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Pittsburgh Steelers TE Eric Ebron affirms second-half game wasn’t improv

At the point when the Pittsburgh Steelers emerged from the locker room after halftime on Sunday, they turned up their offense to 11 and put on an act. The Steelers were down 21-7 to begin the second half and looked lost. Be that as it may, at that point quarterback Ben Roethlisberger took over, throwing for 244 yards and three touchdowns in the half to beat the Indianapolis Colts.

However, before you begin contemplating whether this was an instance of Roethlisberger simply drawing plays up in the dirt, it wasn’t. At least as indicated by tight end Eric Ebron. He addressed the media on Monday and when the offense took off it wasn’t a case of spontaneous creation and the Steelers had practiced all those plays.

All in all, what was the change? It seemed like Roethlisberger just took control for calling the offensive plays paying little mind to what offensive organizer Randy Fichtner sent in. In the first half of the Steelers played same mundane, predictable offense that has tormented this group for weeks.

In the second half, Roethlisberger hurled out Fichtner’s plan and did it himself. That is the reason the offense took off. Going ahead, if the Steelers want to continue winning, Roethlisberger should be permitted to call the plays from the earliest starting point of the game and give him full autonomy of the offensive gameplan.