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fordfixer
11-14-2010, 12:30 AM
Game of the Week: Pats-Steelers
Kerry J. Byrne
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/w ... xid=si_nfl (http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/writers/kerry_byrne/11/12/patriots-steelers/index.html?xid=si_nfl)

ColdHardFootballFacts.com breaks down Sunday's New England at Pittsburgh game (8:20 p.m. ET, NBC).

The Patriots (6-2) hit the road to face the Steelers (6-2) in a battle of the NFL's two preeminent powers of the past decade. The winner will have an inside track in the race for the AFC's No. 1 seed.
Three Things You Should Care About

1. Love line play? You'll love the clash of Pittsburgh's DL vs. New England's OL. The Patriots visit Pittsburgh with the NFL's No. 2 scoring offense (27.4 PPG). The Steelers counter with the league's stingiest defense (15.4 PPG). But the down and dirty story behind those lofty rankings is the war of attrition in the trenches, where we'll witness one of the great clashes of 2010.

Pittsburgh's defensive front is one of the best in football, a story we discussed in great detail right here last week. Entering Week 10, the Steelers are No. 2 on our Defensive Hog Index, a critical indicator of postseason success. However, New England's offensive line is no pushover. They're No. 2 on our Offensive Hog Index and actually held the No. 1 spot all year until the team's loss last week at Cleveland.

It sets up a great showdown.

The Steelers enter the game allowing just 2.64 YPA on the ground. It's not only the stingiest run defense of 2010, but also puts Pittsburgh on pace to field the greatest run defense of the Super Bowl Era. The existing record is held by the famed 2000 Ravens (2.69 YPA). The New England offense responds with a ground game that's merely ordinary: their average of 4.12 YPA ranks 15th in the NFL. So the evidence here tells us the Patriots will have trouble establishing a run game.

However, New England's offensive line is among the very best in football at protecting the passer. It surrenders a Negative Pass Play (sack or INT) on just 6.52 percent of drop backs (fifth). The Steelers are not as dominant rushing the passer as they have been in past years. They force a Negative Pass Play on 10.15 percent of drop backs (ninth). It's good, but not great.

Given the expected inability to run the ball, the Patriots need to be in peak form protecting quarterback Tom Brady to have success moving the ball against the league's stingiest defense.

2. The New England offense misses its Randy Moss binky. Do you need a prolific wide receiver to be a great team? The overwhelming evidence says no, prolific receivers do not make great teams.

The Patriots and Steelers themselves stand as evidence: New England won three Super Bowls when Tom Brady threw dink-and-dunk passes to a nearly anonymous collection of journeymen and castoffs.

Pittsburgh won two Super Bowls with Hines Ward as its top pass catcher. Great football player? Absolutely. Prolific pass catcher by modern standards? Not at all.

With all that said, there's no doubt New England's offense was more productive with Moss on the roster:

• The Patriots averaged 5.73 yards per play in four games with Moss; they average 4.99 yards per play in four games without Moss.

• The Patriots averaged 7.47 yards per pass attempt with Moss; they average 6.49 yards per pass attempt without Moss.

• Most importantly, the Patriots scored 32.8 PPG in four games with Moss; they scored 22.0 PPG in four games without Moss. That's a dramatic and sudden downturn in scoring sans Randy.

Of course, New England was 3-1 in four games with Moss. And they're 3-1 in four games without Moss, including victories over projected AFC playoff powers Baltimore and San Diego. So the Patriots here in 2010 -- as they have in previous years -- have shown they can win without a big-name wide receiver. Remember, the gritty, tough-it-out formula was the secret to their success earlier in the decade.

But there's no doubt the offensive production in New England has declined by every measure since Moss was traded. And there's no doubt that the deep threat Moss "opens up the field" and makes offenses more productive. It's no coincidence, after all, that Moss was the common denominator among the two most prolific offenses in NFL history, the 1998 Vikings (556 points) and 2007 Patriots (589 points).

3. Ben Roethlisberger deserves more credit for his incredible productivity. Most football fans and so-called experts obsess over those big gaudy numbers and 400-yard passing days that grab headlines. The fantasy football phenomenon fuels this obsession. But the truth is that passing effectiveness, not volume, is the singular secret to success in the NFL and always has been -- at least if you care about wins and losses on the field and not in your fantasy league.

Quarterbacks with a high average per pass attempt almost always win, regardless of how often they pass. And Roethlisberger is a perfect example of the importance of effectiveness over volume. He's actually one of the most prolific passers in NFL history if you look at the right numbers.

Big Ben averages an incredible 8.02 yards per pass attempt, the fifth highest mark in the history of football. If you want to know why the Steelers instantly became title contenders the day Roethlisberger became the starter, if you want to know why he's already won two Super Bowls, look at that number.

Sure, he's been blessed with a consistently strong defense and a team committed to the run. But those two factors don't win consistently if you can't exploit the opposition with a highly effective passing game. Just ask Green Bay Hall of Famer Bart Starr, the only quarterback with five championship rings. His career average of 7.85 YPA was the best of any quarterback in the 1960s. Or ask Cleveland Hall of Famer Otto Graham. He led the Browns to six straight championship games in each of his six NFL seasons, an unprecedented streak of success. His average of 8.62 YPA as an NFL passer is also unprecedented, the highest, the most effective mark of all time.

Roethlisberger went 26-4 in his first 30 games as a starter, a period during which he averaged an amazing 8.89 yards per pass attempt -- an incredible number. The wins were a direct result of his historic but misunderstood productivity.

He's in true Big Ben form here 2010, too, even after his four-game suspension early in the year. Roethlisberger has averaged an impressive 8.41 YPA and he's won three of his four starts.

Bottom line: passing effectiveness, not passing volume, is what wins games in the NFL. Big Ben is the best contemporary example of this law of football success.

The Cold, Hard Football Facts

The Patriots suffer a critical weakness that will ultimately prevent them from winning a Super Bowl and most likely will prevent them from winning on Sunday: one of the worst pass defenses in football today.

The Patriots this year allow opposing passers to complete 70.17 percent of their attempts. How inept is that effort? In the entire history of the NFL, only one other team has allowed opposing passers to complete more than 70 percent of their passes over the course of an entire season: the 2007 Lions (70.20).

The Patriots also rank No. 28 in Defensive Passer Rating (93.9), our preferred indicator to measure pass defenses. Basically, we apply the formula used to rate quarterbacks to measure the effectiveness of each defense. Defensive Passer Rating has a very high correlation to success on the scoreboard. And, right now, the Patriots field the worst pass defense in franchise history.

It's something a statistical miracle -- and a tribute to the typically smart situational football of Bill Belichick's teams -- that the Patriots are 6-2 despite being hamstrung by this terrible pass defense.

The Steelers present all kinds of trouble for New England's defense, especially in light of Roethlisberger's historic productivity.

The pick

New England is the rare team that has enjoyed great success against Pittsburgh in recent years. The Patriots have won five of seven meetings with the Steelers in the Tom Brady Era (since 2001), including a pair of wins at Pittsburgh in AFC title games (2001, 2004).

But those were much better defensive clubs in New England. The 2010 Patriots appear too vulnerable to shut down the Steelers or keep pace on offense against Pittsburgh's top-rated defense.

We expect Big Ben to have a Big Day in this battle of mighty AFC heavyweights.

Pittsburgh 27, New England 23


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fordfixer
11-14-2010, 12:46 AM
New England vs. Pittsburgh
NFL Preview - New England (6-2) at Pittsburgh (6-2)
http://content.usatoday.com/sportsdata/ ... 14#preview (http://content.usatoday.com/sportsdata/football/nfl/game/Patriots_Steelers/2010/11/14#preview)

(Sports Network) - In a game that figures to have a significant impact on the AFC landscape going forward, the New England Patriots pay a visit to Heinz Field this Sunday to take on the Pittsburgh Steelers for a clash between two of the conference's current front-runners.

Both teams enter this primetime showdown sporting identical 6-2 records that put them at the top of the AFC pack along with the Patriots' fellow tenants in the East Division, the New York Jets. The Steelers will be taking the field with a slim half-game edge on rival Baltimore for first place in the North, with the Ravens losing their Week 10 matchup at Atlanta on Thursday.

New England also comes in with the goal of atoning for its worst showing of this 2010 campaign, having been dealt a startling 34-14 road loss to improving Cleveland last Sunday. The Patriots were outgained by a 404-283 margin by the determined Browns, who piled up 230 rushing yards on the afternoon, and matched a season high by committing three turnovers in having a five-game winning streak stopped.

The high-scoring Patriots' sluggish offensive performance last week continued a troubling trend for the perennial playoff participants, who've averaged just 254.5 total yards in splitting their four road games so far this season. That modest output is a concern on Sunday, with the Steelers having fielded one of the league's stingiest defenses over the course of the first half of this 2010 campaign.

Pittsburgh hasn't been without its issues on that side of the ball, however. While the Steelers are yielding a league-low 15.4 points per contest and have routinely smothered the opposition's running game, teams have found success moving the football through the air as of late. New Orleans quarterback Drew Brees shredded the Black and Gold for 305 yards and two touchdowns on a pinpoint 34-of-44 passing in a 20-10 victory two weeks back, while Cincinnati's Carson Palmer put up big numbers in the second half in nearly leading the Bengals back from a 20-point deficit this past Monday.

Cincinnati scored a pair of fourth-quarter touchdowns to pull within 27-21 and moved within range of another score in the game's final minute, but the Steelers came up with a critical stop on fourth down to leave Paul Brown Stadium with a hard-fought win.

Pittsburgh did not exit unscathed, however, as two members of the offensive line suffered injuries that will likely keep them out of Sunday's tilt. Left tackle Max Starks was placed on injured reserve on Wednesday due to a neck problem that will require surgery, while left guard Chris Kemoeatu is doubtful to suit up because of a sprained right knee.

The banged-up Steelers now return home off a short week to battle a New England team with a remarkable history of bouncing back after a loss. The Patriots have dropped consecutive games only twice over the past seven seasons, amassing a stellar 23-2 record in games that have followed a defeat during that span.

SERIES HISTORY

The Steelers have a 13-7 advantage in their all-time regular-season series with the Patriots and delivered a 33-10 road rout in their most recent meeting with New England, which occurred in 2008. Brady did not play in that game due to a torn ACL he suffered in that season's opener. The Pats had won their last two non-playoff bouts with Pittsburgh, including a 23-20 triumph in 2005 during their most recent visit to Heinz Field, prior to that setback.

The teams have also met in the postseason four times since 1996, with the Patriots winning a 1996 AFC Divisional Playoff (28-3), the Steelers returning the favor with a victory in a 1997 AFC Divisional Playoff (7-6), and New England prevailing in the 2001 (24-17) and 2004 (41-27) AFC Championships. The 1997, 2001, and 2004 meetings were all played in Pittsburgh.

Patriots head coach Bill Belichick has an 8-10 record against the Steelers, including a 5-2 mark since coming to New England. Pittsburgh's Mike Tomlin is 1-1 against both Belichick and the Patriots as a head coach.

WHEN THE PATRIOTS HAVE THE BALL

Though it's yet to be reflected in the won-loss column, it's becoming evident the New England offense is no longer the prolific outfit capable of striking at will that we've grown accustomed to in the past. Quarterback Tom Brady (1826 passing yards, 14 TD, 4 INT) is still adjusting to a remodeled group of receivers that no longer includes big-play threat Randy Moss, traded away by the team in early October, and hasn't gotten its usual contribution from All- Pro slotman Wes Welker (44 receptions, 3 TD), who's averaging a pedestrian 8.1 yards per catch while making his way back from a serious knee injury in the 2009 regular-season finale. While Brady's still done an excellent job taking care of the ball, the absence of Moss seems to have had an effect on the star signal-caller, as he's completed a substandard 56.8 percent of his throws over the past three weeks. With Moss gone and Welker struggling, rookie tight end Aaron Hernandez (34 receptions, 2 TD) has become the Pats' most dangerous target, and the talented 21-year-old scored the club's only two touchdowns in last Sunday's loss to the Browns. The running game has been inconsistent as well, but could get a boost from the possible return of veteran back Fred Taylor (98 rushing yards) from a toe injury that sidelined the 12th-year pro for the past five games. If he's active, Taylor will rotate with leading rusher BenJarvus Green-Ellis (385 rushing yards, 6 TD), with astute in-season pickup Danny Woodhead (232 rushing yards, 16 receptions, 3 total TD) taking over third-down duties.

Brady will need to be on target if the Patriots are to rebound this week, as no teams have been effectively able to run on a stout Pittsburgh defense that's allowing a meager 58.3 rushing yards per game and 2.6 yards per attempt. Inside linebackers Lawrence Timmons (78 tackles, 3 sacks, 2 INT) and James Farrior (53 tackles, 1 sack) have been flying to the football playing behind one of the league's premier nose tackles in five-time Pro Bowler Casey Hampton (7 tackles, 1 sack), while standout strong safety Troy Polamalu (44 tackles, 2 INT) excels in providing further support from the back line. The Steelers also possess a couple of tremendous edge rushers in outside linebackers James Harrison (55 tackles, 7 sacks, 1 INT) and LaMarr Woodley (27 tackles, 5.5 sacks, 1 INT), who combined for three sacks and a forced fumble in Monday's win over Cincinnati, and the duo will need to keep bringing the heat to help protect a secondary that's surrendered over 250 passing yards and six touchdowns through the air over the past four weeks. Pittsburgh's depth along the defensive line will be tested as well on Sunday, with sturdy end Aaron Smith likely done for the season with a torn triceps and opposite-side starter Brett Keisel (12 tackles, 1 sack, 1 INT) expected to miss the game with a hamstring injury.

WHEN THE STEELERS HAVE THE BALL

Pittsburgh's balance on offense could present a few problems for New England, as running back Rashard Mendenhall (702 rushing yards, 7 TD, 14 receptions) is turning in a strong season as the lead ball-carrier and the passing game has been much improved since quarterback Ben Roethlisberger (917 passing yards, 6 TD, 3 INT) returned from a well-publicized four-game suspension to start the year. The injuries up front could prove to be worrisome, however, as Kemoeatu is arguably the team's best run blocker and journeyman Jonathan Scott will be forced to serve as Roethlisberger's blind-side protector at left tackle. If he's given adequate time to throw, Roethlisberger will be looking to connect downfield with big-play receiver Mike Wallace (22 receptions, 5 TD), a deadly deep threat who's averaging 23.1 yards per catch and compiled a career-best 110 yards and a touchdown on five grabs against the Bengals. Wily veteran Hines Ward (30 receptions, 4 TD) remains the offense's go-to guy underneath, with sure-handed tight end Heath Miller (20 receptions, 1 TD) lending assistance in that department as well.

A New England defense that's young in several key spots has taken its lumps at times this season, particularly against the pass. Opposing quarterbacks have completed a league-high 70.1 percent of their throws on a secondary that's allowed an average of 268.9 yards per game through the air (29th overall) and hasn't gotten much help from a spotty pass rush that's totaled a pedestrian 13 sacks over the first eight games. The Patriots have been generally tough in stopping the run, with active inside linebacker Jerod Mayo (96 tackles, 1 sack) and promising rookie counterpart Brandon Spikes (47 tackles) teaming with space-eating nose tackle Vince Wilfork (26 tackles) for a formidable interior corps. That wasn't the case last week, however, with Cleveland running back Peyton Hillis going off for a career-high 184 yards and two scores on 29 carries. The hopeful return of second-year safety Patrick Chung (48 tackles, 2 INT) from a knee injury that's kept him out of the past two tests could help prevent a repeat, though it's still unclear as to whether he'll be ready to go. Getting pressure on Roethlisberger will be imperative, as the cornerback tandem of rookie Devin McCourty (37 tackles, 2 INT, 7 PD) and former practice-squad member Kyle Arrington (35 tackles) has hardly been a shut-down pairing.

FANTASY FOCUS

The Patriots' fate this week probably lies in the hands of Brady, and the two- time Super Bowl MVP should be a good play considering the Pittsburgh secondary has been vulnerable recently and New England will have trouble getting yards on the ground. Hernandez also gets a thumbs-up under that scenario, with Welker still holding value in points-per-reception leagues. The running back situation for the Pats is a bit more cloudy. Green-Ellis has six touchdowns on the year but remains a risk due to the Steelers' prowess against the run and reluctance to give up points. Woodhead, who's becoming a valued receiver out of the backfield, might actually be the more attractive option. New England had to place kicker Stephen Gostkowski on injured reserve this week, but avoid replacement Shayne Graham and the defense if possible. Pittsburgh's defense is an every-week start, however, as is Mendenhall as the team's clear-cut feature back. Roethlisberger could be in line for a good game against the Patriots' suspect secondary and merits consideration, while Wallace has replaced Ward as the fantasy receiver to own among Steelers.

OVERALL ANALYSIS

With a master game-planner in Belichick and a proven winner in Brady, the Patriots should never be counted out under any circumstances. This one looks to be a tall order, however, as New England's inconsistency on the road is a cause for concern and the defense isn't reliable enough to carry the load if the offense once again struggles. While the Steelers do have a few injuries to overcome, they're clearly the better team on defense and possess more versatility on offense due to their ability to run the ball. Factor in a hostile nighttime crowd at Heinz Field, and the advantage seems to be on the side of the home team.

Sports Network Predicted Outcome: Steelers 27, Patriots 17