The Steelers limited the depleted Bengals to six first downs following an early touchdown drive and found just enough offense themselves amid the snow flurries to control the clock behind Roethlisberger and beat Cincinnati 27-10 on Thursday night.
Pittsburgh (8-3) wasn’t dominating — except defensively — in winning its fifth game in a row over Cincinnati (1-9-1), its longest streak since an eight-game run in the early 1990s.
The Steelers trailed 7-0 until Roethlisberger threw a 3-yard pass to tight end Heath Miller, their first touchdown in more than seven quarters, and didn’t take control until backup running backs Mewelde Moore and Gary Russell led a third-quarter drive that made it 20-7.
Russell ran 2 yards for his first NFL touchdown with 16 seconds left in the third after Moore, benched four days before after being stopped at the goal line by San Diego on fourth-and-inches, ran four times for 21 yards and made a 22-yard reception during a 64-yard drive.
Roethlisberger, turnover free for a second successive game while going 17 of 30 for 243 yards, scored himself from the 8 late in the game as Pittsburgh held a more than 10-minute edge in time of possession.
Jeff Reed also kicked field goals of 37 and 38 yards that weren’t sure things given the slippery field conditions.
Those conditions also helped slow a Bengals offense that was loaded with backups due to injuries — reserves played most of the game at nine positions — and Ocho Cinco’s deactivation for violating team rules.
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