EAST RUTHERFORD, New Jersey — Ben Roethlisberger threw two touchdown passes Sunday to spark Pittsburgh over the New York Giants 24-20 in an NFL game played with Hurricane Sandy's devastation as a backdrop. With the New York area still recovering from the killer storm's damage and shelter and electricity not yet restored for many, the Steelers decided not to fill precious hotel rooms and traveled in and out of the area Sunday. “The first thing was to make sure we weren't going to do anything to interfere with public safety or use resources that would help in the recovery,” NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said. “We talked to a lot of people and they all said they needed something to re-energize, something to entertain.” Severe damage prompted New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg to cancel the New York Marathon that was scheduled for Sunday, but the NFL game in suburban New Jersey went off as planned, although it did not end as the Giants had hoped. “We wanted emotionally so badly to win the game for all our neighbors who are struggling and who need some type of inspiration,” Giants coach Tom Coughlin said. “What we were trying to do was to give them a few hours of enjoyment.” NFL teams paid tribute to emergency first response personnel at every game and the Giants took food donations. Roethlisberger flipped a 4-yard touchdown pass to Emmanuel Sanders but the reigning Super Bowl champions equalized on Andre Brown's 1-yard touchdown run. On the next Steelers' possession, “Big Ben” was hit while trying to pass and New York's Michael Boley returned the fumble 70 yards for a touchdown. Shaun Suisham kicked a 30-yard field goal to cut New York's half-time lead to 14-10, but Scotsman Lawrence Tynes answered from 23 and 50 yards to boost the Giants' edge to 20-10. But Roethlisberger connected with Mike Wallace on a 51-yard touchdown pass and Isaac Redman scored the winning touchdown for the Steelers on a 1-yard run with 4:02 to play. Michael Turner scored Atlanta's only touchdown on a 3-yard run early in the fourth quarter and the Falcons, the NFL's only unbeaten team, improved to 8-0 with a 19-13 home victory over Dallas. Division leaders Chicago and Houston both improved to 7-1 with lopsided triumphs, the Bears routing host Tennessee 51-20 for their sixth consecutive victory and Houston ripping visiting Buffalo 21-9. Chicago's Brandon Marshall caught nine passes for 122 yards and three touchdowns from Jay Cutler while Matt Forte ran for 103 yards and a touchdown and Brian Urlacher returned an interception for a touchdown. Houston's Matt Schaub completed 19-of-27 passes for 268 yards and two touchdowns while Arian Foster ran for 111 yards and a touchdown to continue the best start in Texans history. Aaron Rodgers completed 14-of-30 passes for 218 yards and four touchdown passes and Green Bay ripped visiting Arizona 31-17, giving the Packers (6-3) their fourth victory in a row and the Cardinals (4-5) a fifth loss in a row. Baltimore and Denver enhanced their division leads with road victories, the Ravens rallying late for a 25-15 victory at Cleveland while Peyton Manning threw for three touchdowns as Denver took a 31-23 triumph at Cincinnati. Baltimore's Joe Flacco flipped a 19-yard touchdown pass to Torrey Smith to give the Ravens (6-2) the lead for good on their way to beating the Browns (2-7) for a 10th consecutive time. Manning completed 27-of-35 passes for 291 yards to spark the Broncos to a third win in a row and a 5-3 record to top the AFC West. Top draft pick Andrew Luck threw for an NFL rookie-record 433 yards, hitting 30-of-48 passes, and host Indianapolis edged Miami 23-20. The Colts (5-3) have won three in a row while Miami (4-4) had a three-game win streak snapped. Colts coach Chuck Pagano, still fighting leukemia while interim coach Bruce Arians guides the team, spoke to players before and after the game. The Washington Redskins suffered a 13-21 home defeat to the Carolina Panthers. In other games it was: Seattle 30, Minnesota 20; and Tampa Bay 42, Oakland 32. — Agencies