Second Thoughts

Steelers' QB doesn't seem to remember

Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger developed a case of selective memory when it came to the team’s clock management in the latter stages of Sunday’s loss to the New England Patriots.
Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger developed a case of selective memory when it came to the team’s clock management in the latter stages of Sunday’s loss to the New England Patriots.

Having a short-term memory as a quarterback is generally seen as a good trait to have, particularly after a negative play, but Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger may be taking that ability to a different level.

According to an online story by ESPN writer Jeremy Fowler, Roethlisberger said he doesn't remember what was lacking in the Steelers' game-planning in the final seconds of their 27-24 loss to New England on Sunday.

After a 3-yard gain to the 7-yard line with 22 seconds left, the Steelers were left scrambling for a play as the clock ticked. Roethlisberger attempted a fake spike, then threw to Eli Rogers over the middle. Several Patriots were in the area of the ball, and safety Duron Harmon came up with the interception off a deflection.

"You know what, the great and crazy thing about all that is it was last week and we can move on now," said Roethlisberger, whose Steelers play the Houston Texans on Christmas Day. "We don't have to sit and dwell and have hindsight and 20/20 vision or whatever else they call it. ... [The Patriots game] wasn't the last one of the year. It wasn't the playoff game where we're having the final meetings and that stuff. We get to move on and play another game this week against a really good opponent at their place."

Asked about late-game planning, Roethlisberger said the Steelers have a "great communication environment" between himself and the head coach, coordinator, assistants and offensive line.

Asked why that communication seemed to have issues in the final seconds, Roethlisberger said, "I don't really remember, to tell you the truth. Because it's so long ago now."

Roethlisberger said on his weekly radio show Tuesday that his biggest regret from the game was not having two play calls ready to go after officials reversed Jesse James' touchdown catch with 28 seconds left.

Coach Mike Tomlin said this week that he ordered Roethlisberger to run a play instead of spiking the ball in an effort to catch the Patriots off guard. Roethlisberger said after the game he had planned on spiking it.

In his last three games following a loss to New England, Roethlisberger has a 2-1 record and is 68 of 108 passing for 896 yards, 6 passing touchdowns, 2 interceptions and 1 rushing score.

This time, he must put up numbers without Antonio Brown, who's out with what Tomlin called a "significant" lower leg contusion.

"AB, you can't replace him with one man. AB is not human," Roethlisberger said. "We'll have multiple guys trying to fill that spot. But I know we've got guys who are excited and willing to fill those shoes ... that includes me, too, I'm going to have to be better."

Bet they're bad

The Chicago Bears have not been a good football team under Coach John Fox, which is why they've been favored just seven times in Fox's three years ... and why they've lost all seven times they were favored.

Chicago's record under Fox is 0-7 as a favorite and 13-26 as an underdog. That's not good, but it's particularly bad to lose every time you're expected to win.

On Sunday, the Bears are expected to win: They're hosting the Cleveland Browns, who head into Chicago as a 6 1/2-point underdog as of today.

The Browns, of course, are a bad team to bet on as well. They're the worst team in the NFL at 0-14, but they're also the worst team in the NFL against the spread at 3-11.

Sports quiz

Where did Chicago Bears Coach John Fox play college football?

Answer

San Diego State, where he was a teammate of Arizona State Coach Herman Edwards.

Sports on 12/22/2017

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