ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP) Don't think safety Jordan Poyer and other members of Buffalo's secondary didn't notice Steelers receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster dancing on the Bills logo at midfield during pregame warmups on Sunday night.

Come the fourth quarter, after Levi Wallace intercepted Ben Roethlisberger to essentially seal Buffalo's 26-15 victory, it was the Bills' turn to break out into a dance along their sideline.

''It was tight energy. The song playing. We felt the momentum of the game swing,'' Poyer said, before noting a TikTok video of Smith-Schuster posted on social media.

''I ain't going to lie, seeing them dancing on our logo pregame, that turns you up a little,'' he added. ''You come and play with a little extra fire. We were hyped up on the sideline. We had a big win and we were having fun.''

Josh Allen threw two touchdown passes, safety Taron Johnson returned an interception 51 yards for a score, and the Bills (10-3) inched closer to claiming their first AFC East title since 1995 and third playoff berth in four seasons.

Smith-Schuster and the Steelers weren't asked about the dance - something the receiver does before most every game - afterward.

Then again, they have other concerns after dropping consecutive games in six days following a 23-17 loss to Washington, and falling a game behind the AFC-leading Kansas City Chiefs (12-1).

The AFC North-leading Steelers (11-2) were still able to clinch their first playoff berth in three years before kickoff by virtue of the Miami Dolphins' 33-27 loss to Kansas City earlier in the day.

''We've lost two. We're facing some adversity. But we're not hitting the panic button,'' Roethlisberger said.

''Offensively we're not very good. We're not playing good football and it starts with me,'' he added. ''I think this is a team that has got a lot of resilience and understands what it takes to win football games and understands what time of year it is and right now it's unacceptable.''

The Bills have won six of seven and have at least 10 of their first 13 games of a season for the first time since 1991. That's a considerable switch from a team that had endured a 17-year playoff drought -- which stood as longest active streak in North America's four major professional sports -- before coach Sean McDermott took over in 2017.

''Ten wins, the (job) is not finished,'' Allen said. ''We know what we have to do.''

The third-year player broke the game open by throwing touchdown passes 3:21 apart - a 19-yarder to Stefon Diggs and a 13-yarder to rookie Gabriel Davis - on the first two drives of the second half to put Buffalo ahead 23-7.

Buffalo's second-half eruption came after Allen and the offense managed just six first downs and 102 yards on seven possessions.

Johnson, however, provided the offense by stepping in front of Roethlisberger's pass intended for Smith-Schuster and returned it 51 yards to put Buffalo up 9-7 with 52 seconds remaining in the first half.

''Our defense stepped up big time, especially when we started out the way we did,'' Allen said. ''We've got a lot of guys that care about each other and we don't want to let each other down. When we're out there, we put it on the line for each other.''

Allen upped his season total to 35 combined touchdowns (28 passing, six rushing and one receiving) to break the team's single-season record of 34 set by Hall of Famer Jim Kelly in 1991. His 28 TDs passing rank second most on the team list, and five behind the single-season record set by Kelly in '91.

Allen finished 24 of 43 for 238 yards and an interception. Diggs had 10 catches for 130 yards. Acquired in a trade with Minnesota in March, Diggs now has 100 catches to match the Bills' single-season record set by Eric Moulds in 2002.

The Steelers continue to resemble nothing of the team that set a franchise record by winning its first 11 games. Pittsburgh has been held under 20 points in three straight games, and was coming off a loss to Washington in which coach Mike Tomlin called out his team's sluggish running attack and receivers for their dropping passes.

The game was decided midway through the fourth quarter after Buffalo's Tyler Bass hit a 23-yard field goal to put the Bills up 26-15.

On Pittsburgh's third play from scrimmage, Roethlisberger's deep pass up the right sideline intended for James Washington was intercepted by Wallace.

Roethlisberger finished 21 of 37 for 187 yards with touchdown passes to Washington and JuJu Smith-Schuster and two interceptions.

SACK STREAK

The Steelers extended their sack streak to a 70th consecutive game to break the NFL record set by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers from 1999 to 2003.

Tyson Alualu was credited with Pittsburgh's first sack of the game against Buffalo by stripping the ball out of the hands of Allen midway through the second quarter. The fumble was recovered by Bills center Mitch Morse for an 8-yard loss.

The streak began in Week 8 of the 2016 season.

INJURIES

Steelers: Starting LG Matt Feiler did not return after hurting his shoulder in the first quarter. Feiler's replacement Kevin Dotson was ruled out after hurting his shoulder in the the third quarter.

Bills: Johnson did not return after sustaining a concussion in the third quarter. Morse missed several series in the first quarter after having a brace place on his left elbow.

UP NEXT

Steelers: Continue run of prime-time games in traveling to play Cincinnati Bengals on Dec. 21.

Bills: Travel to play Denver Broncos on Saturday.

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