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The Steelers looked much like they did during their 41-27 loss to New England in the AFC championship game six years ago: dazed and confused. This game followed a similar pattern as that one as the Patriots built a big lead, and the Steelers never could catch up.
"We got off to a fast start and played from ahead the whole game, and that's a big difference," Brady said.
New England led 10-0, 23-3, 29-10 and 36-18, and all three of Pittsburgh's touchdowns came in the fourth quarter. Ben Roethlisberger was 30 of 49 for 387 yards and three touchdowns, but wasn't nearly as effective as Brady during the NFL's first matchup of multiple Super Bowl-winning quarterbacks in 25 seasons.
"I don't think they did anything to confuse us that we didn't expect," said Roethlisberger, the two-time Super Bowl winner who was sacked five times. "They flat-out beat us."
Despite Hillis' domination the week before, Steelers running back Rashard Mendenhall was held to 50 yards. He wasn't a factor.
Neither was linebacker James Harrison, the master intimidator who doesn't have to worry about getting fined for any of his hits Sunday night. And star safety Troy Polamalu was neutralized as Brady repeatedly threw underneath Pittsburgh's two-deep zone defense.
Wes Welker led New England with eight catches for 89 yards, Deion Branch had seven for 71 yards and Gronkowski had five for 72 yards.
The Steelers missed a chance to jump ahead of the Ravens (6-3) in the AFC North race. Baltimore lost in the final minute Thursday night at Atlanta.
It didn't help that Roethlisberger was missing his blind-side protectors, left tackle Max Starks (neck) and left guard Chris Kemoeatu (ankle), or that wide receiver Hines Ward's streak of 186 consecutive games with a reception ended. Ward missed the final three quarters with a concussion, the fourth by a Steelers player in a week.
"They executed better, and they were more physical," Steelers safety Ryan Clark said. "They did what they wanted to, basically."
The offense's ineffectiveness, at least until the game was out of hand, didn't explain how Brady worked over a defense that came in allowing a league-low 15.4 points.
"It's plain and simple," Steelers cornerback Ike Taylor said, "we just got our butts whooped."
Nobody in a quiet Pittsburgh locker room would argue.
"We've got to get this (fixed)," Harrison said.
[Associated Press;
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