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Jacksonville Beats History

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Published: January 6, 2008

Updated: 01/06/2008 12:22 am

PITTSBURGH - Never in the Steelers' 75 seasons had a team beaten them twice in Pittsburgh in the same season. The Jacksonville Jaguars beat history - and the Steelers - despite a memorable fourth-quarter collapse that nearly cost the visitors their season.
Josh Scobee saved the game by kicking a 25-yard field goal with 37 seconds remaining and the Jaguars came back after squandering an 18-point lead in the fourth quarter to beat the Steelers 31-29 on Saturday night in an AFC wild-card game Saturday night that was wild in every sense of the word.

Jacksonville appeared to be done after Najeh Davenport's second 1-yard TD run of the game gave the Steelers a 29-28 lead with about six minutes remaining. But quarterback David Garrard, not a great runner, found a seam on a convert-or-else fourth-and-2 play and rambled 32 yards to the Steelers 11 with 1:56 left.

Garrard aided the Steelers' comeback by throwing two interceptions - one less than he had all season - only to come up with the play that may have saved the Jaguars' season.
Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger put the Steelers into a deep hole by throwing three interceptions before halftime, then got rolling after he began lining up in a shotgun formation and threw touchdown passes to Santonio Holmes (37 yards) and Heath Miller (14 yards) in 4 1/2 minutes of the fourth quarter to get Pittsburgh to within 28-23.

The Steelers rallied from 15 points down to tie Jacksonville late in the Jaguars' 29-22 win at Heinz Field on Dec. 16 but couldn't close the deal. They couldn't this time, either, even though Roethlisberger, shouldering the Steelers' offense virtually by himself with no running game, was 17 of 23 for 263 yards and two touchdowns just in the second half.

The Jags have beaten Pittsburgh four times in the last three seasons, including their 29-22 win Dec. 16, and they appeared ready to do easily by building a 28-10 lead behind backup running back Maurice Jones-Drew's playmaking.

Jones-Drew, escaping Jaguars star Fred Taylor's shadow in a performance filled with big plays, scored on a 43-yard swing pass after one of Roethlisberger's interceptions and a 10-yard run that provided the 18-point lead. Jones-Drew's 96-yard kickoff return the first time Jacksonville touched the ball set up Taylor's 1-yard touchdown run and immediately answered the Steelers' opening-possession 80-yard touchdown drive.

The Jaguars came in off six wins in their last eight games, while the Steelers - missing five starters, including star running back Willie Parker - limped into the postseason with three losses in four games and four in seven.

Rashean Mathis returned the first of three first-half interceptions 63 yards for a TD.

Mathis stepped in front of Santonio Holmes for his first pick, waited for a few blocks and weaved his way to the end zone. Two plays later, Roethlisberger rolled right and threw into double coverage. Mathis and linebacker Justin Durant had Davenport sandwiched in coverage, and Mathis outjumped the other two for another pick.

Pittsburgh was driving late in the second and trying to get back in it, but Roethlisberger was picked off again. Defensive lineman Derek Landri dropped into coverage and made a nice play on the short pass over the middle.

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