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In Final Seconds, Santonio Holmes Was Steelers' Only Option

Steelers No. 1 receiver Hines Ward gutted his way through the entire game, but with a strained MCL, he was not much more than a gimpy decoy. Pittsburgh No. 3 receiver Nate Washington hurt his shoulder on his only catch of the game with 1:33 to play, which meant he was running routes with not much more than one arm.

So when Ben Roethlisberger hopped into the huddle with 48 seconds to play, he really had one option among his top three receivers -- Santonio Holmes. On both of the Steelers' two goal-line plays in the final seconds, everything was set up to get Holmes open.

On first down, the Steelers put Holmes on the left side of the field lined up in a stack formation with Mewelde Moore behind him. On the other side of the field, the Steelers lined up Washington and Ward (the decoys) along with Heath Miller in a bunch formation. At the snap, Roethlisberger looked to his right and pump faked to try to draw the linebackers and safeties over.

At the same time, Holmes was running a route to the back of the left corner of the end zone. Moore trailed behind Holmes and stopped right at the goal line. After his pump fake, Roethlisberger shifted his eyes to Moore, in the hope that cornerback Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie would abandon Holmes for Moore. It worked for just a split second, which was enough to give Holmes a window. Roethlisberger let fly with a good enough pass that could have been the game-winner, but Holmes let it slip through his hands.

On second down, the Steelers ran the same concept out of an entirely different formation. This time, the Steelers put Washington and Miller on the left side, while Ward came in motion to end up lined up behind Holmes at the snap, just like Moore was behind Holmes on first down. This time, Moore was in the backup spot, flanked out to Roethlisberger's right.

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