PITTSBURGH — Powered by pop passes, the Wildcat formation and a rejuvenated ground game, the Pittsburgh Steelers got in the win column for the first time this season with a 27-3 victory against the Cincinnati Bengals on Monday night.
More important, it charted a road map for the Steelers to succeed with quarterback Mason Rudolph in 2019.
Primarily targeting his running backs, Rudolph thrived on short-yardage throws, completing 24 of 28 passes for 229 yards and two touchdowns. Rudolph averaged 8.2 yards per attempt, but 169 of his passing yards came after the catch.
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Rudolph stretched the field a couple of times, but the Steelers’ game plan showed he didn’t need to. It was enough to chip away with short passes, while allowing the versatile running backs shoulder most of the offensive load. The Steelers will obviously face tougher teams than the 0-4 Bengals in the coming weeks, but Monday’s win was a step in the right direction.
Describe the game in two words: Complete performance. If it wasn’t enough that the defense mauled Andy Dalton with eight sacks, the offense hummed along after a sputtering start to score on four consecutive possessions spanning the second and third quarters.
Pivotal play: Linebacker Bud Dupree made the defensive play of the game when he strip-sacked Dalton at the Steelers’ 18-yard line — one of Pittsburgh’s eight sacks Monday night. Cincinnati was in the final stages of responding to the Steelers’ first touchdown drive with a long scoring drive of its own when Dupree swarmed Dalton and knocked the ball loose. T.J. Watt recovered it to end the Bengals’ longest drive (46 yards) to that point. Cincinnati’s next three drives went for a net of 18 yards.
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