The Ben Roethlisberger Show
“If you’re asking me is my heart into it, I’ll say 100%. I love this game, I love this sport, I love my teammates, the fans, I give it everything I have. Like I said, I’m going to put it behind me, just because I put it behind me doesn’t mean I don’t care about it.”
Just in case you missed Ben’s show this morning on Cook & Poni, here’s the recap, courtesy of 93.7 The Fan:
Coming off his five interception performance in a 30-9 loss at home at the hands of the Jacksonville Jaguars, Ben Roethlisberger joined The Cook and Poni Show for The #1 Cochran Ben Roethlisberger Show and made it obvious that he’s not lacking any confidence in himself.
“You wake up Monday morning and you realize, ‘Man, I’m still one of the best in the world that do what I do,’ and I’m gonna have that confidence, I’m gonna have that when I go out there Wednesday to practice and Sunday when we go into Kansas City. I have that belief that I’m one of the best that’s ever done it, one of the best that’s ever played this position and you have to have that confidence.”
One thing Ben addressed about his play is that it’s not a mechanical issue and isn’t due to injury.
“I talked to my agent…he played quarterback in college and worked closely with a lot of people. I asked him ‘Have you seen anything, do you notice anything?’ He said, ‘No, I honestly think that you’re throwing the ball as well as you ever have.’ So I don’t think there’s anything there. Honestly, I think your talent, it doesn’t go away, it goes awry sometimes, but it doesn’t go away. We just got to come back out and be ready to play some great football.”
Ben though isn’t the only one that is struggling on the offensive side of the ball and he told us that “we’re all frustrated.”
“We’ve got to get into the end zone and we’ve got a lot of talent on this side of the ball and we’ve got to utilize that.”
While there are obvious issues on the field for this team, Ben was asked about reported issues off the field. A CBS Sports report said that […]
Week 5: Jaguars 30, Steelers 9
“Doing this long enough, you understand not to panic. I’m not going to hit any buttons where it’s like, ‘Oh man, what do I do to change all this and that, go see people.’ Just come out on Wednesday and be ready to practice.”
Ben speaks to reporters after a very tough loss today. More from the Steelers here.
#GioTough



The best of plans
There is no grant announcement this week for the Ben Roethlisberger Foundation, so fan Vicki Lebakken sent this story for us to share in it’s place…
From Erin Tracy at the Modesto Bee:
Ike is a $9,137 investment for the Modesto Police Department.
But to the Pershalls, he is a member of the family, a reminder of a father and husband who was lost.
The Modesto City Council on Tuesday will consider, at the police chief’s suggestion, to sell Ike to Sgt. Mike Pershall’s family for $1.
Pershall died Aug. 22 when he was struck by a suspected drunk driver while riding his bicycle off-duty in east Modesto. Pershall had been Ike’s handler for two years.
Modesto Police Chief Galen Carroll said his desire to essentially give Ike to Pershall’s family might not be popular among everyone – the dog is 3 years old and most K9’s work until they are 8 or sometimes as old as 10 – but he feels it is the right thing to do.
“It is not a good deal for the police department to lose the dog,” Carroll said. “But there is also the human factor of, you have a wife and two kids who just lost their dad, and that’s the family dog. What is the right thing to do?”
Modesto Police Canine Association president and K9 handler Daniel Starr said the association “absolutely, without a shadow of doubt, supports giving Ike to Pershall’s family.”
“We spend more time with our dogs than we do with our wives and kids … so there is a bond there that no one understands unless they are currently or have been a K9 handler,” Starr said. “But the dogs spend a significant amount of time with our wives and children as well, and there is a significant amount of comfort they bring (to our families) because they know the dogs protect us while we are at work.”
Starr said the association was created in 1999 to pay for the ongoing veterinary care, kenneling and ultimately death costs of retired canines. It’s been the practice in the department to sell those canines to the handler for $1.
“The work that is performed by the dogs and their handlers as well as the bond that is formed is incredible.”— Ben.
The sale absolves the city of any […]
Wednesday’s Q&A with the media
Recap from Teresa Varley, Steelers.com:
Ben Roethlisberger and Antonio Brown have a chemistry that makes the Steelers’ quarterback think of some of the best duos ever to play the game.
When he thinks of their chemistry, he thinks of the likes of the 49ers’ Joe Montana and Jerry Rice, the Cowboys’ Troy Aikman and Michael Irvin, and the Steelers’ Terry Bradshaw and John Stallworth and Lynn Swann.
“We have amazing chemistry,” said Roethlisberger. “I would like to think we may go down as one of the best quarterback-wide receiver duos of all time. That would be an awesome honor because of the guys that I consider that are up there.”
But even the best relationships can cause some frustration, something that played out on Sunday against the Ravens.
On Wednesday, though, that was all in the rearview mirror for Roethlisberger.
“We are over it now,” said Roethlisberger. “We have moved on to Jacksonville. It’s Wednesday, it’s Jacksonville week. This is a really good defense. We don’t have time to think about anything else other than that right now.”
Yes, it is a good Jacksonville defense the Steelers will face on Sunday at Heinz Field. The Jaguars have the NFL’s top-ranked pass defense, allowing just 147 yards passing per game.
They also have 18 sacks, through just four games, and five interceptions. This is a defense not to be messed with.
“They have a million and a half sacks, forced fumbles,” said Roethlisberger. “Their secondary, they paid a lot of money to. They lock people down. Right now we aren’t sure what we are going to do. It’s that good of a defense. Luckily we aren’t playing today or tomorrow. We have time to get into the film room and figure things out. This will be a very good test for us.”
It will be a test with an offense that is starting to find their rhythm. The first quarter of the season is over, the time when a team feels things out. Now is the time an offense gels, and Roethlisberger expects to see more of that.
“It’s a feeling out, especially when you have Le’Veon (Bell) coming back, not being there early. Martavis (Bryant) not here all last year, and new guys, JuJu (Smith-Schuster), […]
Happy Belated Birthday Mr. Lunn!
“Century Club: 100-year-old loves ice cream, trains and Big Ben”
From Kevin Kirkland at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette today:
George Lunn once shook the hand of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. But if you gave him a choice, he’d rather have a bowl of ice cream.
Mr. Lunn, who turned 100 on Sept. 17, sometimes eats ice cream three times a day. He traces his love back to the 1940s, when he ran the Maple Dell restaurant in Moon with his wife, Gladys. Burgers were 5 cents, soft-serve ice cream cones were a dime and milkshakes were 15 cents. They also had an ice cream cart at the bottom of Stoops Ferry Hill, also in Moon.
Mr. Lunn was born in Allegheny County Hospital on Sept. 17, 1917, the youngest of Frank and Dorothy Lunn’s five children. He graduated in 1935 from Coraopolis High School, where he lettered in football all four years.
After graduation, he worked at the Standard Steel Spring Co., making car bumpers for 35 cents an hour. He got a raise to 50 cents an hour when he became a foreman.
In 1939 he married Gladys Ebert and they had two boys: George Jr. of El Cajon, Calif., and David of Greer, S.C., with whom he lives.
In 1942, Mr. Lunn joined his father working for the Pennsylvania & Lake Erie Railroad. He enlisted in the Army but was released from his obligation because he was needed at the railroad. President Roosevelt visited a railroad station during the war and shook his hand. He retired in 1972 after 30 years of service.
A member of Simpsonville United Methodist Church, Mr. Lunn likes to watch birds and loves trains, cats, the Pirates and the Steelers, especially Ben Roethlisberger. He works out at the YMCA twice a week and was pleased to see his picture and birthday on a Smucker’s jelly jar.
Mr. Lunn was a member of the Coraopolis Volunteer Fire Department from the late 1930s to the mid-’50s.
In 1969, his wife passed away after 30 years of marriage. He was diagnosed with prostate cancer and moved to South Carolina, where he met and married his second wife, Ruth, in 1975. He was recently honored as the longest survivor of prostate cancer in America at 48 years.
Mr. Lunn has five grandchildren and nine great-grandchilden, many of whom joined […]