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The Steelers lost 19-17 on Saturday night to the Cincinnati Bengals, who kept their long-shot playoff hopes alive. For the Steelers, it was the fourth straight game in which they never led.
The Steelers ran roughshod over the Bengals' hapless defense in the first half, led by Russell Wilson's 257 yards passing on 21-of-27 passing, with two touchdowns.
The Steelers returned to dominating the rivalry in the 1990s. Immediately following the Bengals' six-game winning streak, Pittsburgh won eight straight meetings from 1991 to 1994. On November 30, 1992, the Steelers sacked Bengals quarterback David Klingler ten times, one short of the single-game NFL record, en route to a 21–9 Steelers win. [12]
After going back and forth on possessions, the Steelers managed to win the game when Boswell kicked the game winning 53-yard field goal with seconds left to make the final score 23–20. With their 3-game winning streak against the Steelers snapped, the Bengals started the season 0–1.
The Wilson scoop-and-score with 11:14 to go in the fourth quarter made it 41-24, and proved to be the most costly turnover of the game. The Steelers produced just three points from the Bengals two ...
The Bengals kicked a field goal to make the score 27–24 before the Steelers would score another touchdown on a pass to Pat Freiermuth near the end of the third quarter. Early in the 4th quarter, Joe Burrow was once again strip stacked by T. J. Watt.
The Bengals and Steelers are both coming off a loss, but Cincinnati is without Joe Burrow. Pittsburgh fired their offensive coordinator this week.
The Bengals wrapped up the scoring of the game with Randy Bullock's 37-yard field goal to make the final score 36–10. With their 11th straight loss to the Steelers, the Bengals fell to 2–6–1. Week 11: at Washington Football Team