Jaguars 45, Steelers 42 | Divisional round: Jaguars Stun Steelers to Reach A.F.C. Championship Game

In an on-field interview with CBS after the game, Bortles said the Jaguars came in knowing they would need to battle.

“The guys played with confidence all day long,” he said of his teammates. “Obviously with what they have on their side of the ball, it’s a good team with a good offense, so we knew we had to keep scoring.”

Given the opportunity to do a victory lap, Bortles took the high road when he was asked about the criticism he and the Jaguars’ offense had taken in recent weeks.

“I’m sure there will still be tons of people that are going to disapprove or talk negatively or hate or do whatever they want,” Bortles said. “But we get to keep playing.”

The combination of Bortles and Fournette was enough to outlast the Steelers, despite Pittsburgh quarterback Ben Roethlisberger throwing for 469 yards and five touchdowns. The stats for Roethlisberger were gaudy, but he threw an interception in the first quarter and his fumble in the second quarter was returned 50 yards for a touchdown, adding to Pittsburgh’s early deficit.

Perhaps Roethlisberger’s most impressive play of the day came on a 4th-and-5 play midway through the fourth quarter, in which he aggressively threw to Brown rather than running for a first down — and he was rewarded with a 43-yard touchdown that narrowed Jacksonville’s lead to 35-28.

After Brown scored, a Steelers comeback at home felt inevitable. B ut the resilient Jaguars responded with an eight-play, 75-yard drive that culminated in Bortles’ 14-yard touchdown pass to Tommy Bohanon.

It was a hectic end to the game from there. Le’Veon Bell scored on an unusual play in which Roethlisberger crossed the line of scrimmage before tossing backward to Bell for an 8-yard touchdown. An onside kick attempt failed, and the Jaguars increased their lead to 10 points with a 45-yard field goal by Josh Lambo. That left the Steelers with too little time, and Roethlisberger’s 4-yard touchdown pass to JuJu Smith-Schuster with one second remaining served only as consolation.

The Jaguars, who went 3-13 last season, will play in a conference championship for the third time in franchise history, and the first time since Mark Brunell led them there after the 1999 season. The team has never made it to a Super Bowl, and getting there by beating Pittsburgh and New England in consecutive weeks is still a monumental task.

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