
It’s
 a great play call because it worked. If it had backfired, running off 
the remaining five seconds and being stopped shy of the goal line, the 
Steelers get blasted this morning for a terrible play call. Those value 
judgments are subjective, and dependent upon the outcome. All that can 
be said objectively about the call to 
direct snap to Le’Veon Bell in the
 shotgun is that it was audacious in a way you too rarely see in the 
NFL.
“It was time to go to the mattresses,” Mike Tomlin said.
The three 
biggest plays in the Steelers’ unlikely 24-20 comeback win in San Diego 
were, respectively, one thought up by the injured QB on the sideline, a 
broken play, and one—Bell’s gamewinning run—that was only installed in 
practice this week, and failed there.
After 52 minutes of action in which Pittsburgh has managed just three points on offense, Vick found Markus Wheaton for 72 yards
 to tie the game. Afterward, Vick revealed that an anxious Ben 
Roethlisberger had drawn it up after watching Vick struggle. “The 
touchdown pass was all Ben,” Vick said. “He put the play together on the sideline and that’s it.”
After the Chargers answered with three to retake the lead, the Steelers got screwed. Eighteen seconds ran off the clock after Pittsburgh’s touchback. No one on the field noticed. The NFL is incredibly lucky that the Steelers didn’t run out of time—imagine the firestorm today.
The 
Steelers stalled a bit once they entered Charger territory, eventually 
facing a third and 6. With a three receiver set that saw the tight end 
blocking and Bell belatedly going out for a pass, no one could get open.
 But with the secondary completely locked up, Vick sprinted up the 
middle for 24 yards, his first and only run of the game.
After a 
pass to Heath Miller at the 1 (and an unnecessary roughness foul that 
spared them from having to use their final timeout, which would have 
made their choice for them), the Steelers had to decide whether to kick 
the field goal and go to overtime, or try to win it then and there. 
“I knew we were going for it,” Bell said. “I knew the play was going to get called. We were talking about it all week.“We knew coming into the week that if there was a play that we have to have at fourth-and-1 or goal line, we were going to that wildcat play.”
The play—a 
wildcat formation, with a direct snap to Bell at the six-yard-line—was a
 gamble. Pittsburgh could have split the difference. Given their 
remaining timeout, something like a QB sneak or a quick pass would have 
left time for a field goal if it didn’t succeed. But what they went with
 wasn’t guaranteed to leave any time on the clock, as it ultimately 
didn’t.
A couple of
 other things going against it: the play is relatively new to the 
Steelers’ playbook, only being installed a few days ago. And it had yet to work.
“[Two days ago in our ‘seven shots’ before practice, it was the exact same formation, exact same play — and we stopped him,” linebacker Arthur Moats said. “And he said, ‘I’m running through that.’So when they called it out, we were sitting there saying, ‘OK, we’re going to find out if it’s real or not.’”
It was not a
 “safe” play, but that was one of its advantages. If observers couldn’t 
quite believe Bell would go outside, taking up more time and foregoing 
the possibility of a consolation field goal, the Chargers didn’t believe
 it either. “I saw the D-line kind of slant to the inside,” Bell said. 
Bell hit 
traffic, wriggled outside, got his leg wrapped up by Donald Butler, 
extended his arms, and crossed the plane by inches before his knee 
touched down. A review confirmed the touchdown and the hard-earned win 
for Pittsburgh. It’s a pleasure to see a team willing to gamble, and get
 rewarded for it.
 
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