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Brady’s 3 Touchdowns Lead Pats Past Steelers

New England quarterback Tom Brady (12) drops back to pass during the fourth quarter of the game against Pittsburgh on Sunday in Pittsburgh. New England won 39-26.(AP)
New England quarterback Tom Brady (12) drops back to pass during the fourth quarter of the game against Pittsburgh on Sunday in Pittsburgh. New England won 39-26.(AP)

Not many teams beat the Steelers. Tom Brady not only beats them, he embarrasses them.

Brady maintained his mastery of the Steelers, throwing three touchdown passes to tight end Rob Gronkowski and scoring once himself, and the Patriots bounced back from a humbling 20-point loss by beating the Steelers 39-26 on Sunday night.

No NFL team wins more on its home field than Pittsburgh, but no opposing player wins there like Brady, who has won six of seven overall against the Steelers and four of five at Heinz Field. He was 30 of 43 for 350 yards with no sacks or interceptions, and now has 14 career TD throws and three interceptions against the Steelers.

"They beat us in all phases," Steelers coach Mike Tomlin said.

The Patriots and AFC East-rival Jets are tied for the conference's top record at 7-2.

"We made big plays when we needed to make them," Brady said. "It's an exciting game for us in this locker room. We haven't been this happy in a long time. We're pretty good when we execute the right way."

Pittsburgh (6-3), its normally dominating defense shredded by Brady during its second home-field loss this season, drops back into a first-place tie with Baltimore in the AFC North. The Steelers played most of the game without wide receiver Hines Ward (concussion), whose streak of 186 consecutive games with a reception ended.

"I wanted to go back in, but they wouldn't let me," Ward said.

Brady threw only one incompletion during a 70-yard drive on New England's first possession that ended with his 19-yard TD throw to Gronkowski, a rookie who played his high school senior season in Pittsburgh.

New England started the second half with a near-identical 78-yard drive that Brady finished off with a 9-yard throw to Gronkowski, making it 17-3 and silencing a partisan crowd of 64,359 that rarely sees a rival quarterback being so effective and efficient.

Except Brady, of course.

"You can't get into a hole like that against a team that good and a quarterback that good," Steelers receiver Mike Wallace said.

As good as ever against Pittsburgh, Brady was more emotional than usual - screaming during huddles, yelling at linemen for penalties - perhaps reflecting his unhappiness at losing 34-14 the week before at Cleveland.

"That's the NFL," coach Bill Belichick said. "If you knew what was going to happen in this league (from week to week), you'd make a lot of money."

Brady, who has averaged 373 yards in his last three starts against Pittsburgh, found Gronkowski for a third time on a 25-yarder that upped it to 36-18 and emptied out whatever fans hadn't already left.

"I don't think they did anything to confuse us, that we didn't expect," Ben Roethlisberger said. "They flat out beat us."

Brady methodically led drive after drive by throwing underneath Pittsburgh's two-deep zone defense. The quick throws - welcome back, Wes Welker - confused the Steelers' defense and negated Pittsburgh's oft-successful blitzing schemes.

Welker, whose production has been nearly cut in half since last season and reduced even more since Randy Moss' departure, made eight catches for 89 yards. Gronkowski had five for 72 yards. BenJarvus Green-Ellis ran for 87 yards, the most against Pittsburgh's defense this season.

James Sanders effectively ended it with a 32-yard touchdown return of an interception with 81/2 minutes remaining on a throw by Roethlisberger that was tipped by Patrick Chung - though there were three more touchdowns, two by Pittsburgh.

When it comes to winning, the Patriots and Steelers are the pinnacles of the NFL. The Patriots' .632 winning percentage since free agency began in 1993 is the NFL's best, and the Steelers are second at .627. Brady's .767 winning percentage coming in led all quarterbacks, and Roethlisberger's .700 was second.

Think how much better the Steelers' record would be if they didn't meet up with Brady.

The Steelers, unable to solve New England's defense for most of three quarters while trailing 17-3, took advantage of a 38-yard pass interference penalty on Brandon Meriweather to advance to the Patriots 8 late in the third quarter. But Roethlisberger threw incomplete on second and third down, and Jeff Reed missed a chip-shot 26-yard field goal - his seventh miss of the season.

The Steelers, clearly deflated, then allowed Brady to throw 45 yards to Brandon Tate on New England's second play from scrimmage, and Brady ended the 80-yard drive with a 3-yard TD run on a quarterback draw that made it 23-3.

Pittsburgh finally got into the end zone on Roethlisberger's 6-yard throw to Emmanuel Sanders with just over 12 minutes remaining. By then, the game had the feel of New England's 41-27 AFC championship game victory during the 2004 season, when the Patriots dominated for three quarters before the Steelers piled up some meaningless statistics.

All three of Pittsburgh's touchdowns came in the fourth quarter, with Roethlisberger (30 of 49, 387 yards) also finding Wallace on scoring passes of 15 and 33 yards.

Pittsburgh was without Roethlisberger's blind-side protectors, left tackle Max Starks (neck, out for season) and left guard Chris Keomeatu (knee, ankle) and, with backups playing, Roethlisberger was sacked five times. Rashard Mendenhall was held to 50 yards rushing one week after Cleveland's Peyton Hillis pounded New England's No. 29-ranked defense for 184 yards and two touchdowns.

This program aired on November 15, 2010. The audio for this program is not available.

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