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1989 Pittsburgh Steelers season
The 1989 Pittsburgh Steelers season was the franchise's 57th season as a professional sports franchise and as a member of the National Football League. They were considered a rebuilding team filled with many young players, especially after the release of longtime center Mike Webster in the offseason. The young team showed its inexperience in the first game of the season, when they lost at home to the archrival Cleveland Browns 51–0. The loss marked the Steelers worst defeat in franchise history. The following week wasn't much better, losing 41–10 to another division rival, the defending AFC Champion Cincinnati Bengals. However, the Steelers clinched the final playoff spot in the last week in the season with a 9–7 record. Chuck Noll, in his 21st season as the team's head coach, was named the NFL's Coach of the Year for the only time in his coaching career. In the first round of the playoffs, the Steelers would have a memorable come-from-behind overtime victory over the division-rival Houston Oilers 26–23, which saw Gary Anderson kick a game-winning, 50-yard field goal in the extra period. The following week, the Steelers nearly pulled off a major upset against the Denver Broncos at Mile High Stadium before losing 24–23 on a Melvin Bratton one-yard touchdown run with 2:22 remaining in the game. Though the Steelers would not make the playoffs again under Chuck Noll (missing in 1990 with an identical 9–7 record and again in 1991 at 7–9 despite a second-place finish that year), the season did set the tone for the team's return to prominence in the 1990s under his successor, Bill Cowher. Until 2015, it was the last season the Steelers made the playoffs in a season the Super Bowl aired on CBS. Each of the next six such seasons (1991, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2009, 2012) would see the team missing the playoffs.
Offseason
NFL draft
Undrafted free agents
Staff
Roster
Offseason
The offseason was marked with the team deciding not to renew the contract of longtime center Mike Webster. Webster's release marked the end of the Super Bowl-era players on the team. Although Dwayne Woodruff was still with the Steelers and had won a Super Bowl ring during his rookie year, Webster had been the last member on the team that won all four Super Bowls. Webster would be succeeded at center with a young Dermontti Dawson, who was drafted the year before to be groomed as Webster's replacement, and like Webster would go on to an All-Pro career as one of the best at his position. Meanwhile, the team drafted UCLA safety Carnell Lake in the second round of the 1989 draft. Lake would be a key member of the team's defense through the 1998 season, although his accomplishments would often be underlooked as opposed to his teammate, Rod Woodson.
Preseason
Schedule
Regular season
Schedule
Game summaries
Week 1
The Steelers and Chuck Noll faced off against their divisional rival Browns and former defensive coordinator Bud Carson in the season opener.
Week 2 (Sunday September 17, 1989): at Cincinnati Bengals
at Riverfront Stadium, Cincinnati Scoring drives:
Week 3 (Sunday September 24, 1989): vs. Minnesota Vikings
at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Scoring drives:
Week 4 (Sunday October 1, 1989): at Detroit Lions
at Pontiac Silverdome, Pontiac, Michigan Scoring drives:
Week 5 (Sunday October 8, 1989): vs. Cincinnati Bengals
at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Scoring drives:
Week 6 (Sunday October 15, 1989): at Cleveland Browns
at Cleveland Municipal Stadium, Cleveland, Ohio Scoring drives:
Week 7 (Sunday October 22, 1989): at Houston Oilers
at Astrodome, Houston, Texas Scoring drives:
Week 8 (Sunday October 29, 1989): vs. Kansas City Chiefs
at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Scoring drives:
Week 9 (Sunday November 5, 1989): at Denver Broncos
at Mile High Stadium, Denver, Colorado Scoring drives:
Week 10 (Sunday November 12, 1989): vs. Chicago Bears
at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Scoring drives:
Week 11 (Sunday November 19, 1989): vs. San Diego Chargers
at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Scoring drives:
Week 12 (Sunday November 26, 1989): at Miami Dolphins
at Joe Robbie Stadium, Miami, Florida Steelers get first ever win against the Dolphins in Miami. This game was played in a driving rain storm. Scoring drives:
Week 13 (Sunday December 3, 1989): vs. Houston Oilers
at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Scoring drives:
Week 14 (Sunday December 10, 1989): at New York Jets
at Giants Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey Scoring drives:
Week 15 (Sunday December 17, 1989): vs. New England Patriots
at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Scoring drives:
Week 16 (Sunday December 24, 1989): at Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Scoring drives:
Standings
Playoffs
Game summaries
AFC Wild Card Playoff (Sunday December 31, 1989): at Houston Oilers
at Astrodome, Houston, Texas Scoring drives:
AFC Divisional Playoff (Sunday January 7, 1990): at Denver Broncos
at Mile High Stadium, Denver, Colorado Scoring drives:
Awards and honors
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