Anatomy of a Play: What were the Steelers thinking on fourth-and-2?

What were the Pittsburgh Steelers thinking on that fourth-and-2 play against the New England Patriots? After thorough examination, we’re stumped.

With 2:01 left in their Thursday night matchup with the New England Patriots, the Pittsburgh Steelers had fourth-and-2 from their own 49-yard line. Down 21-18, they needed to get within field goal range (at worst) to tie the game.

Instead of a high-percentage play, the call was for a backside fade throw from quarterback Mitchell Trubisky to receiver Diontae Johnson. The Steelers had no quick options to the sideline — receiver Allen RObinson and tight end Pat Freiermuth were running stuff over the middle — and given that the two-minute warning was coming up, maybe they get a pass for that one. But you need an easy completion and conversion for your inconsistent quarterback here, not one of the toughest throws in any quarterback’s arsenal. Johnson did get far enough away from cornerback Jonathan Jones to bring the ball in, but again, this is a VERY tough throw to make, and Trubisky couldn’t do it.

“It was,” head coach Mike Tomlin said after the game, when asked if Johnson was the primary read on that play. “We were down there. We play to win. We wanted to be aggressive. We just didn’t get it done.”

Trubisky told a slightly different story.

We had multiple options. The safety [Jabrill Peppers] was favoring GP [George Pickens, to the other side]. I liked the one-on-one with Diontae. I felt like I could throw a better ball.”

Well, Peppers was probably cheating to Pickens because Pickens is by far the team’s best fade and contested catch receiver, but we digress.

Defensive lineman Cameron Heyward was also asked about the decision.

“Go for it. I’m not running from it. You know, he wanted to see his playmaker make a play. Didn’t make it; so be it. As defense I look at like, man, we shouldn’t have been in that situation. You know, 18 points is plenty, and 21 is way too much.”

21 is certainly way too much when you bust on 18.

Steelers fans chant ‘Mason Rudolph’ after Jabrill Peppers’ interception on Mitch Trubisky

Steelers fans were so mad after Jabrill Peppers intercepted Mitch Trubisky, they started chanting for a quarterback change.

The New England Patriots gave the Pittsburgh Steelers all sorts of problems in the first half of Thursday’s game.

Mitchell Trubisky has struggled to get into a rhythm with his receivers, and in the second quarter, Patriots safety Jabrill Peppers snagged an interception against the backup quarterback and ran the ball back to the red zone.

The boo birds filled Acrisure Stadium after the play, and Steelers fans started chanting “Mason Rudolph.” It’s a shocking turn of events considering the Patriots didn’t even score a touchdown in last week’s home loss to the Los Angeles Chargers.

But they’ve looked like a different team entirely against the Steelers.

Zappe has looked as poised as ever in the pocket, which is something the team lacked with Mac Jones under center. For a team that’s 2-10 with nothing to play for, the Patriots continue to show tremendous fight under coach Bill Belichick.

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Bears WR DJ Moore wins Week 5 NVP award

The NVP award is coming back to Chicago.

DJ Moore balled out in prime time and now gets to celebrate with slime time. On Wednesday, the Chicago Bears wide receiver was awarded Nickelodeon’s NVP award for his Week 5 performance in the team’s 40-20 win over the Washington Commanders. Moore had a career day, catching eight passes for 230 yards and three touchdowns. His 230 yards were second-most in team history in a single game, just 19 yards short of Alshon Jeffery’s record of 249 set 10 years ago.

Earlier in the day, Moore won the NFL’s Player of the Week award and now gets his own NVP to go along with it.

The NVP (Nickelodeon Valuable Player) is an award created by Nickelodeon to celebrate a top-performing player in the NFL each week. It originated in early 2021 during the postseason when Nickelodeon aired a special broadcast of the Bears-Saints Wild Card game. Former Bears quarterback Mitchell Trubisky won the inaugural award thanks to a fan vote despite losing the game 21-9.

This is the first time a Bears player has won the award since that game.

Mike Tomlin refuses to hold Steelers OC Matt Canada accountable for a putrid offense

Why is Mike Tomlin pretending like he doesn’t have one of the NFL’s worst offensive coordinators?

Let’s clear up the obvious first. For all intents and purposes, Mike Tomlin is a made man. He can likely coach the Pittsburgh Steelers for as long as he wants. He’s never had a losing season in 16 years, and he brought the franchise its last Super Bowl championship in 2008. Calling him one of the best coaches in NFL history is not hyperbole. I would be shocked if the Rooney family ever fired him outright. Legends like him don’t get abrupt pink slips. Period.

But how Tomlin continues to treat his broken Steelers offense — led by the much-maligned Matt Canada — should start furling more eyebrows. Tomlin’s process, at least thus far, is enough to question whether he’s the man who will turn the Steelers back into a marquee powerhouse or if he’ll just lead an organization that is now satisfied with straddling around .500. No one is unimpeachable forever.

Let’s take it to Tuesday in Pittsburgh.

Two days after the Houston Texans walloped the Steelers 30-6 with a rookie quarterback, Tomlin was still answering questions about one of the worst defeats of his tenure. The Pittsburgh defense’s woeful performance aside, Canada’s continually awful offensive attack has mainly (and rightfully) been under the microscope. In Canada’s third season as the Steelers offensive coordinator, Pittsburgh’s offense is 29th in total yards, 29th in points scored, 31st in expected points added per play (EPA), and 30th in offensive DVOA. The defense has scored almost as many touchdowns (2) as the offense (4), which has two single-digit point efforts in four games. This is all, in two words… very bad.

How did Tomlin respond when asked about making any changes to the offense? Like, you know, perhaps relieving Canada of playcalling duties? With a succinct, “Not at this juncture.”

Whatever Tomlin is thinking here, he needs to adjust his rationale quickly. Because none of this Steelers’ offensive bleakness under Canada is new. If we extend the above statistics to his entire tenure as Pittsburgh’s offensive leader, the Steelers are still just 23rd in total offensive EPA per play since the start of 2021. They have still not finished with a DVOA higher than No. 17 overall (in 2022). And in both 2021 and 2022, the Steelers were in the bottom third of the NFL in total yardage and points scored. Some might deny it on principle, but Pittsburgh now has an anemic offense that bottom-feeding franchises like Chicago and Cleveland can be “proud” of.

Simply put, it is not the company you want to keep, folks.

Pittsburgh can’t and shouldn’t blame the departure of Ben Roethlisberger, either, who was a decrepit shell of himself at the end of his career anyway. While one can perhaps point to the combined ineptitude of Mitchell Trubisky and Mitchell Trubisky 2.0, er, Kenny Pickett, dragging the Steelers down — because neither are viable starting quarterbacks — it’s not as if Canada’s unimaginative offense does them any favors. Pittsburgh has an explosive skill group featuring George Pickens, Calvin Austin III, and Pat Freiermuth. Yet, Pickett averages just over six yards per pass attempt and has nearly as many air yards (407) as Joe Burrow on precisely one healthy calf (376). Rather than get the ball to their playmakers in space or downfield, Canada’s scheme is intent on consistently spamming low-risk hitches, curls, and pick plays that go nowhere once a defense realizes there are no other tricks up the Steelers’ sleeve. It’s not hard to stop a team when you know what’s coming.

Ultimately, this is what Canada’s offense has produced. It’s a glorified pop-gun attack that can score every now and then for a moral victory but cannot remotely hang with the league’s big boys in Kansas City, Buffalo, and Miami. It’s apparent that whatever buttons Canada pushes, they’re all wrong. Pittsburgh is incapable of sustaining quality offense, and it’s sinking a talented team that had lofty preseason ambitions.

So, why does Tomlin continue to provide cover for someone inept at their job? He knows this is a political game.

The moment Tomlin demotes Canada or fires him, he puts the spotlight on himself. He was Tomlin’s hand-picked offensive coordinator choice, the person he wanted to be the Steelers’ offensive steward in the post-Roethlisberger era. In the end, if Canada’s head rolls for persistent failure, then Tomlin understands he needs to have a prepared answer on deck that dramatically improves the Steelers’ offense. Tomlin would have to face the music and show he has a tangible solution right away. If he doesn’t, perhaps the NFL’s safest coach inadvertently raises the temperature of his seat.

It would take a lot, if anything, for the Steelers to part ways with Tomlin down the line. But if I told you they hadn’t won a playoff game since 2016 — easily the longest drought in franchise history post-merger — and that Pittsburgh had steadily morphed into a second-class AFC team, you’d also start questioning Tomlin more. There are ambitious standards for Western Pennsylvania’s professional football team. January is supposed to be an extension of the holiday season for the Steelers faithful, and it hasn’t been for a long time. Tomlin will not be able to coast on keeping Pittsburgh just above water forever. Expectations are far too high for the Steelers to be that plucky, well-coached team that just doesn’t have enough to win it all.

Eventually, Tomlin has to make a change and show progress that the black and gold are on track to be a legitimate heavyweight again. He should start by holding Canada accountable, even with the inherent dangers for himself involved. If he doesn’t, he risks sullying the potential end of one of the best coaching tenures in league history. You can only be a beloved made man for so long.

NFL news: Mitch Trubisky signs extension with Steelers

NFL news: Mitch Trubisky signs extension with #Steelers:

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Mitchell Trubisky left the Buffalo Bills for an opportunity to start with the Pittsburgh Steelers. It didn’t work out exactly that smoothly, but he’s sticking around there nonetheless.

According to Steelers Wire, Trubisky signed a two-year contract extension in Pittsburgh.

Trubisky backed up Buffalo’s starter Josh Allen in 2021. However, he did not play any meaningful snaps in that role and was seeking an opportunity for those in Pittsburgh.

With the Steelers, Trubisky went 2-3 as a starter last season but the reigns were eventually turned over to rookie Kenny Pickett quickly. By Week 5 when Buffalo hosted Pittsburgh, the rookie was under center and the Bills took a 38-3 win.

Buffalo was in the market for a suitable backup this offseason, but eventually signed Kyle Allen to a one-year deal. Allen signed after Case Keenum departed during free agency for his hometown Houston Texans.

Trubisky’s extension also helped the Steelers lower his cap hit in 2023 which was set to be near $10 million.

If Trubisky was not going to rework his contract, there was a chance he would be released… and maybe the Bills would have had interest if that took place earlier this offseason… but we’ll never know.

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5 backup QB options for the Buffalo Bills

Who could be Josh Allen’s backup with the #Bills in 2023?

The Buffalo Bills lost an under-the-radar free agent on the first day of free agency in 2023: Case Keenum.

Buffalo traded for Keenum via the Cleveland Browns last offseason and he signed a new one-year contract with his new club. That deal expired and Keenum went on to sign with the Houston Texans as a pending free agent on Monday.

That only leaves Josh Allen and Matt Barkley on the active roster. In recent years, Buffalo has gone on to add another player in between those two, leaving Barkley as the defacto third-string option on the practice squad.

Here are some remaining options for the Bills at the quarterback position as free agency rolls on:

The Bears got roasted for a hilarious meme about not needing help from random NFL Draft fans

Reminder: The Bears drafted Mitchell Trubisky over Patrick Mahomes.

As we near the chaos of the 2023 NFL free agency period and the 2023 NFL Draft, the Chicago Bears might be pro football’s most powerful team. According to Over The Cap, Chicago has over $94 million in salary cap space. It also possesses the all-important No. 1 overall pick.

With 50 days before the draft, the Bears’ Twitter account posted an amusing meme featuring The Office character Michael Scott wearing a Chicago cap. It’s in reference to the Bears’ overall social media team fielding advice from random fans, in this case, “USER23928,” about who to draft in late April.

It was a perfect self-aware joke:

The humor aside, I want to point out the irony.

While the Bears certainly aren’t alone in “entertaining” tips from random fans, they should probably be one of the last professional sports organizations to discount any outside perspectives.

This is the same squad that drafted Mitchell Trubisky at No. 2 overall over the potential future GOAT Patrick Mahomes. They’re the same franchise with one winning season since 2012 and no playoff victories since 2010. I’m not saying Chicago leadership should actually listen to their Twitter, Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube mentions.

That would be silly.

But I’d be remiss if I didn’t point out the amusing contradiction from one of the NFL’s perennial bottom-feeders joking about how it doesn’t need more assistance. It’s a little on the nose! NFL fans agreed and summarily roasted the Bears.

Patrick Mahomes wanted to be a Chicago Bear, according to his father

Old wounds were ripped open on Monday as Patrick Mahomes’ father confirms the Bears told the star QB they were picking him back in 2017.

It’s been over five years since the Chicago Bears traded up one spot to select quarterback Mitchell Trubisky second overall, passing up on superstar Patrick Mahomes in the process. Mahomes of course was selected by the Kansas City Chiefs eight picks later and is now headed to his third Super Bowl in four years, while Bears fans everywhere have been left to wonder what could have been.

Rehashing the past gets old after a while and Bears fans have done their best to move on, but thanks to a new revelation by a member of Mahomes’ family, those old wounds were ripped open.

Fresh off celebrating the Chiefs’ 23-20 victory over the Cincinnati Bengals in the AFC Championship game, Patrick Mahomes Sr. joined 670 The Score’s Parkins & Spiegel. After talking about the win, the conversation steered towards the infamous draft decision and Mahomes Sr. not only confirmed reports of the Bears’ interest in his son, but said he was told he would be going to Chicago.

“They told him they were going to draft him,” Mahomes Sr. said. “We thought he was going to be the third pick overall and go to Chicago. He had a great meeting when he went there and liked all the guys that were doing the stuff there and thought he was going to be a Bear. Then once they traded up and got Mitch, it kind of hurt him. It really did. He always knew that Kansas City had told him that they were going to come up and get him. They just didn’t know how far they’d have to go. But initially, he thought he was going to be a Chicago Bear.”

The Bears’ interest in Mahomes had already been documented, thanks to an in-depth piece on Bleacher Report that broke down the 2017 NFL Draft by Kayln Kahler in 2020. But hearing it from his father hits differently, especially knowing that he wanted to be a Bear.

“He definitely wanted to be there,” Mahomes Sr. said. “He liked everything about it and he was looking forward to going there. Who doesn’t want to be the first quarterback taken in the draft? It was definitely a situation where he thought he was going to be there and be there for a long time.”

The draft process that season was all over the place, with then-GM Ryan Pace reportedly going rogue by drafting Trubisky and not running the decision by his staff, including then-coach John Fox. Mahomes Sr. couldn’t identify which members of the Bears his son met with, just that he had met with multiple personnel over the course of the pre-draft process.

The sting of picking Trubisky over Mahomes will always be there for Bears fans in some way shape or form. Mahomes is likely on his way to winning his second Most Valuable Player award and is breaking records every season, all while still being just 27 years old. Trubisky, on the other hand, lasted just four seasons with the Bears with mixed results and is now a backup for the Pittsburgh Steelers. But Mahomes Sr. likes what he sees from the Bears’ current quarterback Justin Fields.

“Ya’ll got a good one there,” Mahomes Sr. said of Fields as the hosts pined over the revelation. “He’s going to do some things. I like everything that he does and I think he’s going to be a hell of a quarterback.”

Fields isn’t in the same stratosphere as Mahomes and may never get there, but he showed flashes in his second season that at least helps ease the pain of missing on a generational quarterback five years ago. Mahomes and Fields are set to square off in 2023 for the first time in the regular season as the Bears will visit the Chiefs at some point next fall.

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Mitchell Trubisky threw an INT to former teammate Roquan Smith and NFL fans all made the same joke

The more things change, the more they stay the same.

When they spent the latter half of the 2010s in Chicago, Mitchell Trubisky and Roquan Smith had the pleasure of playing together on somewhat solid Chicago Bears teams. Led by Smith’s superb defense and some timely playmaking from Trubisky, Chicago, of course, won 12 games and the NFC North title during the 2018 season.

Just under a half-decade later, the former Bears teammates had a chance encounter of sorts … in Pittsburgh. On a pro football field. Playing against each other. Huh?

After a trade deadline deal, Smith is now a member of the Baltimore Ravens, while Trubisky is the backup quarterback/pseudo-starter (?) for the Pittsburgh Steelers. And when an injury to Kenny Pickett forced Trubisky to come into the game, he and Smith finally reunited.

That is — Trubisky threw a pick right down the middle of the field to the star linebacker:

Given the proficiency of those Bears’ defenses, Smith’s penchant for making a big play, and Trubisky’s general inconsistencies, something tells me this kind of interception was a common sighting during Chicago practices.

The more things change — with Smith and Trubisky literally playing on two different teams in two different cities — the more they stay the same.

Can the Saints defense shake back against the NFL’s least-explosive offense?

Can the Saints defense shake back against the NFL’s least-explosive offense? Steelers OC Matt Canada hasn’t found much success on the year so far:

We’re just two weeks removed from the New Orleans Saints’ shutout win against the Las Vegas Raiders, but a brutal double-digit loss to the Baltimore Ravens has made that highlight seem like it’s a million miles away. If the Saints are going to shake back with another win, though, this week’s matchup with the Pittsburgh Steelers might be their best shot.

The Steelers offense hasn’t found much success on the season so far. They’ve scored the fewest points in the NFL (120, across 8 games) and are tied for the lowest rate of yards gained per play (4.7). Rookie quarterback Kenny Pickett is the league’s most turnover-prone quarterback. They’re tied for the sixth-worst conversion rate on third downs (33.6%). Pittsburgh ranks fifth-lowest in red zone conversions, too, having scored a touchdown on just 10 of their 21 trips inside the opposing 20-yard line (47.6%).

Much of the blame falls on play caller Matt Canada, the former LSU Tigers offensive coordinator, who hasn’t exactly gotten the most out of his personnel. Pickett hasn’t been an upgrade over Mitchell Trubisky. Najee Harris has regressed at running back, averaging a mere 3.3 yards per carry, with his backup Jaylen Warren outproducing him at 5.3 yards per attempt (though he’s seeing just 3.6 rushes per game).

Both of their leading receivers in targets, Diontae Johnson and Chase Claypool (who was recently traded away), have clocked fewer than 10 yards per reception. Tight end Pat Freiermuth leads the team in receiving yards per game (52.4). Wide receiver George Pickens has been their best big-play threat with 7 receptions of 20-plus yards, and he figures to have a bigger role after the Claypool trade, but he’s only seen 5.4 targets per game.

It almost feels like we’re risking a jinx in pointing this out, but the Steelers offense hasn’t been a threat to score from the open field. Their longest scoring play on the season traveled just 8 yards, the shortest of any NFL team; the Los Angeles Chargers are next-worst, with their longest scoring play traveling 23 yards. If the Saints defense can win at the line of scrimmage and guard the Steelers’ big-play attempts as well as every other team to play them this year, it should mean a win for New Orleans. Hopefully they can meet those expectations while the Saints offense does its part.

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