Joe Flacco had a front-row seat to one of the more memorable hits of last season, and he didn’t hide how it felt in the moment.
The veteran quarterback, now featured in the third season of Netflix’s “Quarterback,” was caught on camera venting on the Bengals’ sideline after taking a shot from Steelers EDGE T.J. Watt in the first half of a Week 11 game at Acrisure Stadium. The hit drew a roughing the passer penalty, but Flacco’s reaction made clear he thought Watt got him good.
“Man, he f***ed me up. He knew what he was doing, too.
Oh, I think so, but he fed me up. It was on my left side, but man, the way he bent me up, this area right here, it just got extra fed up - my right pec.
He was like, ‘I’ve got a chance to hit him here. I’m gonna take full advantage.
“It didn’t feel good,” Flacco added. “But that’s football. That’s the Steelers' defense.”
Flacco has seen plenty of Pittsburgh over the years. He’s tied for the most games against the Steelers of any quarterback in NFL history with 24, and his long run through the AFC North has taken him everywhere except Pittsburgh itself. The former Ravens quarterback, who also spent time with the Browns and Bengals, has spent a career dealing with that defense from the other side.
Even so, Flacco backed off any suggestion that Watt or the Steelers crossed a line when he spoke on “Glenn Clark Radio” on July 14.
“I don’t think so. I actually enjoy that part of the game,” Flacco said.
“I remember talking about [the hit from T.J. Watt last season], he probably knew I was banged up and that’s part of the game.
When guys are hurt, it’s your job to exploit that.”
Watt’s own 2024 season was a step down by his standards, even after he finished as an AP Defensive Player of the Year finalist. He posted 11.5 sacks and led the league with six forced fumbles, then followed that with a first season under his three-year, $123 million extension that didn’t match his usual production.
The 31-year-old missed three games late in the 2025 campaign because of a partially collapsed lung, and his numbers slipped to 7.0 sacks and 46 pressures, per Pro Football Focus. His 12.4 percent pass-rush win rate, also according to PFF, was another drop from his normal level.
Pittsburgh does have depth around him with Nick Herbig and Alex Highsmith on the roster, but Watt’s production still matters. If the Steelers want their defense to hit its ceiling, they need that pass-rush win rate to climb.
There’s also the question of whether Watt can get back to the level that made him one of the league’s most feared defenders. A new system under Patrick Graham could help, but the concerns are real.
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