs, it’s going to be on the road.
“It’s a one-game season ... this week at Cleveland.”
Roethlisberger is 52-of-76 for 708 yards in three games since returning from a thumb injury. Frye is 56-of-88 for 620 yards in three starts and parts of two other games.
“Charlie’s been able to handle everything that’s come his way pretty well,” Crennel said.
Steelers wideout Hines Ward is having a below-average year. He caught two passes for 11 yards at Minnesota and has 61 catches for 830 yards on the season. Former Pitt star Antonio Bryant, the Browns’ No. 1 receiver, has 56 catches for 836 yards.
Browns General Manager Phil Savage said Heath Miller was the only tight end he’d have considered drafting in this year’s second round. The Steelers made sure he didn’t get there, picking the Virginia star at No. 30. He had a 50-yard catch Sunday and has six touchdowns on the season.
BET ON SMASH-MOUTH
Mouthy Joey Porter is back as the ringleader of Pittsburgh’s defense. Porter got shot in the buttocks before the 2003 season, then had an off year. At Minnesota on Sunday, he recorded his eighth 2005 sack, picked off a pass at a key time and was in a tackle that produced a safety.
The Vikings got suffocated after falling behind, netting 25 yards in the second half. Linebacker James Farrior, who had a career year in 2004, led the Steelers with nine tackles.
Chris Gardocki punted like he was 25, not 35, in the Metrodome, averaging 47 yards. There’s no domeball on Lake Erie, but Gardocki was a Brown from 1999-2003, and he knows the witch winds.
The game could boil down to the Frye factor vs. the Steelers’ love of smash-mouth — they do that well with or without Bettis.
Pittsburgh is near the league lead with 129.6 rushing yards a game. The Browns have one of the worst run defenses, allowing 133.1 yards a game.
The Browns can finish no better than 7-9.
“Nothing would satisfy them more,” Cowher said, “than if they knocked us out of the playoffs.”
Reach Repository sports writer Steve Doerschuk at (330) 580-8347 or e-mail: [email protected]
Pitt points
The Steelers ...
Can finish with a 6-2 road record by winning at Cleveland.
Are 147-91-1 in 14 years under Bill Cowher, including 8-9 in the postseason and 17-5 vs. Cleveland.
Are 98-1-1 under Cowher after building at least an 11-point lead.
Are 95-21-1 under Cowher when they score first.
Hadn’t won in a dome since 1996 before beating the Vikings, 18-3, on Sunday. Are 21-4 with Ben Roethlisberger as their starting quarterback, 7-3 this year. Trail the Browns, 55-52, in the all-time series but lead, 43-24, since 1970.
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