PITTSBURGH — Lamar Jackson's energy is palpable.
It pulses every time the NFL's reigning Most Valuable Player has the ball in his hands, a kinetic energy fueled by the Baltimore quarterback's unique skillset, one most teams in the league have struggled to grasp let alone stop.
Yet something happens when Jackson faces the Pittsburgh Steelers. The electricity that comes so easily against others vanishes. Jackson's surehandedness too. He gave it away three times in Pittsburgh last season as Baltimore relied on the defense and Justin Tucker's ever-reliable right leg to survive in overtime.
Earlier this month, Jackson directed an offense that piled up 457 yards. He also threw a pick-6 on Baltimore's first possession, lobbed an ill-advised interception to start the second half that sparked Pittsburgh's comeback from a 10-point deficit and fumbled twice in the red zone as the Steelers grabbed hold of the AFC North with a 28-24 victory.
Pittsburgh rookie linebacker Alex Highsmith — whose leaping pick after dropping into coverage gave the Steelers the jolt they needed — raises eyebrows afterward when he hinted Pittsburgh knew what was coming. A comment Highsmith's mentor, perennial Pro Bowler T.J. Watt, jokingly bristled at as the rematch looms on Thanksgiving
"I'm going to have to talk to Alex about giving the media all his tips," Watt said Tuesday. "It's unacceptable."
Maybe, but it also might be the truth.
Jackson has handled the ball either running or passing 95 times in two career games against the Steelers. Seven times those touches have ended with the ball in the hands of someone wearing black and gold. Jackson has 17 turnovers in 1,273 touches against everyone else.