The opening play of the game Packers Steelers game was a 60 yard pass touchdown pass From Ben Roethlisberger to Rookie WR Mike Wallace . Bush’s inexplicable blown coverage would alter this game in more ways than the 7 points to the Steelers. This would be the first crack in defensive coordinator Dom Capers faith in himself. For most of the game, Dom Capers stuck with his original game plan. He would blitz Roethlisberther often and try to contain him in the Pocket. We never got to see the what Caper’s plan for the run as neither team ran the ball or even attempted to run the ball. Roethlisberger spent the first half terrorizing the Packer’s secondary, engineering 3 touchdown drives against the Packers. Roethlisberger largely would target the receivers covered by freshly promoted defensive backs Jarrett Bush and Josh Bell along with ILB A.J. Hawk, who had problems covering TE Heath Miller. 
In the second half, the Packers defense contained the Steelers to three field goals. The Packers offense scored 22 points in the fourth quarter to put the Packers up 36-30 with 2:06 left on the clock, Pittsburgh’s ball on their own 14. This is where we saw Capers lose his faith in himself. After playing the Steelers the aggressively the whole game, Dom Capers would change his defensive strategy on this last drive. The Packers started playing exclusively nickel and dime coverages during this final drive, usually in a soft zone. Capers never rushed more than 4 this drive and often only 3. Roethlisberger had plenty of time to pick apart the Packer’s secondary in this bend, don’t break defense. Against this defensive scheme, the Steelers went 86 yards in 15 plays. This drive culminated with a 19 yard touchdown pass to Mike Wallace at the end of regulation. After Josh Reed trotted on the field for a chip shot extra point, the Steelers won 37-36.

After the game, Dom Capers said “Obviously, you get influenced when on the first play of the game they threw the ball over the top of us for a touchdown. That was a four-man rush with straight man coverage.” It sounds like Capers lost some faith in his defense and his scheme for Pittsburgh after the first play. Capers defended his switch to Nickel and Dime defense by saying ”You don’t want to let them go the distance in one play. You want to make them have to work and make a play. We had our chances to make plays. We just didn’t get them made.”
I will concede to Capers that the Packers had their chances to make plays to win the game in the soft zones, but they just didn’t make them. CB Tramon Williams dropped what should have been an interception early in the drive. Jarrett Bush picked off Roethlisberger only to have his interception negated by an illegal contact penalty. Then worst of all, DE Cullen Jenkins missed a game ending sack on Roethlisberger. If any of these play had been made, the game would have been a Packer victory.
However, I hate the fact that he switched to this soft zone, which I believe exacerbated our weakness on defense. The season ending injury of CB Al Harris promoted the inconstant Jarrett Bush to nickel and midseason pick up Josh Bell to dime back. By giving Roethlisberger all day to throw the ball, the Packers gave Pittsburgh’s talented receiving corps, which includes two Super Bowl MVPs, time to get separation from our inconsistent and untested nickel and dime backs.
The aggressive blitzing defense Capers schemed for the Steelers, which did not allow a touchdown in the second half, was scrapped in the last two minutes. I believe that is was because Capers lost faith in his own scheme. Instead of sticking with his scheme that had held the Steelers to 9 points in the second half, he lost confidence in his players and himself. I believe Capers then threw the defense out in a formation they have not played often this year because he got scared. Saying whether or not the Packers would have won with that defense is impossible, but I think it gives the Packers the best chance. I still believe that Capers is the answer to the Packers defense and has done an admirable job. I just would have liked to have seen a Dom Capers defense on the field for the last two minutes of the game.