
PITTSBURGH, PA â It was all right there for the taking. A 16â7 halftime lead, momentum on their side, and Aaron Rodgers looking sharp. But once again, the Pittsburgh Steelers unraveled in the second half â surrendering 28 unanswered points and falling 35â25 to the Green Bay Packers in a stunning meltdown thatâs quickly becoming all too familiar.
After a sharp start featuring a red-zone touchdown connection from Rodgers to DK Metcalf, Pittsburgh appeared in control. The offense was efficient, the defense was forcing stops, and Acrisure Stadium was alive. Then, everything fell apart.
The second half exposed every flaw thatâs haunted this Steelers defense all season â poor tackling, broken coverages, and a glaring lack of discipline. Tucker Kraft tore through Pittsburghâs secondary for 143 yards and two touchdowns, while Jordan Love picked apart the coverage with 360 passing yards and three scores. Green Bayâs offense racked up 454 total yards at 7.2 yards per play â the highest output the Steelers have allowed all year.
Rodgers did what he could. Despite being sacked three times and under near-constant pressure, he finished with 216 yards and two touchdowns, keeping the team afloat while Chris Boswell drilled four field goals, including three from beyond 50 yards.
But after halftime, Pittsburghâs offense completely disappeared. The team managed just 38 total yards before a meaningless late drive. What began as a statement opportunity â a chance to prove they could close out games â became yet another reminder that this teamâs issues run deep.
The most alarming stat? This marks the fourth game this season the Steelers have allowed 30 or more points, a shocking number for a unit that entered 2025 as the highest-paid defense in the NFL.
âWe just didnât execute. Weâve got to look in the mirror â all of us,â one defensive starter said postgame, frustration written all over his face.
The loss drops Pittsburgh further into midseason turmoil and raises real questions about the direction of this roster. If this pattern continues, the noise around potential staff and personnel changes will only grow louder.
Right now, the echoes of disappointment inside Acrisure Stadium sound louder than any Terrible Towel.
Leave a Reply