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No-Offense Steelers Beat the Bills : Pro football: Pittsburgh cornerback Rod Woodson and kicker Gary Anderson key 23-10 victory over Buffalo.

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From Associated Press

Rod Woodson, single-handedly accounting for more scoring the last two weeks than Pittsburgh’s offense, returned an interception for a touchdown and forced a fumble for another to lead the Steelers past the Buffalo Bills, 23-10, Monday night.

Gary Anderson, again the only productive member of the Steelers’ no-go offense, kicked three field goals to move into sixth place on the NFL’s all-time list with 302 as Pittsburgh won for the second week in a row without an offensive touchdown.

Woodson stepped in front of intended receiver Bill Brooks for a 37-yard interception return touchdown--the third of his career--to put Pittsburgh ahead, 10-0, in the final minute of the first quarter.

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Later, with Buffalo down only a touchdown after Jim Kelly’s 19-yard scoring pass to Andre Reed, a blitzing Woodson dislodged the ball from Kelly near the goal line and defensive end Gerald Williams fell on it for his first touchdown in nine NFL seasons.

Rookie defensive tackle Brentson Buckner added to the Bills’ growing frustration, blocking a 32-yard field goal attempt by Steve Christie later in the fourth quarter--Christie’s first miss in 18 attempts this season.

Anderson, who last week kicked a field goal in overtime after Woodson forced a critical fumble in the Steelers’ 12-9 victory over Houston, is 7-for-7 the last two weeks, 17-for-18 this season and 45-for-48 the last two seasons.

While the Steelers (7-3) again proved it’s possible to win in the NFL without much offense--they’ve won three of their last four despite scoring only two offensive touchdowns--the Bills (5-5) are in desperate straits well before the Super Bowl.

With Kelly under constant pressure from a Pittsburgh pass rush that leads the NFL in sacks, the Bills are .500 in November for the first time since finishing 7-8 in 1987. They trail Miami (7-3) by two games in the AFC East and must play twice more in the next 10 days, against Green Bay and Detroit.

Kelly, sacked six times for 54 yards in losses, was lifted for Frank Reich late in the fourth quarter after going 22 for 43 for 212 yards and two interceptions. He has only one touchdown pass against Pittsburgh the last two years after throwing 11 in his first four career starts against his hometown team.

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Pittsburgh, trailing Cleveland (8-2) by a game in the AFC Central, couldn’t mount an offense even with former all-pro running back Barry Foster back from a four-week injury layoff, but still remained a perfect 6-0 on Monday night under Coach Bill Cowher.

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