Steelers live in their fears, lose 31-17 to Seahawks

Steelers live in their fears, lose 31-17 to Seahawks
Behind the Steel Curtain Behind the Steel Curtain

It was fourth-and-one from midfield with the game tied at 14. Aaron Rodgers clearly wanted to go for it. Mike Tomlin, doing what Mike Tomlin does best, lived in his fears and punted. That was where the game effectively ended.

Sure, we can point the finger at Kaleb Johnson for inexplicably not knowing to cover the ball on a kickoff that resulted in a Seahawks touchdown – the first time the kicking team has scored on a kickoff in over 40 years. And while that was a mess of a play, it’s a greater reflection on the coaching issue the Steelers have – why is a rookie with a lack of explosiveness back there to begin with? That’s a Mike Tomlin problem.

The Tomlin problem has reared its ugly head for several years, but it usually doesn’t become a huge issue until late in the season. The cowardice, the playing with his tail between his legs and putting on a strong face, acting as if he didn’t – all of that took center stage, and the Steelers are now 1-1 in large part because of it.

Defensive struggles

The Steelers started the game on defense, and they picked up right where they left off against the Jets. The Seahawks hadn’t scored an opening-drive touchdown in 22 games. Never to fear, though – they’re playing the Steelers defense, who were sure to make sure that streak promptly ended on an eight-play drive with Sam Darnold throwing a touchdown to wide open Tory Hornton for his first career touchdown grab.

While Seattle wouldn’t score another point for the rest of the first half, the issues in the middle of the defense stayed evident throughout the course of the afternoon. Patrick Queen and Payton Wilson were black holes in the middle of the field, particularly on third down. The Seahawks had two lengthy completions on third downs on the opening drive alone, and went 6-of-14 on third down for the afternoon. The Seahawks ended up with 31 points, which marks the first time since 1989 the Steelers have opened the season allowing 31+ points in the first two weeks of the year.

In my Week 2 Keys to Victory, I wrote that Jaxson Smith-Njigba was the only player who could truly harm the Steelers in the passing game. Well, he had eight catches for 103 yards. The unquestioned No. 1 player on the offense was open all day, and you would have thought Pittsburgh didn’t know who he was with the amount of plays No. 11 was making.

The run defense was a problem, once again. Kenneth Walker had 13 carries for 105 yards and the back-breaking touchdown at the end of the fourth quarter. Over eight yards per carry for a rushing offense that looked rough against the San Francisco 49ers a week ago. It’s crystal clear that the Steelers’ run defense is just bad. The same New York Jets offense that put up 32 yards and almost 400 yards of...