By Teresa
Varley
Steelers.com
After a slow start the Steelers
scored on three straight possessions to build an insurmountable lead and defeat
the Seattle Seahawks 21-0 at Heinz Field.
The win improves the Steelers record
to 4-1 as they head into their bye week, while Seattle dropped to 3-2.
“We didn’t start the way we wanted
to offensively,” said head coach Mike Tomlin. “It was a tough scenario, a tough
situation. We knew they were going to pack the box and stop the run, because of
our wideout situation. I am sure it became obvious to them quickly that we only
had three wideouts suited. We had to pound the rock and eventually because the
guys stayed together and stuck to the plan, they broke it. They broke
through.”
The Steelers opened the game with one wide receiver on the
sideline with Hines Ward inactive and soon had another one joining him. Santonio
Holmes did not start because of a hamstring injury suffered during pre-game
warm-ups. The team was also without starting safety Troy Polamalu and nose
tackle Casey Hampton, both inactive due to injuries.
“I am so happy and proud of this
football team,” said Tomlin. “We saw a bunch of adversity today. They showed
their character today. It is something that I knew we had. It was a total team
effort. You could talk about identifying different guys that did big things and
responded, but you couldn’t pick them. Everybody in a helmet today was a
playmaker.”
Heath Miller pulled in a 13-yard
touchdown reception on the team’s final drive of the first half and Najeh
Davenport added two rushing touchdowns on the next two possessions.
“He has done a heck of a job for
us,” said Tomlin of Davenport. “Not just in terms of stepping up and making
plays today, but he has been a situational sparkplug for us all year. It is a
credit to him.”
Willie Parker had his fourth
100-yard rushing game of the season, carrying the ball 28 times for 102 yards.
Ben Roethlisberger completed 18 of 22 passes for 206 yards and a
touchdown.
The defense was swarming all day,
not allowing the Seahawks to ever establish an offensive attack. Matt Hasselbeck
completed 13 passes for 116 yards and an interception, before being replaced
mid-way through the fourth quarter by Seneca Wallace. Shaun Alexander had 11
carries and was held to a mere 25 yards on the ground.
The Seahawks
opened on offense with Hasselbeck connecting with Deion Branch for a seven-yard
gain. Hasselbeck found fullback Leonard Weaver for a three-yard gain for a fist
down at the Seattle 31-yard line. Hasselbeck threw incomplete to Maurice Morris,
but Alexander came back with a six-yard carry. The Seahawks weren’t able to
convert on their second third down attempt of the game and were forced to
punt.
With both of their starting wide
receivers on the sideline the offense went to work. Roethlisberger didn’t waste
any time going to Nate Washington, who started for Ward, for a 14-yard gain.
Parker struggled to get yardage, with a two-yard gain and then being knocked for
a four-yard loss. Roethlisberger went to Davenport for a seven-yard gain, but it
wasn’t enough and they punted on their first possession as well.
Alexander was stuffed for a one-yard
gain and incompletion set the Seahawks up for a long third-and-nine. Hasselbeck
looked over the middle and found Bobby Engram for a 14-yard gain to the Seattle
30-yard line. The defense then put the clamps on and Seattle had to punt for the
second time.
The Steelers offense continued to
struggle to get moving. Parker went off right tackle for a six-yard gain, but
two incomplete passes forced a three-and-out.
The defensive battle continued with
neither team being able to do anything with the ball on their next possessions
and the first three drives of the game for both teams ending in punts.
The Seahawks showed signs of life on
offense on their next drive, going into Steelers territory, the first time
either team crossed the 50-yard line in the game. On third-and-13 from the
Steelers 38-yard line the defense stepped up again when James Farrior sacked
Hasselbeck for a seven-yard loss.
Seattle backed the Steelers up on
their own one-yard line on the ensuing drive. It looked like they wouldn’t go
anywhere, but on third-and-three Roethlisberger hit Willie Reid for a 25-yard
gain to their 33-yard line. Cedrick Wilson pulled in an eight-yard reception and
Parker had a one-yard run, setting up third-and-one. Roethlisberger took it
himself, going up the middle for the first down. Julian Peterson sacked
Roethlisberger for a nine-yard loss on the next play. On third-and-19 the
Steelers came up short when Roethlisberger was forced by blanket coverage to
dump it off to Davenport for only six yards.
The defense stepped up again and
held the Seahawks, putting the ball right back into the hands of the offense and
they made it count.
Parker had a four-yard gain, but
then got hit for a one-yard loss. Miller fought for the first down on an
eight-yard catch to keep things moving for the Steelers. Lofa Tatupu blitzed on
the next play and was untouched when he sacked Roethlisberger for an eight-yard
loss. Davenport gave the offense a spark when he broke free of defenders for a
45-yard run to the Seahawks 20-yard line. Parker got a three-yard carry and
Roethlisberger went to Carey Davis for a four-yard gain, giving the Steelers a
third down at the two-minute warning.
Roethlisberger went back to Miller,
who pulled in the 13-yard pass in the end zone for a touchdown, giving the
Steelers a 7-0 lead.
Seattle responded on offense with
Hasselbeck driving them down the field thanks to a 30-yard completion to Ben
Obamanu. Hasselbeck was sacked for a four-yard loss. Hasselbeck hit Marcus
Pollard for a 22-yard gain, and safety Anthony Smith was flagged for a 15-yard
roughing the passer call, giving Seattle the ball at the Steelers 14-yard
line.
With the pressure on them, the
defense responded. Ike Taylor, who earlier had his hands on a potential
interception, intercepted Hasselbeck at the goal line to send the Steelers into
the half up 7-0.
The Steelers started the second half
at their own 20-yard line and despite being hampered by three holding penalties,
multiple third-and-longs and a 10-yard sack, the Steelers kept the drive alive.
On third-and-17 Wilson pulled in a 17-yard reception to the Seahawks 20-yard
line. Parker took off running on the next play, but the apparent touchdown was
called back to the one-yard line after Seattle challenged the call. Peterson
stopped Davenport for no gain on the next play, but he wouldn’t be denied. He
got the call again and this time there was no denying the score, giving the
Steelers a 14-0 lead.
A fired up defense and a loud Heinz
Field crowd forced a false start by the Seahawks to start their drive. After
that, the Seahawks weren’t able to go anywhere and punted after failing to
covert on third-and-three.
It was back to work for the offense
with contributions coming from all directions. Miller had a 10-yard reception
and Wilson added an 18-yard catch. Davenport pulled in a short catch and turned
it into a 17-yard gain. Parker broke for a nine-yard carry to the 10-yard line
and added a five-yard carry. On second-and-goal Davenport went around right
tackle untouched for the touchdown, extending the lead to 21-0.
The Steelers continued their stellar
defensive play, shutting down the Seahawks on another drive and forcing the
punt.
After scoring on their last three
drives, the Steelers too had to punt away on their next
possession.
Wallace came in at quarterback for
the Seahawks with just over seven minutes to play in the game and was hassled by
the defense, completing just one of three passes with a
sack.
Charlie Batch came in to close the
game for the Steelers.