The wheels have officially fallen off the Pittsburgh Steelers’ wagon. There isn’t much going right for this team, and that’s putting it mildly. All of their issues came to a head on Sunday as they were absolutely routed by division rival Cincinnati Bengals. This peak of embarrassment came on the heels of a string of embarrassing games, all compounding on one another. It seems safe to say – this is just not a good football team.
So what in the world is going on? Why, for all their issues, do they refuse to change anything?
For starters, in order to fix a problem, you have to admit you have one. And from management to the coordinator level, heads are buried deep in the sand. By all accounts they have no intention of removing them any time soon.
The Steelers have gaps at every position and in every area of play. Ranging from their porous front seven, which allowed over 100 rushing yards in the first half …
JOE MIXON IS FEASTING AGAINST PITTSBURGH 🍽
pic.twitter.com/QL8s8nzIWd— PFF Fantasy Football (@PFF_Fantasy) November 28, 2021
… to their anemic secondary letting Tee Higgins absolutely light them up …
GO UP AND GET IT TEE HIGGINS
pic.twitter.com/O9L3jwdA1D— PFF (@PFF) November 28, 2021
… to their receivers making bone-headed plays …
Chase Claypool not using his head #Steelers pic.twitter.com/6lVcx3Tppz
— Steelers Depot 🎅🎄🎁 (@Steelersdepot) November 29, 2021
… to just, well, overall lack of effort …
Good effort play by Najee Harris after Roethlisberger's first INT. Comes across the field to make the tackle, save a TD, and Steelers' D holds Bengals to a FG.
Diontae Johnson's effort…not quite the same. #Steelers pic.twitter.com/hT3PrvmqnP
— Alex Kozora (@Alex_Kozora) November 30, 2021
These are problems this team has struggled with on-and-off dating back to 2017, and after years of crossing their fingers and putting off finding a solution, it’s all come to haunt them in major ways.
Instead of addressing the weak offensive line with their remaining cap space, they let it stand. And let it crumble. They saw fit to toss a bunch of young players lacking experience on the field and allow them to be torn apart limb-from-limb. And boy, with the exception of a couple games, it has been brutal.
Instead of telling Melvin Ingram to suck it up and get on board with his role as a depth-piece (you know, the agreement they had in place when they brought him in), they obliged and traded him away, tails between their legs. And now they have no linebacker depth to speak of.
Instead of pulling Devin Bush from action until he deals with whatever has been plaguing him, coach Mike Tomlin throws him to the wolves week by week and watches his run game suffer as a result.
Instead of telling their young receivers to use diplomacy on the field and in media scrums, they let them run loose with suggestions, like one from Chase Claypool, of “playing music at practice.” The lack of self-awareness after such a defeat at the hands of a divisional opponent is…something.
Seriously. Check this out.
For context, here is Chase Claypool and his music suggestion. Seems like he might be kind of trolling here, honestly. Yinz decide. #Steelers pic.twitter.com/WPzeVJtqW3
— Steelers Depot 🎅🎄🎁 (@Steelersdepot) November 29, 2021
Wow.
For a team that prides itself on never having a losing season under its current head coach, they are well on their way to making history. This is a group who seems poised to potentially lose (or tie) the rest of their games. And as for the future of the franchise, a dark cloud is settling overhead; if the last 5 years are actually a pattern, then the next several are probably going to get even worse.
Buckle up, Steelers fans. This may not be pretty.
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