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"I talked to him after the game and said, 'You're going to let me keep the ball right?' He got one of the game balls, so he gave me that ball," Thomas said. "That's great to be able to catch his 400th. Hopefully he'll sign it for me. I can go back and show my grandkids in the record book."
Manning, who hadn't played in a game that counted since Jan. 8, 2011, spent much of his night on the sideline as Roethlisberger led a clock-chewing offense that had Denver's defenders gassed and Manning antsy as the Steelers converted 11 of 19 third downs.
"Roethlisberger was awesome on third down," Manning said. "I've seen that before throughout his career. He does a good job extending plays. You get up to warm up, kind of getting ready and see them on a third-and-15 and thinking you're about to go out there and he converts it and you go back and sit down. We thought it was important when we got the ball back we had to be efficient."
At one point, Roethlisberger had taken 30 snaps to Manning's one -- a kneel-down -- during two monstrous drives that spanned halftime.
"Roethlisberger was awesome on third down," Manning said. "Wasn't much fun sitting on the bench there all night. Great job by our defense in the end, getting that turnover."
After going to the no-huddle midway through the first half, Manning led Denver on three straight 80-yard touchdown drives, picking apart Pittsburgh's defense with precision.
"It helped a lot," Manning said of the hurry-up. "We're going to use the no-huddle as a change-up. Once we did it, it went so well, the coaches kind of said stay with it. I was kind of afraid that might happen."
After Porter's pick-six, Roethlisberger was sacked three times on his last possession after going down just twice all night.
"Better late than never," said Von Miller, who had two of those sacks.
Although this one was a screen pass, Thomas' long TD was reminiscent of his 80-yard touchdown on a crossing pattern on the first play of overtime that beat the Steelers 29-23 in the AFC wild-card game eight months ago when Denver was Tim Tebow's turf.
That changed when Manning was released by the Colts on March 7 after 14 seasons and after a frenzied free agency tour chose Denver as his destination for his comeback two weeks later. The Broncos sent Tebow to Broadway 24 hours later.
On Sunday night, Manning looked like he hadn't missed a beat -- or 611 days.
"What can you say?" Steelers safety Troy Polamalu said. "I mean, he's Peyton Manning. He's the same Manning. Everything anybody has ever said about him is probably the same thing I would say tonight."
NOTES: Denver DT Ty Warren, playing in his first game since 2009, sprained an elbow in the first half and didn't return. ... Also hurt in the first half were Steelers O-linemen Marcus Gilbert (knee) and Ramon Foster (eye). ... Steelers star LB James Harrison (knee) sat out, as did S Ryan Clark, who has sickle cell trait that makes playing at altitude dangerous.
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