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Jaguars Are Skilled at Zeroing In

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From the Associated Press

Ben Roethlisberger gingerly walked off the field near the end of the game, grimacing and grasping his side after another hard hit.

Big Ben was back. He wasn’t back to form, though -- and the Jacksonville Jaguars’ defense had a lot to with that.

Wearing protective padding around his midsection, Roethlisberger returned to Pittsburgh’s lineup Monday night, barely two weeks after an emergency appendectomy. The Jaguars made him pay for his courage, harassing the quarterback and stopping the defending Super Bowl champions’ nine-game winning streak with a 9-0 victory -- the lowest-scoring game in Monday Night Football history.

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“A lot of it was my fault,” Roethlisberger said. “I told coach I’ll be OK. When I get some more practice and get on the same page with the receivers, we’ll be good.”

Pittsburgh couldn’t run it either, managing only 20 yards in Willie Parker’s 11 carries and 26 yards overall.

Josh Scobee kicked three field goals for the Jaguars (2-0), who improved to 4-0 against the Steelers in September and 3-0 against them on Monday night.

The Steelers (1-1) kept it close all game, and got the ball back with about five minutes to play, down 6-0. But Rashean Mathis intercepted Roethlisberger’s slant pass and returned it into field-goal range.

Scobee kicked his third field goal, a 42-yarder with 4:26 left. He had a 31-yarder late in the third and a 32-yarder earlier in the fourth, and that’s all Jacksonville would need.

“We moved the ball well, but we did a bad job of scoring points,” quarterback Byron Leftwich said. “To move to the next level, we’ve got to have more than nine points but, we played a tough team, man. The Super Bowl champs. It was a tough, physical game and we came out on top.”

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Mathis picked off another one with 1:44 left, sending Roethlisberger walking slowly to the bench. Mathis also sealed last year’s victory at Pittsburgh, intercepting a pass in overtime and returning it 41 yards for the decisive score.

The shutout was Jacksonville’s first since December 2003 against Houston. It also was the fifth time the defending Super Bowl champion has been shut out; the 1980 Steelers were blanked once, and the 1981 Raiders were shut out three times.

“If you come in here with the mind-set of running the ball on us, you may want to rethink that philosophy,” Jaguars defensive end Paul Spicer said. “It ain’t going to be that easy.”

Said Jacksonville Coach Jack Del Rio: “It was a lot of good hitting out there. Two real physical teams going at it out there. I’m real proud of the effort they put forth.”

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