Well, 'Hm-hah!' as Myron Cope used to exclaim. What did we witness at the Steelers' Monday practice, their first since being obliterated on both sides of the ball in Baltimore?
The instant the ball made impact with Matt Szczur's bat and seared toward third base, with fellow Cubs at first and second, the Pirates' infield experienced individual flashes.
It was 57 degrees all through the Pirates' 7-3 cutdown of the Cubs, and all around PNC Park the patrons had broken out their hoodies, sweatshirts and windbreakers.
On one stomach-turning sequence in the Steelers' 26-6 loss to the Ravens, Troy Polamalu, Ike Taylor and Ryan Shazier all whiffed on exquisite chances to take down Steve Smith.
Roger Goodell isn't on the verge of being disgraced. He's already disgraced. Let's get that much straight right now, no matter how dulled it might be inside his deluded head.
To dispense with this right off the top: Neither the Steelers nor the Browns experienced anything especially transformational at halftime Sunday.
They never saw the video. Until Monday, of course, when all of us saw it. They never saw Ray Rice smash his girlfriend in the face with a left hook.
One last look at the Steelers’ last game … • Funny, but it at least sounded like Mike Tomlin watched the Cleveland film and came away with the right conclusions...
Those were the Cleveland Bleeping Browns out there. No, check that, those were the Browns with Brian Hoyer at QB not long after carrying clipboards on the South Side.
The only thing more damp than the Highmark Stadium pitch was the mood itself late Saturday night. The Riverhounds were all strewn about.
The official Pitt football playbook is as thick as a small tree trunk and weighs a solid three pounds, if you ask Chad Voytik. He ought to know.
DEJAN KOVACEVIC, DK ON PITTSBURGH SPORTS A weekly feature aimed at rounding up a whole lot of odds and ends from a whole lot of time spent around our local...
I keep coming back to the same thought: The cumulative winning percentage of opponents on the 2014 schedule is .469, an eighth-place tie for the NFL's easiest.
The single most significant message the Steelers could possibly take from back-to-back 8-8 seasons is that something's got to change.
Neal Huntington sees it. He does. And I'd have to believe he feels it, too, when his Pirates have a day like Sunday at PNC Park.
The totality of all that Pitt achieved in its 125th football opener could be summarized by the state of one finger on one player.
DEJAN KOVACEVIC, DK ON PITTSBURGH SPORTS A weekly feature aimed at rounding up a whole lot of odds and ends from a whole lot of time spent around our local...
At 7:33 p.m. Thursday, a helmetless Ben Roethlisberger strode casually to Heinz Field's 50-yard line decal for the coin toss between the Steelers and Panthers.