
The Pittsburgh Steelers left Warrior Field with a 31-28 loss to the Chicago Bears, but the moment that brought the entire NFL to a standstill didn’t come from the scoreboard. It came in the third quarter, when Broderick Jones—player No. 77, a powerful right guard and a pillar of the offensive line—went down after a violent collision with linebacker Domínique Robinson.
The blow snapped Jones’ neck, and he immediately fell to the turf. Steelers players rushed toward him, while medical personnel rushed to check his neck and shoulders—the areas most feared. Jones was escorted into a private tent, and many believed his night was over.
But like a true warrior, he fought his way back onto the field and completed 45 of his remaining 70 snaps. However, after the game, Steelers officials confirmed he had suffered a serious stinger, a nerve injury in the neck that can be long-lasting and especially dangerous for trench players.

The burgh offensive line produced a dominant 186-yard performance, but the emotional toll was still written all over Jones’s face.
Inside the locker room, when asked about the moment he fell, Jones shared a haunting recollection:
“When my neck went numb and my arm went numb from that violent impact, I honestly thought that was the moment it was all over — and what scared me the most was not the fall, but the thought that one fall like that could wipe out my entire career.” I spent my whole life trying to protect him.
Head coach Mike Tomlin later confirmed Jones is fit to play next week against the Ravens, and the medical team will conduct an MRI to ensure he has not suffered any lasting neurological damage.
“Broderick fought hard — a strong guy, but we have to be extremely cautious,” Tomlin said.
Jones’s absence is a significant blow to the burgh — losing not just a key blocker but a key player who provides the defense and the tempo of the offense.
The Steelers lost to the Bears, but the fear that rippled across the field when Broderick Jones fell to the ground may have lasted longer than the scoreboard.