Which is, of course, what Tomlin’s teams have done for 14 seasons.
Was it pretty? No. But “not pretty” is when Tomlin’s teams are historically most dangerous. Above all, Tomlin’s teams smell blood.
That’s what happened on one ridiculous play call by the Bills at the start of the fourth quarter.
Facing a fourth-and-1 from Pittsburgh’s 41-yard line — and with a 10-6 lead at the start of the fourth quarter — the Bills wisely went for it. After all, this is the Buffalo team that stuck its own head in the guillotine a year ago by opting for field goals against the Patrick Mahomes-powered Kansas City Chiefs in January’s A.F.C. championship game. A little guts in the play-calling is a welcome change.
What came next was beyond bizarre.
Allen turned around to flick a pass backward to Matt Breida, and cornerback Cameron Sutton was right there to lasso the running back to the ground for a 7-yard loss.
Four plays later, Pittsburgh pounced.
Roethlisberger feathered a 5-yard score to Diontae Johnson in the back of the end zone. Johnson, who led the league in drops a year ago, displayed remarkable concentration locking the ball in while dragging his back foot.