LB Patrick Queen
On his emotions playing his former team:
"I thought back then I would be a little more [ticked]off. I woke up this morning, and I didn't feel any anger. I just felt content with life and the game and just being where I'm supposed to be. ... God put me in this place for a reason. I was just heated at the situation that occurred. So I just gave my faith to God and trusted Him that I was in the right place for a reason."
On holding Baltimore's league-leading offense to 16 points:
"Knowing what Lamar [Jackson] can do, knowing what the offense can do, especially with all the weapons and how much older everyone is now, it's not that young Ravens team anymore. It's definitely a huge game, knowing how this division goes and how it turns out. ... I think our defense went out there and trusted us to do our job. Nobody tried to do anything different. Nobody tried to be Superman. We just went out there and trusted each other and balled."
On the two-point conversion:
"We just knew with the game on the line they're going to put it in his hands and do what he does best. We just all knew that we had to do our jobs. We talked about it before we called timeout. We saw everything we needed to see and everybody understood the job they had to do."
On his forced fumble on Isaiah Likely:
"He had a play on the sideline over there when he caught the ball and I tried to hit him. He kind of shrugged it off and he was looking at me up and down. I was like, 'Oh, I've got something for that.' The next play I saw him, I was like, 'If you come outside, I'm going to cut you.' He went back inside and I made a play on the ball."
On if he said anything to the Ravens sideline after his forced fumble and recovery:
"No, I didn't say anything to their side. I took off the complete opposite way. Everything was how it was supposed to be. I have no anger or animosity towards them. It's just football."
On Lamar Jackson's 1-4 record against the Steelers:
"Seeing him and his emotion after the games, I know he really wants these wins, especially in division. Give him all the credit. He's a great player, MVP, but Pittsburgh just has a plan."
Head Coach Mike Tomlin
On how Pittsburgh's defense limited the Ravens:
"We did what we always do, to be quite honest with you. You better play hard, fast, and together when you play this group and when you play Mr. Jackson. His talents are unique. Their schematics are unique. Forget the minutia of what it is you do. You better play hard, fast, and together or you have no shot. We always start there."
On Queen's performance:
"One man's trash is another man's treasure. I'm glad he is on our team."
On keeping the Ravens offense in check:
"We have to. These AFC North relationships are intimate ones. We don't have a choice. You can't circumvent that challenge. You have to go through it. Thankfully today we did."
On Baltimore's two-point try to tie the game:
"I wanted to see what structure they were in and call a timeout, and we did that. Thankfully we even saw some of the semblance of the schematics of what they intended to run. I think that made them change and go the other direction. Obviously, particularly Mr. Jackson is a little bit less dangerous when he is going to his left than his right. So we're thankful for that."
WR George Pickens
On if there was anything different that they didn't see on film:
"We kind of got some of the looks that we expected. A lot of them – I would probably say 65% of them weren't the looks from film. That's always going to be – a team is always going to try to switch it up and get you guys confused."
On how chippy it was out there, especially with Marlon Humphrey:
"Yeah, he was. A rivalry game, a very chippy game. I think from the previous years with me getting the game-winner on him and him just trying to come out with a tougher mentality, but also costing his team flags. I would probably say just aggressiveness. It's a rivalry game, so something you expect."
On responding to the scrums that players got into on the field:
"I feel like that's kind of like what I want – me personally, I want the team to be like that because a lot of guys are going to talk. I'm going to talk, but as far as making plays on the field that's the most important part. I feel like we kind of did that a little bit more today."
On kicker Chris Boswell going 6-for-6:
"It's always good to have 'Bos' because 'Bos' works on his craft, so he is for sure going to make the field goal. Then on the other side, they got a great kicker too. Like I said, he's all about making plays. Some did; some didn't. That's pretty much it."
QB Russell Wilson
On getting a win in Ravens-Steelers:
"It was huge. Obviously, when you're thinking about the best teams in football, the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Ravens are up there. So we had the best talent in the world on that field today, on a historic field."
On playing in the historic rivalry for the first time:
"We knew this was going to be a game of a long battle throughout. We knew it was going to come down to the wire, and we were able to pull it out. ... It was a great team effort. Obviously for a guy like Queen to be able to step up and make big plays against a team he used to play for, I know that meant a lot for him as well."
LB T.J. Watt
On not letting the Ravens heat up:
"It really seemed like the momentum for them never really got there. Obviously, they had a couple big chunk plays, but it was an absolute dogfight like we expected going into the game. It doesn't matter how big the win is, a win is a win right now."
LB Payton Wilson
On his interception where he took the ball from Justice Hill:
"I wasn't looking. I was chasing him on a wheel route and I went under the pick route. So once you go under a pick route, you're in chase mode. So once his hands go up, I play through his hands and the ball happened to be there and [I] took it from him."