
Ben, Brown and Bell describe their dominance over the Dolphins
The Steelers' Big 3 of Antonio Brown, Le'Veon Bell and Ben Roethlisberger grabbed control of their wild-card game against Miami in the first half and didn't let go. Listen to the players explain how it went down.

The situation: The Steelers' offense starts clicking immediately, driving to the 50 for a first-and-10 with 12 minutes, 15 seconds left in the first quarter.
The play: Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger throws a screen pass to wide receiver Antonio Brown, who jab-steps inside then breaks toward the sideline, where tight end Jesse James comes through with a crucial block of cornerback Tony Lippett. Brown does the rest, streaking downfield for a 50-yard score. It was Brown's first-career postseason touchdown.
“That screen to the house, man. AB ain't nothing to play around with, he loves his situation, man.” -- Steelers center Maurkice Pouncey
AP Photo/Fred Vuich

“He did a nice job setting the blocks. Those guys did a nice job executing the blocks, particularly Jesse James. The rest was AB. ” -- Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin
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The situation: The Steelers face a second-and-7 from their own 38 with 6:50 left in the first quarter.
The play: Antonio Brown beats man coverage on a slant route and gets a step on the safety. With no other help over the middle, Brown cruises untouched for his 62-yard score.
“Once they're both on, it's pretty tough to slow both of them down.” -- Dolphins safety Bacarri Rambo
AP Photo/Fred Vuich

“He's the best in the world at running the slant route and as soon as it got into his hands, I put my arms up. You knew he was going to score.” -- Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger
Justin K. Aller/Getty Images

The situation: Le'Veon Bell carries nine times to set up a second-and-goal from the one with 12:39 left in the second quarter.
The play: Bell pounds through his offensive line and takes a shot from Dolphins linebacker Kiko Alonso, barely crossing the goal line for the 1-yard score. The touchdown capped a beautiful drive orchestrated by Bell, who rushed 10 times for 78 yards on that series alone.
“They kept it coming. Kept running ... ” -- Steelers running back Le'Veon Bell
AP Photo/Don Wright

“We [Antonio Brown] definitely feed off each other. When we scared those guys earlier in the game, they backed up.” -- Steelers running back Le'Veon Bell
AP Photo/Fred Vuich

The situation: The Steelers face a third-and-2 from the Miami 8-yard line with 2:05 left in the third quarter.
The play: Bell bounces to the left before finding his crease and runs untouched to the end zone. He breaks Franco Harris' franchise mark for most rushing yards in a playoff game. Harris' record of 158 yards stood nearly 42 years. He set it in Super Bowl IX on Jan. 12, 1975.
“There are so many times where I get the best view in the house. It is fun to just sit and watch and just see what he's going to do. ” -- Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger
James Lang/USA TODAY Sports

“I feel like when I have the ball, I'm going to control the tempo. ” -- Steelers running back Le'Veon Bell
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