Watch it on Wednesday!
Ben will be featured on the prime time special “Under the Lights” on Wednesday, Sept. 10th at 9:00pm ET on CBS.
The one-hour special will be hosted by Jim Nance, the CBS Sports‘ lead NFL play-by-play announcer and the voice of Thursday Night Football, and will celebrate some of the greatest and most memorable moments in the history of prime time football. The show will also preview the Thursday Night Football schedule.
The show will revisit classic moments in NFL history and feature conversations between CBS and NFL stars including Mark Harmon, Tom Selleck, LL Cool J, Billy Gardell, Jerry Rice, Andrew Luck, Julio Jones and of course Big Ben!
If you are unable to watch on Wednesday, you can tune in to a re-airing of the special on NFL Network on Tuesday, September 16th at 10pm ET.
Vote Today!
For GMC’s Never Say Never Moment of Week 1 in the NFL:
Ben Roethlisberger, Pittsburgh Steelers
Steelers hold off furious Browns comeback: The Pittsburgh Steelers stormed out to a 27-3 halftime lead, and appeared to have the game well in hand. However, the second half was another story as the Cleveland Browns scored 24 unanswered points.
The Steelers managed to shift momentum late in the fourth quarter and get into position for Shaun Suisham’s game-winning 41-yard field goal in a 30-27 win. The win helped quarterback Ben Roethlisberger improve his career record to 18-1 against the Browns, the best mark of any quarterback against one team since at least 1970 (minimum 15 starts).
Cast your vote here.
Worth Repeating:
From sportswriter Tom Reed at the Cleveland Plain Dealer –
“Ben Roethlisberger is a 6-foot-5, 241-pound quarterback armored in pads and coated in Teflon. He extends plays with his feet, shakes off would-be sackers like a golden retriever spraying bath water and makes defenders squirm in their seats during Monday morning film sessions.”
Ben: “I love where my life is right now with my family and with football”
“Without a doubt, he is a high-echelon quarterback in the NFL. He’s consistently productive and he has been one of the toughest players I have seen in the league. I only coached him three years, but he played with a number of different injuries. I have never seen a more competitive guy on Sundays. He has a great feel for the game.” — Bill Cowher.
From Ed Bouchette, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette:
“Big Ben reflects on a decade as quarterback”
The first decade of Ben Roethlisbeger’s NFL career appears as a kaleidoscope, bursting with color and breathtaking images here, there, everywhere.
From bright lights to dark shadows, from uncommon success to humiliation, it has been some ride for the Steelers quarterback, his teammates, his employers and his fans.
No one knows that better than Roethlisberger, who heads into his second pro decade against Cleveland today at the top of his game.
“In 10 years, I’ve had a lifetime worth of experiences, both on and off the field.”
What can a decade yield for one quarterback? Three Super Bowls, two Lombardi Trophies, virtually every Steelers passing record, the only rookie NFL quarterback to go 13-0, no losing seasons, a horrific motorcycle accident, many broken bones and sprains, a four-game suspension, a wedding, the births of two children. Is he, at 32, a better man and quarterback for it all?
“I love where my life is right now with my family and with football,” Roethlisberger said, reflecting one day this summer on all that has occurred since he embarked on his pro career as the Steelers’ first draft pick in 2004.
The Steelers love where he is, as well. He delighted, frustrated and even angered many of them over the past decade, but they agree with his own assessment of where he finds himself today.
“I think Ben is in the prime of his career,” Steelers president Art Rooney II said. “He looks to be in great shape, looks good on the field. I think he’s primed and ready to go.”
Roethlisberger, who played every snap last season, has missed nine games because of injuries and one, the 2006 opener, after an appendectomy. He was rested twice in meaningless season finales before the playoffs and suspended by the NFL for four other games. He should have missed more, including a couple in 2011 […]
Steelers win nail-biting home opener 30-27
“That is why we put the work in. That’s where it all comes from. We make an adjustment last minute, no one blinks, no one flinches. They run the proper play and we get into field goal range.” — Ben
Gil Brandt @Gil_Brandt
Roethlisberger improved his record against Browns to 18-1 (.947), best mark of any QB vs. 1 team since 1970 merger.
From Mary Kay Cabot,Cleveland Plain Dealer:
“Ben Roethlisberger owns the Cleveland Browns”
After all these years, Ben Roethlisberger is still making the Browns pay for passing on him in the draft in 2004. He can improve to 18-1 over the Browns with a victory and 10-0 against them at home. He’s also looking to go to 8-1 in home openers — and is still seemingly indestructible.
“When you’ve got a quarterback that’s damn near impossible to bring down, it opens up a lot of room for success,” said Browns defensive end Billy Winn. “One guy will miss a tackle, two guys will miss a tackle and basically all of his receivers are just out there playing backyard football, getting open and creating opportunities. You have to have multiple guys getting to the quarterback. It’s not good enough having one guy back there. You have to have constant pressure.”
Roethlisberger shows no signs of slowing down at 32. Last season, he finished No. 3 in the NFL with a 92.0 passer rating, No. 7 with 28 touchdowns and No. 9 with 4,261 yards.
You can read more here.
From Pat McManamon, ESPN – AFC North blog:
“Roethlisberger reads and the Browns fail”
Sunday’s 30-27 Steelers win in Heinz Field was greatly influenced by two plays, one the Steelers made, the other the Cleveland Browns didn’t. Taken on their own, they were two plays in a game that had 131. Taken in the context and situation of the game, the two plays had large significance.
Both came on the last possession for each team with the score tied at 27.
Pittsburgh’s was successful, and led to the game-winning field goal.
Cleveland’s was not, and contributed to a punt that gave the Steelers the ball for their game-winning drive.
For the Steelers, Roethlisberger’s savvy and poise were on display with 20 seconds left. As he walked to […]
“Steelers’ Roethlisberger has drive to win — now”
“Nobody is going to put more pressure on me than me. For me, it is always pressure to win. I always put that pressure on me to be the best I can be and win football games.” — Ben
From Mark Kaboly, Pittsburgh Tribune-Review:
Ben Roethlisberger is a winner.
Actually, Ben Roethlisberger needs to win … at everything he does.
You name it — shuffleboard, golf, throwing a football into a garbage can, naming songs from the 1980s — and he will try his hardest to come out on top, and he usually does.
“You ask Ben to play basketball, he is going to kill you,” Steelers cornerback Ike Taylor said. “You ask him to play pool, he is going to kill you. If you ask him to play pingpong, he’s going to kill you.”
Maybe that’s the reason Roethlisberger has won at every level of football?
“He’s as competitive as they come,” Steelers offensive coordinator Todd Haley said. “That’s a trait that you love to see guys have. He is going to give it everything he has every time he takes the field.”
In high school, he led Findlay to a 10-2 record and the school’s first playoff win in his only year as a starter.
In college, he led Miami (Ohio) to a 27-11 record, including a MAC title his final year.
In the pros, he has won 105 career games in 10 seasons and two Super Bowl rings.
“I don’t like to lose at anything,” Roethlisberger said. “I don’t care what it is for. It is hard for me to lose at all. I have always been like that. Maybe I got it from my dad or my grandma, I don’t know. It is something that has always been in me.”
Ten quarterbacks have won a Super Bowl after age 32, but the majority of those came decades ago. Only one quarterback older than 32 (Brad Johnson in 2002) since the turn of the century has won a Super Bowl. Roethlisberger turned 32 in March.
“That doesn’t concern me, no, because I don’t feel like I am old,” Roethlisberger said. “I feel like I am entering my prime, and I feel like we have a good team that can do some good things. Nobody is going to put more pressure on me than me. For me, it is […]
“First impressions of Ben Roethlisberger”
“I think it’s been a pretty solid 10 years. I mean, three Super Bowl appearances, two wins…I think most quarterbacks coming into the league would take that if you said that’s going to be part of your first 10 years. “Ben started and developed really quickly compared to what the old school used to be that it took a few years. Ben wound up starting his rookie year and really was pretty quick to being an effective quarterback.” — Steelers president Art Rooney II.
From Ed Bouchette, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette:
Brett Keisel has followed Ben Roethlisberger’s career as closely as anyone. The defensive end already had two years on the roster when the Steelers drafted their quarterback in 2004.
Keisel, who would become friends with Roethlisberger, recalled two first “wow” moments for him that opened his eyes to just what the Steelers had in their young quarterback.
The first came during a practice.
“I was just a couple years older than him, and I made a nice rush, and he just took off away from me,” Keisel said. “I said, ‘This big boy can run.’ ”
The other came in the fifth game of his rookie season — his third start — against Cleveland at home. The score was tied, 7-7, in the first quarter. The Steelers had second down on the Browns 6.
“The pocket got smashed,” Keisel said, giving the play-by-play 10 years later. “And he did a couple whoop-de-doos and spins and tiptoes and then just gave everything he had to get into the end zone, and then he had to dive between two guys coming to smash him.
“When that happened, all of us were like, ‘Wow!’ ”
There would be many more such moments over the next decade, and they hope more to come.
Said Keisel: “Running with this thing the way he did as a rookie and going 15-1, and the next year we go win the Super Bowl and then we go back and then we go back. I mean, it’s all because we have that franchise quarterback.”
You can read more here.
“Steelers say Ben Roethlisberger is ‘most underrated QB'”
“Getting back to (and winning) the Super Bowl is everything – that’s the goal that would mean so much to me, this team, the fans and the Rooneys. It’s where we want to be.” — Ben
From Jim Corbett, USA Today Sports:
Ben Roethlisberger is arguably the AFC North’s best playmaker.
Pittsburgh Steelers cornerback Ike Taylor calls the two-time Super Bowl winner, “The league’s most underrated quarterback.”
The same goes for Roethlisberger’s leadership. Teammates countered former Steelers receiver Emmanuel Sanders’ shot earlier this summer his new field general, Denver Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning, is the better leader by voting Roethlisberger offensive captain for a sixth time.
Roethlisberger shrugged off Sanders’ swipe.
“It’s a little disappointing,” Roethlisberger told USA TODAY Sports. “But you move on. I can’t worry about those things other people are saying. Being voted captain, I think speaks volumes about my leadership.”
What Roethlisberger didn’t say was how he paid for his receivers to spend an April week working with him in Southern California along with top draft prospect and now Jacksonville Jaguars rookie Blake Bortles. He shares the same agents, Bruce and Ryan Tollner, as Roethlisberger.
“It was big for those young guys, a smart move by Ben,” offensive coordinator Todd Haley told USA TODAY Sports. “He wants to be great and wants us to be great. He’s always had the capability to be that guy.”
What really matters now is what happens come Sunday’s season opener against the visiting Cleveland Browns.
It helps that Roethlisberger has never lost to the Browns at home during his 10-season career.
The Ohio native doesn’t plan on things changing Sunday when the Steelers start their 2014 revenge tour — bent on a bounce-back campaign after two years failing to reach the postseason.
Roethlisberger, 32, is getting the ball out quicker and embraces the no-huddle scheme that enabled the Steelers to go 6-2 down the stretch of last year’s 8-8 disappointment, Pittsburgh’s second consecutive playoff-less finish.
A quarterback who has been sacked 386 times is more confident knowing he might have his best group of protectors yet following the offseason hiring of 33-year NFL coach Mike Munchak.
“They’re a good young group and a lot of it has to do with their Hall of Fame coach and they’re absorbing everything he says,”Roethlisberger said. “They’re may be one of the closest […]