Varsity and JV: Winners and losers from Steelers loss to Bears

Varsity and JV: Winners and losers from Steelers loss to Bears
Behind the Steel Curtain Behind the Steel Curtain

The Steelers saved us from buying in and made sure their annual collapse came about a month early. They’ve gone from 4-1 with a massive lead over the 1-5 Baltimore Ravens to 6-5 and out of the playoff picture.

The loss to the Chicago Bears highlighted a lot of the same issues that have plagued the Steelers for quite some time, so let’s get into this week’s Varsity and JV performers.

Varsity

EDGE T.J. Watt

Watt passed his brother J.J. on the all-time sack list with a strip sack that was recovered for a touchdown. We’ve needed to see him make splash plays, and he did in Week 12.

EDGE Nick Herbig

Another splash play for the Steelers’ leader in splash plays, as Herbig recovered the strip sack from Watt in the end zone for a touchdown. He also had a very nice tackle for loss that lost the Bears five yards.

RB Kenneth Gainwell

Gainwell had 132 yards from scrimmage (92 rushing, 30 receiving) and had a 55-yard run on fourth down to set up a Jaylen Warren touchdown.

DT Yahya Black

The rookie from Iowa had his best game as a Steeler thus far, forcing and recovering a fumble.

Run Blocking

The Steelers ran for 186 yards on the day. They found success, as they usually do, when they went jumbo. Spencer Anderson, in particular, had a few notable downfield blocks to spring larger gains. The offensive line has been tremendous.

Juinor-Varsity

QB Mason Rudolph

I want to put an asterisk next to his name because, all things considered, Rudolph did fine. Unfortunately, though, two turnovers that led to touchdowns for the Bears certainly ended up being deciding factors.

Middle of the Field Passing

I’m doing more of a deep dive on this in another piece, so stay tuned. But let’s just say this isn’t exclusively an Arthur Smith problem.

Pass defense

Welcome back, horrible soft zone coverage! Dan Orlovsky posted a screenshot on X that summarizes the Steelers’ defense pretty well. It was 3rd-and-5, and the Steelers’ defense is backed up beyond the line to gain, which allows a very easy conversion for the Bears. Chicago kicked a field goal at the end of the first half on that drive, which proved to be pivotal in the loss.

No one coaches scared quite like Mike Tomlin.

Receiving Corps

DK Metcalf had five catches for 22 yards. The same issues with the receiving corps are there. The lack of a No. 2 receiver allows defenses to key in on Metcalf because no one fears Calvin Austin or Ben Skowronek. This falls on the front office more than anyone for not getting a WR2 for the second straight year.

HC Mike Tomlin

It starts and ends with Tomlin. Nothing changes if nothing changes. Now at 6-5, the Steelers are in the exact situation they’ve been in for years going into December – with little room for error...