Tom Brady posts to Twitter to celebrate Ben Roethlisberger’s career

“Ben defied the TB12 Method.”

Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Tom Brady showed love for Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger, who officially retired on Thursday after an 18-year career.

Brady and Roethlisberger squared off many times, with the Patriots going 7-4 against the Steelers during the years the two quarterbacks played each other in the AFC. They didn’t match up during Brady’s tenure in Tampa.

“Ben defied the TB12 Method in favor of the ‘Throw Some Ice On It’ method his whole career, and ended up an all-time-great with 6 Pro-Bowls and 2 Super Bowls,” Brady wrote on Twitter on Thursday. “There’s more than one way to bake a cake!”

The question remains as to whether Brady will be back.

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3 Takeaways from Ben Roethlisberger’s retirement announcement

Ben Roethlisberger made his retirement official on Thursday.

On Thursday, Ben Roethlisberger made his retirement from the Pittsburgh Steelers official via a video on his social media channels. This was something we were all expecting to happen as Roethlisberger puts a cap on his 18-year career. Here are our big takeaways from the announcement and in a more general sense, Roethlisberger’s retirement.

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Twitter reacts to the announcement of Steelers QB Ben Roethlisberger’s retirement

Friends and fans took to social media after Ben Roethlisberger announced his retirement.

On Thursday, Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger announced via his social media that he was retiring. Social media then responded with overwhelming messages of congratulations, thanks and encouragement.

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What are the Steelers’ quarterback options now that Ben Roethlisberger has retired?

Ben Roethlisberger’s retirement means the Steelers need a new QB.

Ben Roethlisberger officially retired Thursday. The two-time Super Bowl winner was an instrumental piece of a Pittsburgh Steelers team that hasn’t had a losing record since 2003.

His departure leaves a massive question mark behind center, but it’s not unexpected. Hell, it may even make the Steelers a little better in 2022. Roethlisberger’s final season saw Pittsburgh make the playoffs in spite of his waning arm strength and worst season, statistically, since 2008. A cache of talented pass catchers wasn’t enough to elevate that offense into the top 20 when it came to either scoring, yardage or overall DVOA.

The Steelers’ problem now isn’t just finding a replacement. Any assets devoted to securing a new QB1 will come at the expense of badly-needed upgrades along the offensive line. Whomever starts in 2022 will have to deal with a group that allowed Roethlisberger’s sack rate to nearly triple between 2020 and 2021. His 2.1 seconds of pocket time per pass were the lowest in the league last season, ultimately handicapping his downfield passing game.

That leaves a big on-field legacy to fill and an uncomfortable situation for whomever winds up his successor. There are a few names head coach Mike Tomlin could turn to in order to lead a dawning new era in the Steel City. Here are the candidates he’ll thumb through this offseason.

Ben Roethlisberger announces his retirement with video letter

After 18 seasons, he’s calling it a career.

Big Ben is calling it a career.

Ben Roethlisberger, who spent all 18 seasons of his NFL career with the Pittsburgh Steelers after the franchise drafted him 11th overall in the 2004 NFL Draft out of Miami (Ohio), is retiring.

The quarterback announced what many assumed would happen this offseason with a video he released on Thursday in which he read a letter about “cleaning out his locker” that also had loving messages for his whole family and the Steelers organization.

“Football has been a gift and I thank God for allowing me to play it,” he said in the video that dropped Thursday morning:

Roethlisberger finishes with two Super Bowl titles, a rookie of the year award, six trips to the Pro Bowl and over 64,000 yards passing and 418 touchdowns.

As USA TODAY Sports detailed in June 2020: “He was twice accused of sexual assault and the NFL suspended him for six games in the 2010 season for violating the league’s personal conduct policy.”

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Ben Roethlisberger retires from Steelers after 18 seasons in touching video

Ben Roethlisberger has retired after 18 seasons

Ben Roethlisberger announced his retirement from the Pittsburgh Steelers via a touching video on Thursday.

The first-round pick from Miami (Ohio) said: “The journey has been exhilarating, fueled by a spirit of competition. Yet the time has come to clean out my locker, hang up my cleats and continue to be all I can be to my wife and children. I retire from football a truly grateful man.”

Roethlisberger won two Super Bowl wins, Rookie of the Year in 2004, and the fifth-most passing yards (64,088) in NFL history. He threw 418 TD passes and was 165-81-1 as a starter.

 

Mike Singletary says 49ers, Steelers had trade in place for Ben Roethlisberger

Mike Singletary said the #49ers could’ve traded for Ben Roethlisberger in 2009, but he turned it down.

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The history of the 49ers and the NFL nearly took a dramatic turn in 2009 during Mike Singletary’s first year as the team’s head coach. Instead of rolling forward with former No. 1 overall pick Alex Smith, San Francisco had the option of trading for Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger.

Singletary in a story with The Athletic made the franchise-altering decision to reject the trade. Via The Athletic’s Dan Pompei:

Quarterback Alex Smith was in his fifth season in Singletary’s first full year as head coach. The former first pick of the draft had been a massive disappointment, and moving on would have been best for all. But Singletary liked Smith, saw his potential, and knew he had worked with four coordinators in his first four years. He wanted to give him a chance, and he told him he would.

Then, 49ers owner John York, CEO Jed York, director of player personnel Trent Baalke and other executives called Singletary to a meeting. They had a trade in place with the Steelers for Ben Roethlisberger, who had recently been accused of sexual assault. Singletary vetoed the deal.

He felt an obligation to Smith, and he also believed he needed to stand for what he had been preaching.

“I had been telling the team I wanted a team of character,” he says. “I felt I had to be true to that. But if I could do it again, I’d do it differently.”

Singletary lists a slew of mistakes he made during his head-coaching tenure, but given that he’d operate differently if given the chance to do it again, it’s hard to imagine one is more damaging from an on-field perspective than the decision to veto a trade for Roethlisberger.

San Francisco struggled at the quarterback position during Singletary’s two seasons as head coach. In 2009 the 49ers completed 59.1 percent of their throws for 3,293 yards, 23 touchdowns and 14 interceptions. Smith started 10 games that year. Shaun Hill started the other six.

Things didn’t get better in 2010 with Alex Smith (10 starts), Troy Smith (six starts) and David Carr (one game) completed 56.4 percent of their throws for 3,613 yards with 19 touchdowns and 15 interceptions.

In that same two-year span Roethlisberger, who was 27 in 2009, completed 64.5 percent of his passes and averaged 3,764 yards, 21.5 touchdowns and 8.5 interceptions per season in 27 games. Since 2009 he’s also been to six Pro Bowls and gone to the playoffs eight times. He would’ve been a dramatic improvement under center for San Francisco.

Singletary’s reasoning for shying away from the trade was sound. Not wanting to take on a player accused of sexual assault is a logical decision. Sticking with Smith and trying to piece together a QB room with Hill and Troy Smith as backups is still an issue worth regretting.

What-ifs are always going to be part of sports, and a Roethlisberger trade may not have saved Singletary or brought the 49ers a championship. It’s a question worth pondering though since the ripple effects would sent tidal waves of change across the NFL over the past decade.

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Bud Dupree reflects on career of former Steelers teammate Ben Roethlisberger

“Ben is a legend, Hall of Famer. There’s just no doubt about it,” Dupree said of his former Steelers teammate.

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After the Pittsburgh Steelers’ 2021 season ended with a wild-card loss to the Kansas City Chiefs this past weekend, the expectation is that quarterback Ben Roethlisberger will retire.

Roethlisberger, who was drafted No. 11 overall by the Steelers back in 2004, put together a Hall of Fame career with Pittsburgh that included six Pro Bowls and a pair of Super Bowl titles.

On Wednesday, Tennessee Titans outside linebacker Bud Dupree reflected on Big Ben’s career. Of course, Dupree and Roethlisberger were teammates on the Steelers for six seasons.

“Ben is a legend, Hall of Famer. There’s just no doubt about it,” Dupree said. “I know he don’t want to hang it up, nobody never wants to hang it up… But, he’s got a lot of life outside of football.  He made a very, very powerful impact in the city of Pittsburgh, and also around the world just being who he is, one of those big quarterbacks running over people, throwing the ball, extending plays. He kind of created that nature, and he’s been a great leader for that team. I know he’s looking forward to seeing his afterlife with his kids, waking up to his kids everyday.”

While Dupree’s old team is now looking ahead to next season, his current one is about to embark on its playoff journey when the Titans host the Cincinnati Bengals at Nissan Stadium in the divisional round on Saturday.

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NFL Wild Card: From the Chiefs’ generosity to Jimmy G., every team’s fatal flaw

The Chiefs are very generous with the ball, the Rams need Robert Woods, and other reasons why this year’s Wild Card teams aren’t playing deep into January.

As much as we can learn to appreciate every NFL team playing every weekend throughout the fall, there’s something different about playoff football. Aside from the obvious aspects of sudden death glory (ho-hum), January is where every team thinks they have a shot at winning the Super Bowl. Of course, most of those teams’ aspirations will prove to be delusional and utterly misguided in due time. Reality is often disappointing.

But the social media hype videos, the “nobody believes in us” speeches (even when you’ve won your gauntlet of a division)—they all last forever. That’s the magic of the postseason: Truly anything can happen. Plus, you can make up critics who don’t exist—what a dream.

With Wild Card Weekend on the very near horizon, let’s examine the most significant reason, the fatal flaw, that may prevent each of the 12 teams from making a deep playoff run.

Wild Card odds, courtesy of Tipico.

Ben Roethlisberger must ignite offense for Steelers to have chance vs. Chiefs

Touchdown Wire’s Laurie Fitzpatrick analyzes what the Steelers must do to upset the Chiefs in Sunday’s wild-card matchup.

This very well could be the last NFL game for Ben Roethlisberger.

The venerable Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback helped guide his team to an unlikely playoff berth, but the dangerous Kansas City Chiefs stand in their path in a wild-card matchup Sunday at 8:15 p.m. EST at Arrowhead Stadium.

On the surface, the Steelers’ chances don’t look great. After all, Pittsburgh’s offense has dropped from 18th to 28th in the league in offensive DVOA since Week 10 of the regular season. Also, the Chiefs beat the Steelers, 36-10, in Week 16 despite playing without star tight end Travis Kelce.

The Steelers (9-7-1) are 12½-point underdogs against the Chiefs (12-5), according to Tipico Sportsbook.

Although the Steelers have a tall task ahead, it seems as if Roethlisberger enjoys the underdog role. He led the league with six comeback wins and seven game-winning drives this season. Roethlisberger further fed the underdog narrative with an interesting quote earlier this week.

“We’re probably not a very good football team,” Roethlisberger said. “Out of the 14 teams that are in, we’re probably No. 14. We’re double-digit underdogs in the playoffs. So, let’s just go play, have fun and see what happens.”

A team with nothing to lose can be dangerous in the playoffs, so let’s break down the game film to determine what the Steelers need to do to have a chance Sunday in Kansas City.

The stat that jumps out from the Week 16 matchup is turnovers. Pittsburgh committed three turnovers (two fumbles, one interception), with Roethlisberger accounting for two of them, while the Chiefs didn’t turn the ball over. The Steelers must protect the football to have a chance on Sunday.

That said, Roethlisberger likely will have to make some tough throws. In Week 16, Chiefs ran a number of two-high safety coverages, and Roethlisberger did a great job attacking the open gaps in the second level.

Roethlisberger is known for putting the ball where only his receivers can get it, and he will need to play near-perfect football in order to control the game.

In the clip below, when the Cincinnati Bengals successfully moved the ball against the Chiefs’ safeties in Week 17, multiple defenders show frustration as they throw their hands in the air.

It’s no secret that the Chiefs secondary has had trouble with communication when it comes to concept routes on the outside.

We shouldn’t expect these throws all game, but Roethlisberger will have to put a few over the Chiefs’ linebackers, targeting Chiefs safeties Juan Thornhill and Daniel Sorensen to have a chance for big plays downfield.

This brings us to the next area where the Chiefs allow their defense to become exposed. Against the Bengals, wideout Ja’Marr Chase was left alone on the outside and subsequently made several plays deep downfield.

The Steelers will have to replicate a few of these plays that the Bengals pulled off in Week 17, isolating the Chiefs’ cornerbacks on the outside.

In the last matchup, Steelers receivers Diontae Johnson and Chase Claypool combined for 10 receptions for 92 yards. They will have to greatly increase that production with catches similar to the one below if they want to stay competitive with the Chiefs’ high-octane offense.

If Steelers can win their matchups on the outside, it should help open up the ground game with Najee Harris — and tackling hasn’t exactly been a strong point for the Chiefs over the past few weeks.

Case in point: Chase’s 72-yard touchdown reception when the Chiefs and Bengals played in Week 17.

The Steelers also have players who excel in racking up yards after the catch. Johnson and Harris both rank among the top 11 in the NFL in yards after the catch.

If the Steelers can limit turnovers and pull off some big plays with Claypool, Johnson and tight end Pat Freiermuth, they have a chance to make this a competitive game. And the longer they can control the clock and keep the ball out of Patrick Mahomes‘ hands, the better.

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