PITTSBURGH — The Pittsburgh Steelers insist they have no secret formula when it comes to stopping Lamar Jackson. That there is nothing mystical about their approach to the otherworldly Baltimore Ravens quarterback.
They study film. Just like everybody else. They read their cues. Just like everybody else. They fight. Just like everybody else.
And they win. Like just about no one else.
''Forget the minutiae of what it is you do," Steelers coach Mike Tomlin said. ''You better play hard, fast and together or you have no shot.''
They almost always do when Jackson is on the other side of the line of scrimmage.
The latest proof came in an 18-16 victory over the Ravens on Sunday that included another 60-minute clinic on slowing down perhaps the most dynamic player in the league.
Pittsburgh (8-2) held Jackson and the rest of the NFL's top-ranked offense to season lows in points and yards (329) and season highs in mistakes, some self-inflicted, some not.
Baltimore (7-4) turned it over three times — each leading to one of Chris Boswell's six field goals — and committed 12 penalties while never really establishing the kind of rhythm that comes so easily when they play someone other than the Steelers.