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New England Patriots come up short in loss to Pittsburgh Steelers

By The Sports Xchange
Pittsburgh Steelers free safety Sean Davis (21) celebrates stopping the New England Patriots on fourth down late in the fourth quarter of the 17-10 win on Sunday at Heinz Field in Pittsburgh. Photo by Archie Carpenter/UPI
1 of 9 | Pittsburgh Steelers free safety Sean Davis (21) celebrates stopping the New England Patriots on fourth down late in the fourth quarter of the 17-10 win on Sunday at Heinz Field in Pittsburgh. Photo by Archie Carpenter/UPI | License Photo

PITTSBURGH -- This was the Patriots-Steelers game we expected: close, competitive and physical. It was old fashioned football. For those who like high scoring shootouts like the matchup between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Los Angeles Rams earlier this season where the final score was 54-51, this was not the game for you. For those who like defense and running, this was a game you might have been waiting for all season.

Unfortunately, for the Patriots the Steelers were the more physical team and

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By being unable to stop Pittsburgh, New England took a 17-10 loss on Sunday.

It was only the third time that Tom Brady has lost to the Steelers. It didn't help either that the Pats committed 14 penalties for 106 yards.

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Brady made one last valiant effort to do what he has done so many times in his career.

The Patriots trailed 17-10 with 2:30 to play and Brady drove the team to the 15. Unfortunately for New England, his final pass to Julian Edelman fell incomplete and the Patriots fell to 9-5.

The Patriots could have clinched their division title the last two weeks with a win and each time they failed to do so. The Patriots will likely clinch the AFC East next week when they face Buffalo at Gillette Stadium but the Pats fell to the No. 3 seed -- meaning they will need help from the Houston Texans in order to earn a first round bye.

The inability to stop the Pittsburgh running attack was frustrating because the running back James Connor did not play. Their backup Jaylen Samuels looked like Gayle Sayers Sunday afternoon with 19 rushes for 142 yards.

The Steelers kept giving it to Samuels because they knew the Patriots' run defense is struggling. They surely watched the tape of the Pats run defense last week against Miami in which Frank Gore, 35, ran for almost 100 yards. The cliché' of the NFL being a copycat league proved true on Sunday. There are no secrets to having a better run defense. It is simply about will, power and strength.

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"We just need to be more physical and play better technique," New England defensive end Trey Flowers said.

Sometimes coaches outthink themselves.

The Steelers, for the most, did not on Sunday as they were unafraid to keep running the ball even with two great receivers in Antonio Brown and JuJu Smith-Schuster. The Patriots defense could not make the critical stops.

After the Steelers intercepted Brady when they led 14-10, the Steelers had the ball at their own four yard line. The Steelers went on a five minute drive in which the Steelers picked up two first downs on the ground. Ben Roethlisberger also threw for a first down to Samuels and another to Vance McDonald. The completion to Samuels was the most heartbreaking from a Patriots perspective because he was covered and the defender left his man to try and sack Roethlisberger. On the next play, Samuels ran for another first down for 15 yards.

The Patriots defense improved during the course of the game. The Patriots defense looked terrible on the Steelers opening possession. The Steelers opening drive was 11 plays, 75 yards and the Steelers simply did whatever they wanted as they led 7-0.

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In the first half, Roethlisberger completed passes to eight different receivers. The Pats, defense, though responded on the second possession with two sacks. One by Kyle Van Noy and the other by Jonathan Jones. The Steelers wanted to spread the Patriots out and on their third possession they did so successfully. Roethlisberger hit Antonio Brown for a 17-yard touchdown pass.

On the other side of the ball, the Steelers defense was as good as advertised by pressuring the Patriots and covering well. It was likely the best defense the Patriots faced all year.

Joe Haden made a big interception when the Patriots had the ball in the red zone late in the fourth quarter. It is not a play Patriots fans are used to seeing Brady make. Brady said afterwards he was just trying to throw the ball out of bounds. Brady's arm strength might have a declined a little and he couldn't get the ball out of bounds.

After the game, Bill Belichick admitted his players competed hard and that the Steelers made a few more plays. It was perhaps an admission that his players are trying and the talent might be just short for a Super Bowl run.

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It is not often that Belichick states he is proud of his team after a loss.

"I was proud of our guys, how we battled all the way from the first play to the last. In the end, we just came up a little short. It's one of those typical tough football games against the Steelers and like I said they did a little more than we did tonight. That's pretty much the story the way I saw it," Belichick said.

The Patriots will be in the playoffs and there are no great teams in the AFC so a Super Bowl is not unrealistic. Brady said the Steelers had a few surprises defensively, but that was not unexpected. Most teams try to confuse Brady and be unpredictable.

"Obviously, we are not playing well enough to win. Just missed opportunities - to many plays we got opportunities to do stuff with it and we don't. That's football. I wish were outcomes were different. We just have to get back to work," Brady said.

This is the first time the Patriots have lost five games since 2009 -- a season that ended with a loss in the Wild Card Round. The Patriots, though, are not going to engage in self-pity.

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"We are in a tough spot obviously. We put ourselves in a tough spot, but at the same time we haven't lost our belief in each other and we still have a lot to play for. There's really no time for our to feel sorry for ourselves. We need to figure it out, keep competing and keep trying to improve," Matthew Slater said.

A tough spot? Most teams in the league would like to be in such a tough spot -- one win away from a division title.

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