PITTSBURGH — The style points are lacking. The win total is not. The Pittsburgh Steelers are hardly complaining.
Well, technically, that's not true.
The NFL's last unbeaten team, the one that improved to 8-0 for the first time in franchise history following a closer-than-it-had-to-be 24-19 win over the Dallas Cowboys on Sunday, finds itself with the epitome of first-world problems in 2020: mildly expressing frustration even as the victories pile up.
"We can't keep having these conversations every week because one of these weeks we'll be doing it with an 'L' if we're not careful," head coach Mike Tomlin said.
Pittsburgh spent an inordinate amount of time chasing the injury-ravaged Cowboys. Just like it did the week before in Baltimore. Just like it did in Week 3 against Houston. Just like it did for a hot second in the season opener at the New York Giants. Each of the Steelers' last three games has come down to the final snap. A missed field goal in Tennessee. A pair of heaves to the end zone — one by reigning MVP Lamar Jackson, one by the well-traveled by largely anonymous Garrett Gilbert — both of which were broken up by Minkah Fitzpatrick
The Steelers aren't overwhelming opponents as much as they are outlasting them, very aware of the fine line they are walking. They are third in the NFL in point differential (plus-74), behind defending Super Bowl champion Kansas City (plus-103) and the two-loss Ravens (plus-84). Their run defense has shown signs of slippage each of the last two weeks. The offense has looked lifeless recently when quarterback Ben Roethlisberger isn't going no-huddle and working out of empty sets, in some ways making it up as he goes along. The special teams, which had been so solid through seven games, spent most of Sunday looking like a discombobulated mess.
And in the end, it didn't matter. They found a way, just as they've throughout the first half of the most unusual season in league history.
"I kid on the sideline, I feel like I'm too old for this stuff," the 38-year-old Roethlisberger said. "My body gets worn down."