George Pickens put the Steelers in the red zone Sunday on a pass from Russell Wilson.
He promptly took them out with a celebration penalty on a drive that stalled out and came up scoreless on a blocked field goal.
The penalty was Pickens’ second of the day for unsportsmanlike conduct. Both penalties drew admonishment from Steelers right tackle Broderick Jones.
Pickens’ finger gun proves costly
Pickens’ second penalty took place on Pittsburgh’s first possession of the second half. With the Steelers leading, 27-21, Pickens caught a deep ball from Wilson down the right sideline on second-and-7. The 36-yard gain put Pittsburgh at the Cincinnati 13-yard line.
But his post-play celebration made for an easy penalty call from the refs. Pickens raised his right hand with two fingers extended in a finger gun directed toward the end-zone stands in Cincinnati. Pickens was flagged for unsportsmanlike conduct, a 15-yard penalty that backed the Steelers up to the 28-yard line.
After the penalty, Jones pulled Pickens to the side to have a word with him.
The Steelers didn’t pick up a first down from there. They instead gained five yards and settled for a field-goal attempt by Chris Boswell. Cincinnati blocked the kick, and the Steelers came up scoreless after initially advancing to the Bengals 13-yard line on Pickens’ big gain.
Pickens is fortunate that the penalty didn’t result in an ejection. He was previously flagged for unsportsmanlike conduct in the first quarter and given a warning.
Pickens was previously warned of a potential ejection
That penalty also came after a big gain that resulted in a Steelers first down. Pickens caught a pass on a crossing route on third-and-8 for a 21-yard gain to the Cincinnati 47-yard line. After the play, Pickens dropped the ball directly into the face of Bengals linebacker Germaine Pratt, whom Pickens beat on the play and was lying face up on the turf.
The ball drop drew a 15-yard unsportsmanlike penalty for what officials ruled as taunting.
The taunting designation came with a warning that Pickens would be ejected for another infraction. Fortunately for Pickens, officials didn’t deem his second unsportsmanlike penalty as taunting, and he remained in the game.
Like with his second penalty, Pickens’ first prompted Jones to pull him to the side to share some words. On this drive, the Steelers eventually scored a touchdown to tie the game at 14-14.
Officials previously declined to flag Pickens for a celebration on Pittsburgh’s first score of the day. On that one, Pickens took a screen pass from Wilson 17 yards for a touchdown to tie the game at 7-7 in the first quarter. After the score, Pickens punted the ball into the stands.
It all added up to the full Pickett experience, complete with big, game-changing plays and avoidable post-play mistakes that cost his team.