Tag Archives: Roethlisberger

Steelers ‘Weren’t Real Happy’ About Pat Freiermuth Saying Canada’s Offense Didn’t Have Hot Routes In 2022, Roethlisberger Says – Steelers Depot

  1. Steelers ‘Weren’t Real Happy’ About Pat Freiermuth Saying Canada’s Offense Didn’t Have Hot Routes In 2022, Roethlisberger Says Steelers Depot
  2. Ben Roethlisberger says 49ers reached out during 2022 season to ‘gauge interest’ in return to NFL NFL.com
  3. Ben Roethlisberger claims he was in discussions with 49ers during 2022 season profootballtalk.nbcsports.com
  4. ‘I Don’t Know That I Could Play:’ Ben Roethlisberger Nearly Missed Super Bowl XLV After Injuring Foot In Shuffleboard Accident Steelers Depot
  5. Steelers’ Legendary QB1 Ben Roethlisberger Doubles Down On Defense Of Maligned OC Matt Canada Steeler Nation
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Tom Brady, others react to Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger announcing retirement

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As expected, quarterback Ben Roethlisberger announced his retirement on Thursday after 18 seasons with the Pittsburgh Steelers. The 39-year-old shared the news in a video posted to his social media pages.

In the video, No. 7 is seen cleaning out his locker while reflecting on nearly two decades in Pittsburgh. 

“I don’t know how to put into words what the game of football has meant to me and what a blessing it has been … The journey has been exhilarating, defined by relationships and fueled by a spirit of competition,” he says in the video. “Yet the time has come to clean out my locker, hang up my cleats and continue to be all I can be to my wife and children. I retire from football a truly grateful man.”

He then thanked his wife, his three kids, his parents and his sister. He also thanked his former coaches, teammates and the fans who supported him.

“Football has been a gift,” the two-time Super Bowl champion said.

The Steelers drafted Roethlisberger in 2004 with the 11th overall pick and he spent his entire career in black and gold. Following his retirement announcement, fans and players reacted, some Steelers fans thanking him for the 18 years, some rivals celebrating the announcement and others reacting to a new era of quarterbacks emerging with each veteran QB retiring.

Here are some of the best reactions:

Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Tom Brady joked about how different their training styles are.

The Steelers thanked Big Ben.

Eli Manning, the No. 1-overall pick in the 2004 NFL Draft and one of Roethlisberger’s most notable contemporaries, congratulated him on his retirement.

Not a bad stat.

Fans are trying to manifest.

It’s the end of an era.

Fans are already thinking five years ahead.

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Pittsburgh Steelers QB Ben Roethlisberger retires after 18 seasons

PITTSBURGH — After 18 seasons as the quarterback of the Pittsburgh Steelers, Ben Roethlisberger officially announced his retirement Thursday morning.

In a video posted to his Twitter account, Roethlisberger announced what became obvious over the final weeks of the 2021 season.

“The journey has been exhilarating, fueled by a spirit of competition,” Roethlisberger said. “Yet the time has come to clean out my locker, hang up my cleats and continue to be all I can be to my wife and children. I retire from football a truly grateful man.”

Roethlisberger finished a likely Hall of Fame career with two Super Bowl wins, Rookie of the Year honors, and the fifth-most passing yards (64,088) in NFL history.



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Ben Roethlisberger was easy to admire as a quarterback, but not as a man | Pittsburgh Steelers

Ben Roethlisberger is lucky that football legacies are not decided by finales. If Sunday night was indeed Big Ben’s last ever NFL game, as he has strongly hinted, it wasn’t exactly a mic drop. In the 42-21 beatdown by the Chiefs, Roethlisberger struggled with rollouts, and lacked the creativity and finesse of his opposing number, Patrick Mahomes.

Just as no one places too much weight on Dan Marino’s 62-7 playoff loss to the Jaguars in his career finale, Roethlisberger’s clunker of an ending won’t be a significant part of his story. But in comparison to Marino – and most other quarterbacks – Roethlisberger’s legacy is complicated.

His on-field success over an 18-season NFL career speaks for itself. Roethlisberger is a two-time Super Bowl winner and will one day be enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. The Steelers haven’t suffered a single losing season with him under center. In turn, they’ve been a playoff staple – during Sunday’s loss Roethlisberger passed Joe Montana and Brett Favre for the third-most career passing yards in the playoffs.

Injuries and age have taken their toll, and in recent years the team often won in spite of their quarterback rather than because of him. Roethlisberger in his prime, though, was an absolute marvel. With his signature pump fakes and ability to escape pressure, he had a habit of extending plays and converting first downs that didn’t seem possible … until they were. He wasn’t flashy like younger quarterbacks such as Mahomes, Lamar Jackson and Josh Allen. Nor was he a quarterback like Tom Brady or Aaron Rodgers, who often seem five steps ahead of opposing defensive coordinators. He was just Ben. Gritty. Strong. Tough.

While Roethlisberger’s farewell tour has come with incessant gushing from teammates, broadcasters and Steelers fans, the NFL world at large doesn’t have the same fuzzy feelings. Some of that is Roethlisberger’s personality. He’s surly and can be difficult with the media. He also has a history of publicly calling out teammates.

But most of the hostility stems from Roethlisberger’s history with women.

ESPN’s Brian Griese spent the majority of Week 18’s Monday Night Football broadcast talking up Roethlisberger as if he were the Messiah. At one point, Griese paused his lovefest to channel his inner journalist and vaguely mention that Roethlisberger has “made some mistakes.”

The first “mistake” occurred in 2008 when Roethlisberger was accused of sexual assault by Andrea McNulty, then an employee of a Lake Tahoe hotel and casino. McNulty said she was lured to his hotel room under the guise of fixing a broken television. Her complaint alleges that Roethlisberger blocked the door when she tried to leave. According to the lawsuit the quarterback grabbed her and then tried to kiss her. Roethlisberger denied the allegations and never faced any criminal charges. He reached an out of court settlement with McNulty in 2011.

The NFL did not punish Roethlisberger. McNulty, on the other hand, was the recipient of backlash from those who did not like to think of their favorite quarterback as an alleged sexual assaulter. McNulty later suffered from depression.

In 2010, another accusation surfaced when a 20-year-old college student in Georgia claimed that Roethlisberger assaulted her in the bathroom stall of a nightclub. Her complaint alleged that Roethlisberger’s bodyguard grabbed the woman’s arm and escorted her to a hallway where the quarterback was waiting with “his penis out of his pants.” She says he went on to rape her and a subsequent medical examination of the woman found “superficial laceration and bruising and slight bleeding in the genital area” although no semen was detected. The case was dropped after authorities cited insufficient evidence. Roethlisberger was questioned by just one police officer who coincidentally had asked Roethlisberger to pose for a photo earlier that night and allegedly later described the accuser as a “drunken bitch”.

The NFL finally swooped in with a six-game suspension for violating the league’s personal conduct policy but later reduced it to four games for “good behavior.” Yes, an accused rapist received the same punishment from the league as Tom Brady for releasing air from footballs.

Roethlisberger already had a history of reckless behavior, most notably when he crashed his motorcycle in 2006, suffering serious facial injuries. He was not wearing a helmet and it was reported that he did not have a valid license at the time of the crash.

By the time of his suspension, many in the Steelers organization had tired of Roethlisberger’s behavior. One of the team’s other star players, receiver Hines Ward, said the NFL suspension was “justified”, adding: “When you’re in the quarterback position, everybody looks to you and there are certain situations you can’t put yourself in.”

Since then Roethlisberger has stayed out of trouble. He married in 2011 and is a father of three. And he went on to win a lot more football games, an achievement that was more than enough for many fans to forget about his past.

Roethlisberger is, of course, not the only alleged rapist to be embraced by his team’s fanbase. But there’s something especially difficult to swallow as we consider him as a player and person. When we consider that the quarterback is supposed to be the ultimate leader. From a talent standpoint, the Steelers have been lucky to have a future Hall of Famer under center for so many years. But that same future Hall of Famer is far luckier that the actions he’s accused of didn’t ruin him.

Roethlisberger was accused before Ray Rice punched his wife on camera and the league was forced to pretend it cares about its players’ behavior off the field. What if these accusations had come out during the more recent #MeToo movement? There are a variety of sliding doors scenarios that could have led to us bidding adieu to Big Ben years ago. But instead we’ve had 18 years of Roethlisberger – glorious for some, uncomfortable and infuriating for many.



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QB Ben Roethlisberger reflects on Pittsburgh Steelers legacy, looks forward to next chapter after season ends in wild-card loss to Kansas City Chiefs

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger didn’t use the word “retirement” following Pittsburgh’s season-ending 42-21 playoff loss to the Kansas City Chiefs but called his 18-year career with the franchise “an honor” and said he’s “looking forward” to the next chapter.

Roethlisberger and the Steelers didn’t get the happy ending they had hoped for to cap his 18-year career during Sunday night’s AFC wild-card showdown at Arrowhead Stadium, one in which he finished 29-of-44 passing for 215 yards and two second-half touchdowns after the game had long been decided.

Afterward, most involved acted, and spoke, as if they had seen Roethlisberger play for the final time for the only team whose uniform he has worn in his NFL career.

“Man he was [No.] 7, it’s been an honor and a pleasure, man,” Steelers coach Mike Tomlin said.

Describing his emotions coming out of the game and walking off the field, Roethlisberger said, “Yeah it’s tough, but I’m proud to play with these guys. God has blessed me with an ability to throw a football and has blessed me to play in the greatest city, in Pittsburgh with the greatest fans and the greatest football team and players. And it has just been truly a blessing, and I’m so thankful to Him for the opportunity that He’s given me.

“Just a bunch of guys that fought for each other, that fought their butts off and just competed. It wasn’t always pretty, but there are a lot of games that we found a way. I’m so proud of this group of men and the way they fight for each other, for the black and gold, for our fans. It’s just been an honor to play with them.”

Just after the clock wound down to 0:00, Roethlisberger shared a moment on the field with Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes, who finished the night with 404 yards and five touchdowns.

“Such a good football player,” Roethlisberger said. “[Just a] lot of respect. [He] said he’s got to get a jersey, and I said ‘I need one, too.'”

Likewise, Mahomes described Roethlisberger as “a tremendous player that I have a ton of respect for — the way he plays the game, the competitor that he is.

“He’s won Super Bowls. He’s a guy that I’ve watched growing up and I have a ton of respect for him. That’s what I told him, that if this is his last game, he did it the right way.”

Sunday night was an uphill affair for the Steelers as a whole, but particularly for Roethlisberger. Going into the game, the quarterback had publicly hoped the underdog Steelers could “go in and play and have fun.”

But Roethlisberger was 0-for-3 passing over the Steelers’ first two possessions, 3-of-8 passing by the end of the first quarter and 5-of-14 for just 24 yards at halftime — by which point the Chiefs had already built a 21-7 lead.

Toss in a couple drops from wide receivers and a largely ineffective run game, and the Steelers punted seven times in the first half alone.

“I don’t think any of us played well early, for whatever reason … we didn’t make the plays we had to early to give ourselves a chance,” Roethlisberger said.

Pittsburgh did not score a touchdown on offense — a 13-yard scoring pass from Roethlisberger to Diontae Johnson — until there was 4:10 remaining in the third quarter to make it a 35-14 game, a rather anticlimactic closing act on his decorated career.

The Steelers’ only score before the third quarter had been a 26-yard fumble return by outside linebacker T.J. Watt that had briefly given them a 7-0 lead in the second quarter.

“No. 7, man, the way he’s battled, the way he’s always given us a chance, when you talk about having toughness as a quarterback, when you talk about a guy who is going to give you everything he’s got, you can’t ask for more than that,” Steelers defensive tackle Cam Heyward said. “Ever since I got here … we had a guy who gave us a chance, when we started a season you said that’s a Super Bowl-winning quarterback. There’s not a lot of quarterbacks who can do what he does.”

Roethlisberger has played in 249 regular-season games for the Steelers in his 18-year career, and Sunday night marked his 23rd postseason start for the team.

Roethlisberger, who will turn 40 on March 2, has not formally announced his retirement from the league but had hinted as much even before the Steelers’ final home game of the regular season in Week 17 when he said “all signs are pointing to this could be it.” He also did a lap around Heinz Field thanking fans after Pittsburgh’s 26-14 win over the Cleveland Browns.

On Sunday, a throaty contingent of Steelers fans made the pilgrimage to Arrowhead, perched behind the Steelers bench with “thank you, Ben” and “thank you, No. 7” signs from two hours before kickoff until the final second of a disappointing night had ticked off the clock. One group had four large, truck-tire-sized photos of Roethlisberger’s head they held up at various times during the game.

“I’ve been here a long time, and it’s been a lot of fun,” Roethlisberger said when asked Sunday what impact he has had on the franchise. “We joke a lot about the Browns and going there, but it was meant to be that I was going to wear black and gold.

“Draft day, I had a black suit on with a gold tie. I’m just so thankful. I hope that I’m able to pass the legacy of what it is to be a Steeler from Dan Rooney. We all miss him, anyone who knew him misses him and so, it’s just, hopefully I could pass some of that on to the guys and continue the tradition of what it means to be a Steeler.”

He added, “I gave Cam [Heyward] a big hug and told him it’s on him now … teaching and holding guys to the Pittsburgh standard.”

Roethlisberger said his immediate future would likely include “tubing and sledding” in the snow with his children Monday, and that not playing anymore would “probably really hit me come training camp time.”

“As we move from one chapter to the next, it’s gonna be different but it’s gonna be fun and a new challenge and I’m looking forward to it,” Roethlisberger said

He will end his career among the game’s elite at the position, in the top 10 of nearly every major passing category to go with two Super Bowl wins as well as six Pro Bowl selections in a career in which the AFC also included the likes of Peyton Manning and Tom Brady much of the time.

“When he goes no huddle … when he’s playing backyard football, he’s unbelievable,” Steelers wide receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster said. “That right there, you can’t make it up … the touch, throws, the timing, he has all that.”

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Patrick Mahomes reveals message to Ben Roethlisberger after Steelers QB’s likely final game

Pittsburgh Steelers fans likely saw Ben Roethlisberger’s final NFL game on Sunday night – a 42-21 loss to the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC wild-card playoff round.

Roethlisberger and Patrick Mahomes met at midfield after the game. The Chiefs quarterback was asked by NBC’s Michelle Tafoya what the two talked about.

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Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger (7) walks off the field at the end of an NFL wild-card playoff football game against the Kansas City Chiefs, Sunday, Jan. 16, 2022, in Kansas City, Mo. The Chiefs won 42-21.
(AP Photo/Ed Zurga)

“I just told him I have so much respect for him. I’ve watched him growing up. The way he plays the game, he competes to the very end. He did that this whole entire season. Who knows what the future is but it was great to be here and witness him,” Mahomes said.

The NBC broadcast showed Roethlisberger walking the Arrowhead Stadium tunnel for the final time.

CHIEFS DISMANTLE STEELERS IN WILD-CARD ROUND, SHOWDOWN WITH BILLS NEXT

“It’s tough,” Roethlisberger said of his emotions coming off the field via ESPN. “I’m proud to play with these guys. God has blessed me with an ability to throw a football and blessed me to play in the greatest city … it’s been a blessing.”

Fans cheer as Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger walks off the field at the end of an NFL wild-card playoff football game against the Kansas City Chiefs, Sunday, Jan. 16, 2022, in Kansas City, Mo. The Chiefs won 42-21.
(AP Photo/Travis Heying)

Steelers fans who traveled to Arrowhead Stadium were seen holding up signs thanking Roethlisberger for his great career in which he led the team to two Super Bowl titles between 2004 and 2021.

He did his best to keep the Steelers in the game, throwing two late touchdown passes but it wasn’t enough. Roethlisberger was 29-for44 with 215 passing yards and two touchdowns. One touchdown pass was to James Washington and the other was to Diontae Johnson.

If this is it for Roethlisberger, he retires as one of the best to ever play for the Steelers.

Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger (7) walks off the field at the end of an NFL wild-card playoff football game against the Kansas City Chiefs, Sunday, Jan. 16, 2022, in Kansas City, Mo. The Chiefs won 42-21.
(AP Photo/Travis Heying)

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He finished the 2021 season with 64,088 passing yards and 418 passing touchdowns in his career. He was a six-time Pro Bowler and the 2004 AP Offensive Rookie of the Year.

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Ravens vs. Steelers score: Ben Roethlisberger rallies Pittsburgh to an overtime win and likely playoff berth

Ben Roethlisberger’s career may continue for at least one more week. In a vintage Roethlisberger performance, the 18-year-old gunslinger delivered the 53rd game-winning drive in his career to lift the Steelers to a 16-13 overtime win over the Ravens. The Steelers won the game on Chris Boswell’s 36-yard field goal with 1:59 left in overtime on a kick that was set up by Roethlisberger’s fourth-down completion to Ray-Ray McCloud four plays earlier. 

At 9-7-1, the Steelers will clinch a playoff berth as long as the Raiders-Chargers game does not end in a tie. Along with taking care of business in Baltimore, Pittsburgh received outside help by virtue of the Jaguars’ upset win over the Colts. The loss officially knocked Baltimore (8-9) out of playoff contention. 

The Steelers took a 13-10 lead on Roethlisberger’s 6-yard touchdown pass to Chase Claypool with 2:56 left in regulation. But the Ravens were able to force overtime on Justin Tucker’s 46-yard field goal with 1:16 left in the fourth quarter. In overtime, Pittsburgh’s defense forced a Baltimore punt to set up the Steelers’ 15-play, 65-yard drive that included three third-down conversions by Roethlisberger as well as his crucial fourth-down throw to McCloud. Najee Harris’ 15-yard run two plays later set up Boswell’s game-winning field goal. 

Pittsburgh won despite playing most of the game without Harris, who suffered an elbow injury on the Steelers’ opening possession. In what was likely the final regular season game of his career, Roethlisberger engineered his seventh game-winning drive of the season, an NFL best. He finished with 244 yards with a touchdown and an interception on 30 of 44 passing. 

We’ll have a deeper breakdown of Sunday’s game in a moment, but in the meantime, check out our live blow blog for in-game updates, highlights and analysis. 

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Ben Roethlisberger expects this to be his last season with Pittsburgh Steelers

Ben Roethlisberger privately has told former teammates and some within the organization that he expects this to be his final season playing quarterback for the Pittsburgh Steelers, league sources told ESPN.

Roethlisberger has not made any such public proclamations, and likely won’t, since he doesn’t want the latter part of the season to be about him as Pittsburgh tries to make a playoff push.

But sources say he and those within the organization are now operating as if he is entering the final five games of his Hall of Fame career, with two of them fittingly coming against the Baltimore Ravens, Pittsburgh’s opponent Sunday and in the final regular-season game as well.

Roethlisberger is in the final year of his contract. He is 39 years old and turns 40 in March, and has seen all of his quarterback draft classmates, such as Eli Manning and Philip Rivers, move on to the next chapters of their lives. Roethlisberger’s 18 seasons with one team is the most by a quarterback in NFL history.

Roethlisberger has told many that he never would want to play anywhere other than Pittsburgh. It doesn’t mean he couldn’t surface next season in another NFL city, but that is “highly unlikely,” according to one source.

And that would mean that this year is expected to cap the career of one of the Steelers’ all-time greatest players. Roethlisberger will leave the franchise with more wins, touchdown passes and passing yards than any quarterback in Steelers history.

His 410 career touchdown passes entering Sunday’s game are eighth most in NFL history. His 62,870 passing yards are sixth in NFL history. His 161 career wins are fifth in NFL history.

The fact that this is expected to be the final NFL season for the six-time Pro Bowler does not come as a surprise to many around the organization. They felt that last season could have been Roethlisberger’s last and, in a way, the team even seemed to prepare for that, turning over much of its roster on the offensive side of the football this season and transitioning to the future there.

The Steelers have, on average, the youngest offensive roster in the league, with rookies manning the center and left tackle positions and playing at running back and tight end.

Though the Steelers have quarterbacks Mason Rudolph and Dwayne Haskins on their roster, there are questions about whether either will be the one to succeed Roethlisberger. After an offseason in which they were not very busy in free agency (other than in-house work), the Steelers do appear set to have comfortable cap space to be aggressive in pursuing a replacement starting quarterback.

At 5-5-1, the Steelers will need one final postseason push to give Roethlisberger one more opportunity to try to add to the two Super Bowl titles that he already has helped bring to Pittsburgh.

The Steelers’ home finale is Week 17 against the Cleveland Browns on Jan. 3, a game that will air on ESPN’s Monday Night Football. Pittsburgh closes out the regular season in Baltimore on Jan. 9.

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Ben Roethlisberger is indeed vaccinated

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The Aaron Rodgers “immunized” wordplay has provided the “fool me once, shame on you” basis for wondering whether other quarterbacks who test positive for COVID are truly vaccinated.

So on the morning after Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger suddenly landed on the COVID reserve list and with some speculating that maybe he’s secretly unvaccinated just like Rodgers was, we posed a specific, on-the-record question to the Steelers this morning. Is Roethlisberger vaccinated?

“Ben confirmed to the media a couple weeks ago on camera in his weekly session that he is indeed vaccinated,” Steelers spokesman Burt Lauten said via text message.

So there it is. The Steelers know the truth, and their decision to cite Roethlisberger’s disclosure of his status operates as confirmation that he’s indeed vaccinated.

The abrupt announcement that Ben can’t play comes from the fact that, as reported by Jason La Canfora of CBS Sports, Roethlisberger wasn’t feeling well, told the team about it, got tested, and tested positive. It’s not the first-time Roethlisberger self-reported symptoms that kept him from playing or continuing to play; twice before, his disclosure of concussion symptoms sidelined him.

While some players may be inclined to shake their heads at the prospect of a quarterback tapping out, Roethlisberger did the right thing. Even if it means that the Lions somehow end Pittsburgh’s four-game winning streak in a game that will be played with Roethlisberger not playing.

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Ben Roethlisberger praises rookie OT Dan Moore Jr. for effort

If you are a fourth-round rookie offensive tackle, you don’t necessarily expect to be a starting left tackle right out of the gate. However, it is a role Pittsburgh Steelers offensive tackle Dan Moore Jr. has accepted and done his very best.

On Sunday, Moore had a very tough draw with Cleveland Browns edge rusher Myles Garrett. Garrett is one of the best pass rushers in the league and Pittsburgh didn’t give Moore as much help as you might have assumed but he held his own. Nevertheless, despite this, quarterback Ben Roethlisberger was very happy with how Moore performed.

“I thought Dan did a great job,” Roethlisberger said. “It’s tough to ask a rookie to go against that guy, and what he did today was pretty special. I can’t say enough about the line, run game and pass pro, they are the heart of this group.”

The Steelers are on the verge of being forced to make a decision about the tackle position going forward with the return of Zach Banner. Moore hasn’t been perfect by any means but has he been worse than starting right tackle Chuks Okorafor? Let us know in the comments which guy you think Banner will replace or do both guys keep their jobs.

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