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Ben Roethlisberger Throws 3 TDs In First Game Back, Steelers Beat Browns 28-10

ALAN ROBINSON   10/17/10 10:37 PM ET   AP

Ben Roethlisberger First Game

PITTSBURGH — With Ben Roethlisberger reveling in the cheers he once feared he might not hear, the Pittsburgh Steelers looked like themselves for the first time all season. They also sounded like the team that loves to intimidate.

To the Cleveland Browns, it was Steelers linebacker James Harrison who was the game's impact player. Twice.

Roethlisberger, cheered loudly during his first game in 9 1/2 months, returned from his four-game suspension to throw three touchdown passes, and the Steelers shut down a Browns offense that was depleted by Harrison hits during a 28-10 victory on Sunday.

With the Steelers (4-1) leading 7-3 but backed up to their own 4 late in the third quarter, Roethlisberger – flashing the big-play ability his team lacked without him – completed passes of 50 yards to Mike Wallace and 36 yards to Heath Miller on successive plays.

Three plays later, Hines Ward fought through two potential tacklers on an 8-yard touchdown catch that made it 14-3.

Roethlisberger also threw scoring passes of 29 yards to Wallace and 14 yards to Miller. He finished 16 of 27 for 257 yards during his first regular-season game since he was accused of, but not charged with, sexually assaulting a Georgia college student in March.

Then, numerous Steelers fans professed to be outraged with the quarterback's actions. Except for 20 sign-carrying protesters outside Heinz Field, that anger wasn't evident as Roethlisberger received numerous loud ovations from the standing-room crowd of 65,168.

"I started thinking about it on the way here," said Roethlisberger, who once worried that his reception would be chilly. "Before the game I got emotional. To hear the cheers was something special. I got a little emotional."

The Browns (1-5) couldn't get into the end zone until rookie Colt McCoy threw a 12-yard scoring pass to Ben Watson with Pittsburgh already up by 18 points.

McCoy (23 of 33, 281 yards, five sacks) didn't look overwhelmed in his first NFL start, but he played with a depleted cast after Harrison hits sidelined wide receivers Joshua Cribbs and Mohamed Massaquoi with head injuries during the second quarter.

"We had our hands full with those guys," McCoy said. "They're really fast, they're really good."

Cribbs left after a helmet-to-helmet caused him to crumple onto the turf for several minutes. Massaquoi was shaken up after Harrison's hit caused him to drop a pass. Alex Mack, angry at how Harrison kept sidelining his teammates, reacted by angrily kicking the ball about 20 yards to the Browns' sideline, drawing a delay-of-game penalty.

"You don't want to injure people. I don't want to injure anybody," Harrison said. "But I'm not opposed to hurting anybody."

Apparently, his teammates aren't, either.

"He's a beast," Ward said of the 2008 Defensive Player of the Year. "When you see him knocking guys out, you know he's a man on a mission. You don't want to see guys get hurt, but he set the tempo for us."

With Cribbs unable to operate the wildcat set the Browns used effectively in upsetting the Steelers 13-6 in December, Cleveland's offense took on a more predictable and easier-to-defend look. Cribbs ran for 83 yards in that game; this time, Peyton Hills had a team-high 41 yards.

"It makes it tough when you're planning to vary the attack with couple of different things, and we're out of it with quite a bit of the game left," said coach Eric Mangini, who started McCoy because Seneca Wallace and Jake Delhomme have high ankle sprains.

The Browns were forced to play the second half with only two healthy wide receivers, Brian Robiskie and Chansi Stuckey. It was another oddity in a game in which none of the four active quarterbacks – Roethlisberger and Byron Leftwich, McCoy and Brett Ratliff – had previously thrown a pass all season.

Still, McCoy's encouraging performance against a defense that has allowed a league-low 60 points offered some hope.

"He had a lot of poise for his first game, playing against one of the toughest defenses in the league," Mangini said.

The Steelers, beating Cleveland for the 13th time in 14 games, moved into first place in the AFC North as Baltimore (4-2) lost to New England 23-20 in overtime.

Roethlisberger didn't get off to a great start; he was intercepted on Pittsburgh's first drive, but came back to find Wallace for the game's only touchdown in the first 41-plus minutes.

"We didn't want him to be flawless," said Wallace, who welcomed Roethlisberger back by cutting the Mohawk haircut the quarterback disliked. "Then we wouldn't have anything to work on in practice."

To ease Roethlisberger in, the Steelers ran Rashard Mendenhall frequently at the start. He finished with 84 yards, including a 2-yard TD run.

Cleveland's most effective play was a punt inside the Steelers 10; Reggie Hodges did that four times, repeatedly backing the Steelers up and keeping the game close – at least until Roethlisberger got away from a predictably conservative game plan to hit the long passes to Wallace and Miller.

NOTES: No running back has gained more than 42 yards against Pittsburgh. ... Ward caught a pass in the 183rd consecutive game, matching Art Monk for the fourth-longest streak in NFL history. ... Phil Dawson's 39-yard field goal was his Browns-record 235th, one more than Lou Groza. ... McCoy was the 11th Browns quarterback to start since Roethlisberger became a starter in 2004. The Steelers have started three other QBs during that time because of injuries. ... Steelers DE Brett Keisel (hamstring) was hurt in the first quarter and didn't return.

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PITTSBURGH — With Ben Roethlisberger reveling in the cheers he once feared he might not hear, the Pittsburgh Steelers looked like themselves for the first time all season. They also sounded like...
PITTSBURGH — With Ben Roethlisberger reveling in the cheers he once feared he might not hear, the Pittsburgh Steelers looked like themselves for the first time all season. They also sounded like...
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07:29 PM on 10/21/2010
Better than ever!!
09:04 PM on 10/19/2010
This sets a terrible example! He should be fired, along with Micheal Vick and I hate to say it - maybe even Brett Farve. Kids look up to these guys! It's time to clean up pro sports!
05:58 PM on 10/19/2010
Welcome back!!!
04:39 PM on 10/19/2010
Until Ben is seen with some young lady on his arm, there will be questions. I think this guy has some serious sexual problems with women. On two occasions Ben has forced himself on unwilling women.

A haircut and behavior modification along with league mandated sessions with a mental health professional may have satisfied Roger Goodell, but chances are good that at some point, Ben will repeat his bad behavior towards women.
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12:28 PM on 10/19/2010
Big Ben is the Man for the moment. But you just wait until he comes up against the Ravens!
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brwnizofmine
11:31 AM on 10/19/2010
I bet the people that love Ben so much dont love Michael Vick as much. And to top it off, Vick's infraction was against dogs and Ben's alleged infractions were against humans. Big difference.
02:12 PM on 10/19/2010
I've been trying to explain this for about a month now to Vick haters in various forums but they usually end up being Vets, Dog-trainers and the like....
01:56 AM on 10/20/2010
Vic admited his guilt. He was arrested and convicted.

Ben denied it. Was not convicted or even tried.

Big difference. Not even comparable.
Because Vic was guilty Ben has to be?

Right......I guess you "think" accusations the same as guilt. Hell lets throw out courts all together and let commentators on the internet be the judge and jury. That is what you want it seems.
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brwnizofmine
07:41 AM on 10/20/2010
No, what I really think is that SOME people love animals more than they love humans. That's what I really think.

Getting back to Ben, he's denied it a few times, right? Who is the better man, one that owns up and takes his punishment or one who keeps denying and getting away with it?
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whizkid
07:41 PM on 10/18/2010
Just a good old boy isn't he?
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frank day
Republican = FAIL
04:10 PM on 10/18/2010
hip hip huray? Why are we cheering for this guy?
06:16 PM on 10/18/2010
Because he's a great quarterback?
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mountainweb
Conservative Commonsense
06:46 PM on 10/18/2010
He is a winning quarterback, need to accept the fact that he was NOT charged with anything, get over it and get on with football...
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bmwracer
In the LEFT lane.
02:54 PM on 10/18/2010
He's not going to hear those cheers outside of Pittsburgh.
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iman927
Trolling is an art.
02:23 PM on 10/18/2010
"Alex Mack, angry at how Harrison kept sidelining his teammates, reacted by angrily kicking the ball about 20 yards to the Browns' sideline, drawing a delay-of-game penalty."

False.

Mack thought it was a fumble, and instead of risking a recovery (o lineman often fail to control the fumble), he kicked the ball backwards towards the sideline to end the play with the Browns still in possession. He didn't hear the whistle, I guess.
theryan
My micro-bio was empty.
12:56 PM on 10/18/2010
A lot of people came jumping back on the bandwagon, I personally, never left. Welcome back Ben, good game and I am looking forward to some more awesomeness.
06:16 PM on 10/18/2010
me too... I loves me some Big Ben. :-)