PITTSBURGH — The way Aaron Rodgers looks at it, part of his job is to be a ''magnetic force."
This is, after all, why the Pittsburgh Steelers signed the four-time NFL MVP to a one-year deal last summer. And why Rodgers opted to return for a 21st season after two miserable years with the New York Jets, eager to prove he could still sling it. Still deliver. Still win.
Turns out, there's some life in Rodgers' right arm yet.
And in his team's season, too.
The 42-year-old Rodgers threw for a season-high 294 yards, the last 26 coming on a go-ahead touchdown pass to Calvin Austin III with 55 seconds left, and the Steelers claimed their first AFC North title in five years with a 26-24 victory that wasn't assured until Baltimore's Tyler Loop missed a 44-yard field goal as time expired.
Pittsburgh (10-7) will host Houston (12-5) in the opening round of the playoffs on Monday, Jan. 12, hoping to end a postseason victory drought that stretches back nearly a decade.
''The belief level in the locker room after a win like this is exponentially greater,'' Rodgers said.
Considering the way Pittsburgh kept bouncing back against Lamar Jackson and the Ravens, maybe it should be.