ARLINGTON, Texas -- The locker room was quiet, save for the sounds of tape ripping and travel bags shuffling. The Pittsburgh Steelers' staff was engineering an exit from Cowboys Stadium on Sunday night while the players spoke quietly at their lockers, whispering thoughts on their future.
There were no bombastic remarks or seething, teeth-clenched outbursts. From a generally outspoken team, this was the reserved look. If anything, after suffering a 27-24 overtime loss to the Dallas Cowboys in front of 95,595, the Steelers were conflicted.
Frustration? Yes. They'd missed an opportunity to close in on the reeling Baltimore Ravens and stay even with the surging Cincinnati Bengals.
Then, reality. If the seesaw Steelers -- who've lost four of five -- win out, they are in what players call "the tournament."
On NFL Network
NFL Replay will re-air the Dallas Cowboys' 27-24 OT win over the Pittsburgh Steelers in Week 15 on Wednesday, Dec. 19 at 9 p.m. ET.
"We're upset," said defensive end Brett Keisel, who had a fumble recovery. "They're a tough team; we feel like we're a tough team. We didn't make enough plays down the stretch to win. But the fact is, we still have a chance. That's how we have to look at it. It's not like we're finished. We still can climb our way out of it and have a shot."
Pittsburgh (7-7) had its chances Sunday before Cowboys cornerback Brandon Carr picked off a pass in overtime and returned it 36 yards to put the ball at the 1 and set up Dan Bailey's winning kick.
The Steelers had been up seven with 12:37 left after Antonio Brown's 7-yard touchdown, only to allow the Cowboys back in. In a tie game, Pittsburgh drove to the Dallas 37 with 3:35 left, only to have Ben Roethlisberger get sacked by Cowboys pass rushers DeMarcus Ware and Anthony Spencer. The Steelers had a first-and-10 at their own 46 with 1:34 left, only to wind up punting it away. And, of course, they had received the ball in overtime before Roethlisberger threw a pass behind Mike Wallace, hitting Carr's hands instead.
And yet? The Steelers take down the Bengals and Cleveland Browns in Weeks 16 and 17 -- both games are in Pittsburgh -- and it's a new start. That was coach Mike Tomlin's postgame message.
" 'We control our own destiny,' " said linebacker LaMarr Woodley, recounting what Tomlin told the team. "That was the whole entire message right there. That's just the reality of everything. You can't look back at the losses the last two weeks. We still have our opportunity to be in the playoffs. At the end of the day, it's still something to look forward to."
It has been that kind of season for the Steelers. Up and down. Enduring plenty of health issues. Losing Roethlisberger to a serious, potentially devastating injury that wound up costing him just three starts. Going through the lows of losing to the Ravens without him, and the highs of, well, beating the Ravens without him. Starting 0-3 on the road, then racing back to a 6-3 record overall. And now, just the opposite.
That explains the conflicting emotions. How can they feel despair when, thanks to the Ravens' loss earlier Sunday, little had changed for them? How can they count this as a missed opportunity when opportunity hasn't gone anywhere?
"It stings right now," linebacker Larry Foote said. "Probably tomorrow, (when) coach shows us all the scenarios and we watch the film (is when we'll get over it). But like I said before, our goal is to win the Super Bowl. We're not playing right now, and making our goals harder to reach, but we still got life. We gotta make a decision and turn this thing around."
The search for consistency is the first battle. Sustaining the bright spots. They have two games to get it done.
"We just got a figure out a way to put four quarters together, get some consistency," said Steelers tight end Heath Miller, who had seven catches for 92 yards and a score on Sunday. "During games when we're on a roll, it feels like we can't be stopped. But for whatever reason, we're not able to sustain that for four quarters."
The Steelers have flaws. On Sunday, even with Dallas receiver Dez Bryant nowhere near full strength with a broken finger, Pittsburgh's defensive backs couldn't cover for most of the 60 minutes. The Steelers rushed for just 69 yards. And when it mattered most, the protection broke down.
But the talent is still there. Wallace can still blow past a defense, as he did on his 60-yard catch. Brown can still gash a secondary, like he did on his touchdown reception.
Evidence suggests that Pittsburgh could pull it together in "the tournament" -- if they get in. Could 2012 be like 2005? When the Steelers were 7-5, won their last four to get in, and ran the table to nab a title? Could the trials and tribulations they've endured during the regular season pay off in January?
"Once you get in, everyone's got a clean slate," Keisel said. "It doesn't matter how you got in, it's that you're in. That's how you have to look at it. We gotta pick up the pieces. We're playing two teams that we know at the end and hopefully that can be an advantage."
So that's where the Steelers are. Reeling. With all their options open. Fortunate to be still alive, as Woodley noted. But also in a spot they deserve, with no margin for error.
"Take care of our business," Foote said, "and we'll get a ticket."
**
What else is going on? Here is a rundown:
Kirk Cousins' value skyrockets
It's safe to say that the Washington Redskins didn't do anything close to wasting a draft pick when they selected Michigan State quarterback Kirk Cousins in the fourth round last April. Instead, what some considered to be a redundant move after the Redskins had traded for the right to pick Robert Griffin III wound up keeping them in the playoff hunt.
Daniel Jeremiah says Kirk Cousins is just one of the men who kept the Redskins on track without RG3. **More ...**
The 'Skins had enough confidence in Cousins to sit the recently injured RG3 as a precaution on Sunday, and all Cousins did was complete 26 of his 37 passes for 329 yards and two touchdowns -- including a sweet 54-yarder to Leonard Hankerson -- in a win over the Cleveland Browns. If you were impressed by what Cousins did last week against the Baltimore Ravens, you should have been more impressed this time around.
Let's take this a step further. RG3 isn't going anywhere. There will be no battle for the starting job. Washington needs picks. Cousins is under contract for three more years, with a base salary of $480,000 in 2013, $570,000 in 2014 and $660,000 in 2015.
Would a team give up a second-round pick for him this offseason? Has someone seen enough? Makes me wonder ...
Time to make a stand
For a coach on the hot seat -- and there are plenty -- the focus becomes sharper at season's end. Do teams fold, like the San Diego Chargers and Buffalo Bills, or do they stand up tall, like the Carolina Panthers and Arizona Cardinals?
While it appears Norv Turner's future with the Bolts is no longer in doubt, Chan Gailey's with the Bills still is. And what about Ron Rivera and the Panthers? What about Ken Whisenhunt and the Cards?
All Rivera's Panthers have done is handily beat the Atlanta Falcons in Week 14 and give the Chargers a 31-7 pounding Sunday. All the Cardinals did was reverse course following a 58-0 shellacking at the hands of the Seattle Seahawks last week, coming up with a 38-10 win over the Detroit Lions.
For Arizona especially, winning meant something. Nothing had been going right for the Cardinals. When team president Michael Bidwill spoke to reporters last week, he emphasized that the organization would be evaluating the entire product. It's noteworthy that the team responded when the coach really needed it to.
The same goes for the Panthers, finally getting it together in the latter half of a tough season. Cam Newton, who completed 19 of 33 passes for 231 yards on Sunday, is now simply building the hype for Year 3.
Bears in a free-fall
After starting 7-1, the Chicago Bears were leading the NFC North and seemed a likely shoo-in for a playoff spot. Now, Chicago has lost five of its last six, and everything is in doubt. If the Bears end up on the outside looking in, some hard questions will be asked.
What to do about coach Lovie Smith and his staff? Some have already called for his firing locally. Yes, Smith has taken the Bears to the Super Bowl and been named Coach of the Year. But if Chicago is sunk by another late-season swoon? It might be hard to come back from that, even for a respected leader like Smith.
That's why the heartfelt, emotional comments by receiver Brandon Marshall (six catches for 56 yards and a score) on Sunday were intriguing.
The Bears scored just 13 points in a loss to the Green Bay Packers, with quarterback Jay Cutler throwing for 135 yards and Matt Forte averaging 3.4 yards per rush. Oh, and they went the entire game without converting a third or fourth down, which is so bad, it's almost impressive.
Here is what Marshall, who always speaks his mind, had to say:
"Everybody involved in offense should be held accountable, even if that means jobs," Marshall said. "Everyone on offense should be held accountable. It's been this way all year. There's no excuse. There's still hope, but at the same time, we need to be held accountable."
Simply put, Chicago has too many weapons to be so bad on offense. And while there will be plenty of dialogue about Smith's job security, one wonders if an offensive cleansing (including coordinator Mike Tice) would be enough to save Smith.
Some rapid-fire takes:
Darlington: Statements made
The Falcons and the Texans were among the teams serving notice to the NFL on Sunday, Jeff Darlington says. **More ...**
» OK, Atlanta Falcons, I believe. You win. I doubted last week, thinking I had figured out that your wins over the first few months of the season weren't as meaningful as one loss to the Carolina Panthers. I take it all back. The way you crushed the New York Giants -- in big-boy fashion -- made me reverse course.
» How do the G-Men destroy the New Orleans Saints one week and get destroyed by the Falcons the next? Eli Manning throwing two picks in the first 20 minutes on Sunday didn't help. But nothing was worse than Big Blue going for it on fourth-and-1 on the Falcons' 11 and failing. That ended the game. Nevertheless, I'm not getting off the Giants' bandwagon yet. Not with the way they closed last year. Not even with that 34-point loss. Not when Eli still has drives left.
» I don't have much to say about the Denver Broncos. They drilled the free-falling Baltimore Ravens, 34-17, for their ninth straight win. And they dominated this game in every way. Peyton Manning threw for 204 yards, Knowshon Moreno totaled 118 yards, receiver Eric Decker had 133 yards and Chris Harris added a pick-six.
» Joe Flacco hit his team's situation on the head after Sunday's ugly loss, saying that while the Baltimore Ravens are 9-5, it feels like they're 0-14. It does. The Ravens have lost three in a row, and the offense actually looked worse after former coordinator Cam Cameron's firing. The Ravens might be the least scary team in the postseason.
» So this is how the Norv Turner Era will end for the San Diego Chargers? Not with a series of game balls and bouquets, but blowout losses? This is what can happen when everyone knows it's over. That running back Ryan Mathews left with a shoulder ailment just added injury to insult.
» The Saints might be out of the playoff race, but they continue to play their butts off. They earned their first shutout in 17 years by beating the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, 41-0. Must be somewhat painful for Saints fans, as many would argue that New Orleans is playing better than some playoff teams.
» It's been a disappointing season for the Oakland Raiders, but watching a finally healthy Darren McFadden bust out for 149 total yards against the Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday must have been comforting. The only question with McFadden is if he can stay healthy, and it's a fair one going forward. But when he is, he clearly can play.
» I'd heard from Seattle Seahawks people last week who felt bad about dropping 58 on the Cardinals. And yet, with his team up 30 in the fourth quarter, Pete Carroll fakes a punt against the Buffalo Bills. Well, that's just not nice. Maybe he's still trying to impress those Associated Press voters?
» One of these days, someone will have to explain why, in a close game, Kansas City Chiefs star Jamaal Charles gets just nine carries. He's a runner who can take it the distance on any given play. At least give him a crack at it.
» The Green Bay Packers drafted Mason Crosby in 2007, using a sixth-round pick on a kicker who has since hovered under 78 percent for his NFL career. Now, with 12 misses in 14 games, it's time to look elsewhere. I am all for loyalty. But a Super Bowl contender cannot go into the postseason with a liability anywhere, let alone at a spot that promises to burn it. Can't do it.
» Trent Richardson continues to cofound. Some promising runs, but just 28 yards on 11 carries against the Redskins on Sunday. And it's not like the Browns' offensive line can't block anyone. Is it scheme? Coaching? It's surely not talent, right? Confusing.
» It seems the Houston Texans are back to being the NFL's most complete team. They have the kinds of weapons that so few do, with Andre Johnson collecting 151 receiving yards and Arian Foster rumbling to 165 on the ground against the Indianapolis Colts on Sunday.
» Who knew Vick Ballard, the rookie from Mississippi State, would emerge as the Colts' starter? But he has. Hey, if you can be a star in the SEC, the next level isn't that far off.
» Words of wisdom -- via Twitter -- from San Francisco 49ers CEO Jed York after the Patriots nearly came all the way back to steal a dramatic win Sunday: "Big props to #12. That's why we play 60 min. If anyone complains about a team running up the score, remember tonight." Smart man.
» I don't know which direction the Jacksonville Jaguars are going in with regard to the future, but if they secure that No. 1 pick, it won't hurt.
» Since it appears the Miami Dolphins aren't interested in renewing the contract of running back Reggie Bush (104 yards against the Jaguars on Sunday), someone will get to sign a versatile running back who can be used in any formation. Bush's free agency could make for an intriguing drama.
» Too many injuries and too much inconsistency ended the Tampa Bay Buccaneers' playoff dreams in 2012. Look out in 2013, though, assuming Josh Freeman takes a giant leap forward.
» Minnesota Vikings running back Adrian Peterson is ruining ACL rehab timetables for everyone else.
» That was one inefficient day for Detroit Lions quarterback Matthew Stafford against the Cardinals. What happened to those guys? The Lions took many character risks in the past few drafts; is this what happens when they get frustrated?
» With the loss to the Seahawks, the Bills clinched their 13th straight season without a playoff appearance. That's just sad. No wonder the crowd in Buffalo is so football-starved.
» Football Hero of the Day Award goes to Dez Bryant, the Cowboys receiver who played with a thick splint on his hand. We've always known he loves football. But playing with a badly broken finger -- while needing to catch the ball -- is a different level. He had 59 yards and a score.
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