What was the final score of the pittsburgh game

The Pittsburgh Steelers entered the 2022 preseason as a team filled with indecision. No more Ben Roethlisberger at quarterback, and a new era of Steelers football was slated to being. Needless to say, the fan base was curious as to what this new version of their favorite team would look like.

The new name for the Steelers’ home venue, Acrisure Stadium, hosted the first preseason action when the Seattle Seahawks came to town, and the two teams were hoping to get off and running to start the exhibition season.

After winning the opening coin toss, Mike Tomlin elected to take the football to start the game. Mitch Trubisky took the field with the starters deep in their own end after a personal foul penalty against the Steelers’ kickoff unit. The start of the drive didn’t phase the Steelers offense, as they put together an impressive drive which ended in a Trubisky pass in the red-zone to Gunner Olszewski for the first score of the preseason.

The drive featured several third down conversions, one run by Anthony McFarland and another pass to Olszewski, to move the Steelers into the red-zone. The 7 play, 90-yard drive was capped off by a Nick Sciba extra point to make the score 7-0 with 12:15 remaining in the first quarter.

After a brief Seattle drive, Trubisky and the Steelers’ offense were back on the field. A beautiful catch by Connor Heyward and a nice run by McFarland put the offense at midfield. Trubisky was able to scramble past midfield, but the drive stalled and the team punted for the first time.

The Seahawks had a three-and-out, and a Steven Sims punt return set up the offense near the red-zone for their third possession. Mason Rudolph entered the game, and after a fumble on his first play, found George Pickens on a 3rd and 12 play for the second Steelers touchdown. The point-after made the score 14-0 with 1:39 left in the opening quarter.

The second quarter began with the Seahawks running the ball well between the tackles, a trend Steelers fans were hoping to avoid in 2022. Even with backups in the game, the Steelers were unable to get off the field, but did hold Seattle to a field goal for their first points of the game. The kick banked in off the left upright, making the score 14-3 with 12:51 left in the second quarter.

Rudolph remained in the game, and was able to put together a time-consuming drive. The drive was filled with big plays, primarily to George Pickens and the running of Jaylen Warren. Following Myles Boykin putting the offense inside the 10-yard line, Rudolph and the offense weren’t able to punch it in for the touchdown, instead settling for a field goal. The kick made the score 17-3 with 4:28 remaining in the half.

Geno Smith remained in the game for Seattle, but the drive stalled quickly and the Pittsburgh offense received the ball with 2:48 left in the second quarter. Rudolph took over with one timeout remaining at the 20-yard line, but the offense only gained 9 yards before punting the ball back to the Seahawks.

With another shot, Smith took advantage and moved the ball to the 7-yard line. A Seattle run set up the offense to the two-yard line, and Smith took the ball into the end-zone on a bootleg option. The touchdown made the score 17-10 heading into halftime.

Seattle started the second half with the football, and Drew Lock took over at quarterback for the Seahawks. After one play, and one missed tackle, the Seahawks found themselves in Pittsburgh territory. Lock delivered a big third down conversion to get the Seahawks offense into the red-zone. From the 6-yard line, Lock hit his tight end on third down to tie the game 17-17.

The Steelers’ first round pick, Kenny Pickett, took over the offense in the second half, and it didn’t take long for Pickett to get the fans on their feet. Pickett hit Jace Steinberger on his first pass, and a jet sweep handoff to Steven Sims went for a huge gain. After three plays, Pickett and the offense found themselves in the red-zone. The rookie found Jaylen Warren at the goal line, and the ball was stretched over the plane for the touchdown.

Mike Tomlin elected to go for the two-point conversion, and Pickett found Connor Heyward to make the score 25-17 with 6:44 left in the third quarter.

Seattle’s ensuing drive was short-lived, and Pickett and the Steelers offense took over at their own 7-yard line after the fair catch on the punt. The rookie’s second drive didn’t go as smooth as his first, with Pickett taking a sack on third down and forcing the punt unit on the field for the first time in the half.

Lock continued his solid play in the second half by taking advantage of the great field position following the three-and-out. It took hardly no time for Lock to get the Seahawks’ offense into the end zone. Trailing by two, Pete Carroll elected to go for two, and the conversion was successful, making the score 25-25 with 13:32 left in the fourth quarter.

Kenny Pickett’s third drive saw the offense move the ball, but on a 4th and 2 near midfield Mike Tomlin elected to punt the ball instead of going for it. Seattle’s offense continued to move the ball well, but their next drive stalled near midfield and gave the ball back to Pittsburgh with 5:59 left in regulation.

With the running of Master Teague, and the controlled passing of Pickett, the Steelers moved the ball to midfield at the two-minute warning. When it looked like the offense would get into field goal range, a 4th and short resulted in a sack of Kenny Pickett and a turnover on downs.

The ball was on the 47-yard line, with 1:17 remaining, but Mark Robinson came on the blitz and strip sacked Lock which was recovered by Tuzar Skipper, giving the offense another shot with 1:10 remaining.

With another opportunity, Pickett made plays with his legs and arm to get the Steelers the lead, and the win. Pickett, after scrambling for a near first down, found Tyler Vaughns along the sideline who made a man miss and got into the end zone for the game-winning score.

The extra point made the score 32-25, and that score would hold as the final score giving the Steelers a 1-0 record this preseason with a trip to play the Jacksonville Jaguars on deck next week.

For the first time in history, the Cincinnati Bengals and Pittsburgh Steelers met on the gridiron to kick off the season, and all sorts of madness ensued. The reigning AFC Champions lost 23-20 to the Steelers in the last seconds of overtime.

Joe Burrow had a tumultuous season-opening performance, turning the ball over five times and taking seven sacks behind an offensive line that failed to limit both Cameron Heyward and TJ Watt. The latter finished with a sack, three tackles for loss, and an interception. But where Burrow struggled, the Bengals’ defense thrived, limiting the Steelers’ offense to 267 yards and just 13 first downs in five quarters of play.

The start was comically disastrous. Following a three-and-out from the defense, Cordell Volson gave up a sack to Cameron Heyward on the very first play. Joe Burrow wasn’t sacked on the next play, but his first throw ended up in the hands of Minkah Fitzpatrick. The Steelers’ safety proceeded to return the interception to the house for the game’s first score.

It was a bad first showing for the Bengals’ new-look offensive line. Alex Highsmith gave Jonah Williams trouble early on and ended up with a strip-sack on Burrow later in the period. The game would’ve gotten out of hand had Cincinnati’s defense not stuffed the Steelers at the goal-line on the ensuing drive. Instead of stepping on the Bengals’ throat, the Steelers settled for three.

Pittsburgh’s early offensive struggles were met with a stout Bengals’ defense, but turnovers from the offense made the first half all about the visitors. Burrow threw three interceptions to go with the strip-sack in the first two quarters. All 17 of the Steelers’ first half points came off the turnovers they forced.

Lou Anarumo’s unit came up big again to start the third quarter. Following a booming punt from Kevin Huber in his 208th game as a Bengal, the defense continued to stifle the Steelers’ offensive attack. Burrow and the offense received great field position on the ensuing drive and No. 9 threw his first touchdown of the season to Tyler Boyd. A two-point conversion to Mike Thomas, who was playing for a concussed Tee Higgins, brought the game to 17-14.

While Higgins was recovering on the sidelines, Ja’Marr Chase picked up right where he left off last year. The second-year receiver hauled in 10 catches for 129 yards against the Steelers’ secondary. Joe Mixon also had a solid debut despite having his left arm cut open in the third quarter. Mixon finished with 145 total yards on 34 touches.

Cincinnati failed to get anything going offensively to begin the fourth quarter, and Pittsburgh took advantage of excellent field position, knocking in a field goal to increase their lead to 20-14. The Bengals had a chance to get their first lead of the day on the next drive and came to a crucial decision at the Steelers’ 36-yard line. Instead of opting for a 54-yard field goal, the offense stayed on the field and Burrow threw his fourth interception of the game.

Once more, the Bengals’ defense bailed out their offensive counterparts and sent the Steelers off the field for another three-and-out. Burrow and Co. made it all the way to the Steelers’ one-yard line but failed to punch in the touchdown with less than two minutes left in the game. Hope was kept alive after the Steelers only took seconds off the clock on the following drive, and this time, the Bengals’ final drive ended in a touchdown.

Chase and Burrow connected with just two seconds remaining, and all they needed was an extra point to end it. But instead of Clark Harris trotting out at long snapper, Mitchell Wilcox went in for him due to a biceps injury Harris suffered earlier. The snap was slow and Fitzpatrick blocked Evan McPherson’s extra point, sending the game to overtime.

Cincinnati got the Steelers off the field on the first possession of overtime, and following a 64-yard drive, the Bengals once again sent Wilcox out to snap for Kevin Huber and McPherson. This time, the snap was high, the laces were never aligned, and McPherson missed the 29-yard attempt wide left. The Steelers finally showed signs of life against the Bengals’ defense, got Chris Boswell in range, and the veteran kicker doinked it from 55 yards out.

Yep. Not a single thing made sense this game.

Want more insanity? On the following drive, Burrow was strip-sacked on third down at midfield, and Samaje Perine scooped it up and returned it for 12 yards. But the rules don’t allow another offensive player to advance the ball, so the Bengals were out of field goal range, eliminating any chance of Wilcox redeeming himself.

Boswell did redeem himself and knocked in a 53-yarder as time expired as the Bengals fall to 0-1 to start the season. They’re on the road next week with a matchup against the Dallas Cowboys.