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Heath Miller of the Steelers gives a Cowboy — Ken Hamlin, in this case — a ride Sunday, good for a touchdown in the fourth quarter. The extra point tied the game at 13 with 2:04 left.
Heath Miller of the Steelers gives a Cowboy — Ken Hamlin, in this case — a ride Sunday, good for a touchdown in the fourth quarter. The extra point tied the game at 13 with 2:04 left.
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PITTSBURGH — Tony Romo was one play into what he expected to be a game-winning scoring drive and, with Dallas trying to preserve time late in the fourth quarter, couldn’t believe it when Pittsburgh called a timeout.

“He gave us that: ‘Who called the timeout? You called the timeout?’ ” Steelers linebacker James Harrison said. “Yeah, we called the timeout.”

As it has been nearly all season, Pittsburgh’s league-leading defense was one play ahead of the opposing offense, even during a game in which the Steelers largely played from behind.

Deshea Townsend scored on a 25-yard interception return on the next play with 1:40 remaining as the Steelers scored their only two touchdowns 24 seconds apart, rallying from a 10-point deficit to deal the Cowboys a potentially damaging 20-13 loss on Sunday.

“Yeah, we called the timeout,” Harrison said, describing what the Steelers (10-3) perceived to be almost-smug confidence by Romo and the Cowboys even as they were surrendering a 10-point lead in the final 7 1/2 minutes. “And you’re going to throw a pick to Deshea so we can win.”

Afterward, the Cowboys (8-5) almost couldn’t believe it: Not only that Pittsburgh’s bold gamble paid off, but that they couldn’t hold onto an apparently decisive lead in a game they badly needed to win to make the NFC playoffs as a wild card.

Just before Pittsburgh’s comeback began, the Cowboys celebrated wildly after dropping Gary Russell for a 2-yard loss on a fourth-and-goal play from the Dallas 1 early in the fourth quarter to retain that 10-point lead. The Steelers noticed.

It was the third time in a month the Steelers were stopped inside the 1 on their home field, but Dallas couldn’t take advantage — just as Pittsburgh did little with the Cowboys’ four turnovers in the first half.

“It’s all about momentum. It’s just momentum. It wasn’t us thinking the game was over by any means,” said Terrell Owens, who celebrated his 35th birthday by scoring Dallas’ only TD on a 12-yard catch early in the third quarter. “Sometimes it’s just like that. We were excited, the game was going our way.”

Not for long. The Steelers surged back to tie it on Jeff Reed’s second field goal, a 41-yarder, and Ben Roethlisberger’s 6-yard pass to Heath Miller with 2:04 remaining. Roethlisberger found Nate Washington three times for 51 yards on a 67-yard drive that led to the Miller score after the Cowboys twice stalled on drives that, if they had scored, probably would have sealed it.

“We did all the things we had to — up until a point,” Dallas linebacker Bradie James said. “But evidently we didn’t do enough to get a win.”

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