Published January 11, 2009 12:42 am - PITTSBURGH — It was the only 11-10 score ever recorded in NFL history.
Fichtner: Steelers need to capitalize on chances
By Pete Chiodo
PITTSBURGH — It was the only 11-10 score ever recorded in NFL history. And it was a Steelers victory. However, talking to Steelers wide receivers coach and former Meadville resident Randy Fichtner about that game, it’s somewhat hard to tell.
After all, the Steelers offense never made it into the end zone when they battled Chargers back on November 16. The defense scored a safety, and kicker Jeff Reed kicked three field goals to notch the one-point win.
Yet, quarterback Ben Roethlisburger threw for 308 yards, running back Willie Parker rushed for 115, and receiver Hines Ward caught 124 yards worth of passes; and the offense still couldn’t crack the goal line.
And for a guy who is all about offense, that doesn’t sit well with Randy Fichtner.
“We moved the ball down he field, but we didn’t take care of situational football,” Fichtner said Friday following Steelers’ practice.
“Situational football; on fourth-and-one you make it, on the goalline you score, on third-and-one you make it. We didn’t do that. We didn’t make it.”
Penalties didn’t help. The Steelers were flagged 13 times against the Chargers, losing a total of 115 yards.
“Those things happen,” said Fichtner. “And they just all seemed to happen at once.
“The one thing we did in that game is we didn’t turn the ball over,” he added. “And when you don’t turn the ball over, you always have a chance to win. So if there was a silver lining, it was that we didn’t turn the ball over.”
Silver lining? This is a win we’re talking about.
“Oh no, yeah,” said Fichtner. “It was a win. We’ll take them any way. We’ll take the win, we’ll celebrate and we move on to the next game.”
That next game happens to be against a familar opponent. Yet, according to Fichtner, San Diego is a different kind of team than the Steelers saw eight weeks ago.
“They were maligned early in the season,” he said. “They had a couple games that didn’t go their way and they lost their defensive coordinator. So they were in transition.”
A few weeks before facing the Steelers in November, the Chargers fired defensive coordinator Ted Cottrell and replaced him with one-time inside linebackers coach Ron Rivera.
“And you can see the results of the change,” said Fichtner. “Each week their defense is getting better.”