Sports. Honestly. Since 2011

Despite Loss: Roethlisberger Outplayed Brady in Opener

It’s great to have the NFL back. Unless you’re living in Pittsburgh, that is.

The 28-21 final score was aided by a garbage time touchdown drive from Pittsburgh, and an absolutely terrible performance by the Steel Curtain defense. The coaching and game plan in general played scared, with Pittsburgh punting down 14 with about 8:30 left in the 4th quarter.

The main story throughout Friday will be Tom Brady’s four touchdown performance, as well as Rob Gronkowski’s three touchdowns. But below the surface, I feel it’s Ben Roethlisberger that deserves to be talked about right now.

This Is NOT Clickbait: Roethlisberger Outplayed Brady

You might be looking at the above headline and dismissing this article already. Big Ben went 26/38 for 351 yards, 1 touchdown, and 1 interception, while Brady was 25/32 for 288 yards, 4 touchdowns, and 0 interceptions. Surely Brady blew out Roethlisberger performance-wise, right?

Think again. Going solely by box score ignores different playing styles, as well as the defenses both teams were facing.

Tom Brady was effective Thursday Night, at one point completion 19 consecutive passes (all-time record is 24 by Donovan McNabb). The truth, however, is that most of his completions came on easy plays. For unexplainable reasons, the Steelers left Gronk and Julian Edelman wide open all night, allowing Brady to make the easy throws. The short game was also relieved heavily on, as receivers were constantly uncovered on New England’s dink and dunk offense. Brady’s stat-line LOOKS impressive, but he made very few impressive throws overall.

In other words, Brady played well, but his stats look so gaudy because the Steelers’ defense screwed up on coverage and tackling (Take for example Brady’s second touchdown pass; After Gronkowski broke a tackle, corner Antwon Blake had a clear shot to tackle Gronkowski short of the end zone, but simply half-assed his way there, allowing the dominant tight end to easily score a touchdown).

On the other hand, Roethlisberger played a more impressive game. He was far more accurate on the money ball, and got screwed over by inconsistent play from his receivers. Markus Wheaton failed at the catch point a couple of times, and these came on pinpoint accurate passes from Roethlisberger. Darrius Heyward-Bey stepped out of bounds on what should have been a touchdown catch on an impressive deep throw from Roethlisberger, and took an ill-advised slide short of the first down late in the game. The conservative play calling and gratuitous trick plays from Todd Haley destroyed any hopes of momentum Roethlisberger and the Steelers had worked hard on.

I’m not really tough on Roethlisberger’s late interception either. Yeah, it wasn’t a good throw (RE: underthrown), but when you’re down multiple possessions in the fourth quarter, you have to force a big play somehow.

Despite an awful performance from his surrounding cast (not including running back DeAngelo Williams, who had a surprisingly good game), Roethlisberger ended up throwing for 351 yards. While an amount of this was achieved in garbage time, the Steelers receivers and poor coaching left a lot of yards and points on the field, so it somewhat evens out in my opinion.

The Steelers’ offensive line was surprisingly good, giving Roethlisberger clean pockets and time to throw, as well as providing ample run blocking for Williams, all this in spite of the loss of center Maurkice Pouncey.

The bad news is that if Pittsburgh’s defense (and Josh Scobee, who missed two field goals tonight, WITHOUT wind) continues to look this way, Big Ben will be asked to do too much to get the Steelers wins. It’s a shame, because he is a top five quarterback coming off an elite season in 2014.

I’m already regretting choosing the Steelers as my AFC North champions.

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