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Notes from Saturday's practice
Same disclaimer as usual. It’s only one practice. If I say anything bad about “your guyâ€, get over it. Lots of players improve by leaps and bounds within the span of a preseason camp. I can only report what I saw, if your guy made three spectacular catches while my eyes were elsewhere, and I saw him drop the one thrown to him, Probably means I’m not raving about him, but it’s nothing personal. Here we go.
-The new turf has odd markings in each corner of each of the three field’s end zones. It’s a half circle with another half circle outside of that one, about ten yards wide and ten deep. Gotta be boundaries for some sort of drill.
-McLendon, the rookie tackle gets the nod as the first player down on the field. Undrafted rookies from Troy need to show the coaches they’re hustling, kudos to him for the effort.
The plyers are in shoulder pads and helmets, and shorts. No full pads today, means the linemen won’t be working on run stuffing and blocking. We’re gonna be working predominantly on passing today. The tight ends and receivers begin warming up by having balls shot at them out of the two-wheeled machine at ten yards away. First they take a couple while standing squared up to the machine, then they turn to one side, then the other. The idea is to keep both feet planted while they make the catch (like dragging the toes on the sideline)
-Spaeth is first up. He looks a little thinner to me than he did last year. He catches three or four smoothly, absorbing the balls velocity and pulling it in. He’s wearing gloves in this heat? He bobbles one, then catches the rest.
-McHugh takes a turn and the ball hits his hands a little harder. He gets a little slap on it when he catches it, and he doesn’t really absorb the balls velocity. But he doesn’t drop or bobble any.
-Johnson takes a turn. He’s very stiff when he tries to turn his body to snag balls that go off to the side. He’s much more muscular than the other TE’s. But the hand eye coordination isn’t there. He catches on one the forearm instead of the hands.
-Miller takes a turn and shows them how it’s done. While he absorbs the velocity, he doesn’t let the ball carry his hands six or eight inches like Spaeth does, and that allows him to tuck it in quicker. That’s key since a lot of his catches are in traffic. Well, I guess for the money he’s getting paid, he better know how to catch it.
-Sherrod takes a turn and drops one.
-Sweed comes over and showboats. Pulls the ball in effortlessly and in one smooth motion tosses each one behind his back to the coach. It’s nice that he caught every ball cleanly, but I’d rather see him do on the practice field what he’s going to do in games. Hopefully he doesn’t make catches and then toss the ball behind the back to the opponent.
They take turns catching the balls in various forms of readiness. Sometimes, they’re looking away then they spin and catch it. Kinda like the Marques Colston commercial.
-Spaeth catches his.
-Miller catches his.
-Johnson drops his. It’s pretty obvious early on that Johnson better be a hell of a blocker, because he’s not much of a receiver, as far as TE’s go.
-Spaeth catches another.
-McHugh catches his.
-Ratliff sneaks in and catches one.
-Sherrod makes a nice catch on one that’s way behind him.
-Miller and Spaeth catch a few more.
-Johnson comes back and catches one.
-On another part of the field, rookies Wallace and Lewis are tossing the ball back and forth. Wallace throws a couple nice passes. Not necessarily Randal El, but he’s got a nice spiral on it. Might be something to look at in the future. Oops, he throws it behind Lewis. Maybe he better concentrate on playing WR for now. Lewis makes a nice one-handed catch on it. It looks like he’s got good hands for a CB.
Offense and defense splits to go through walk-throughs of some plays. These are slow motion plays just to make sure everyone knows where they’re supposed to go.
-I watch a couple of the defensive plays, and I’d love to write what they were here, but have no clue what the hell to call them, and it’s impossible to describe what the 11 players did, particularly since they line up deceptively, etc.., so I’ll stick with the offense for the most part during the walk-throughs.
-Ben hits McHugh on a center FB screen. Nice way to make use of the TE in the backfield.
-Ben fakes a handoff, looks at Holmes slanting, fakes the reverse, then throws deep to Speath down the middle. Three fakes, eh? Looks like sack begging to happen IMO.
-Ben throws a screen to Parker. Just like the ones they used to run back in 2006.
-The defensive line is working on overload stunts in the middle out of the base defense. Something that no doubt seems more appealing with Timmons in there than it did with Foote.
-Ben throws a 10 yard out to Baker. Baker catches it but waits for it to get to him. I wish he’d go back for it aggressively even in the walk-throughs. There were a couple times last year I thought Baker should have come back for it instead of waiting.
-Wallace apparently runs the wrong route in the walk through and gets instruction on where he’s supposed to be. Right now, they’re lining him up on the outside to the right on 4 wides.
-Batch throws a 10 yard post to McDonald, and McDonald makes a nice two-handed catch on the ball way over his head. He looks small out there, so the likelihood that passes will go over his head are high.
-Dixon hits McHugh on a 10 yard turn-in down the middle.
-Dixon hits McDonald on a 15 yard curl and comeback to the right.
-Over on the defensive walk-through, LeBeau is giving #50 one on one instruction on where to go on a particular stunt. I don’t have a #50 on my roster, so I don’t know who it is.
-Dixon hits Grisham out of the slot on a 6 yard slant.
-The defense is working on a 6 man blitz package. No two plays look anything alike. It looks like someone sets off 6 bottle rockets that shoot in random directions at random times and intertwine like pretzels, but all 6 players end up at the QB.
-Summers lines up on the punt cover walk-through as the all-important second from the gunner on the left.
-Carter takes a turn as the right-side gunner.
-Moore takes the next turn as the right-side gunner.
-Johnson takes a turn at the second from the left gunner, and shows a lot more enthusiasm at it than Summers does. With a left-footed punter, that’s the short side. We better have someone over there who can block.
-Bailey takes the second from the right gunner, the attack spot.
-Special team coach stops the action to instruct Summers. He’s sliding his feet when he drops back to punt block instead of chopping them, and maybe getting too early of a release (not sure exactly what that last part was that he was telling him)
-#50 takes a try at the second from the right gunner spot, but his feet look too slow to me. He’s big. Maybe a DE that got converted to OLB.
-Tomlin steps in to give the punt coverage team hopefuls an earful or a pep talk. Can’t tell which. Maybe a bit of both (he usually doesn’t step in unless he’s unhappy with the way something is going, so I’d say the former) Either way, he’s making a big deal out of it, so that hopefully they take it seriously instead of looking at it as a chore (which is how some of them looked).
The players go into their stretching exercises.
-Summers is stiff as a board. While the other players bend over and grab their toes, straight legged, Summers can barely reach his knee, and he’s really stiff at the hips. If he’s swinging out of the backfield and the ball’s thrown low, it’s either gonna clank off his shins, or he’s gonna have to drop to the turf to get it. And forget about him turning and catching a ball thrown behind him.
-Ubrik is very flexible for someone his size.
-Hoke does his Russian dance. It’s a tradition. The crowd goes nuts.
The team splits up for drills.
-The defensive front seven practice coming off the ball as a unit on a simulated snap. Timmons is the quickest off the ball on the first group.
-Farrior takes the title for the second group.
-The d-linemen are firing out of the chutes into a sled, and McLendon comes out too high and taps the top of the chute.
-Hood fires out low and quickly.
The o-linemen are paired up, standing across from each other. The man playing the “defender†has the o-lineman by the inside of the pads and tries to get him off balance, while the o-lineman has to get hand position inside the defener’s hands and has to keep his balance doing it.
-Parquet gets pushed back fairly easily by Colon and never establishes his hands inside the defender’s.
-Capizzi holds up well against Starks, doesn’t get moved much and gets decent position with his hands.
-Essex works his hands well, but has slow feet while he’s trying to keep position, but he doesn’t get moved.
-Parquet has slow feet as well, but he gets moved.
-Shipley holds his place well, but gets instruction from Zirlein on the use of his arms….which really are short. I mean, they’re short. I’m surprised he can reach down and snap the ball.
-Urbik shows decent feet sliding side to side, but Essex pushes him around with ease when he goes at him straight forward. He bends Urbik over backward. Zirlein comes over and tells Urbik to keep his head up, that he’s got his head down and he’s leaning, which makes it Easy for Essex to pull him forward and then quickly push him back. They try again, and it’s no better. It’s early in the practice, but I’d say Urbik is weak in the lower torso, the butt, the thighs and the calves. And his technique is terrible. Anyone who thought he might be an immediate help to the line can pretty much forget that. He needs a year in the gym and to work on his technique. Seems like a decent athlete, and he’s not as bad as Hills was last year, but I doubt he makes any significant contribution this year.
-Capizzi takes another turn and holds up very well.
The running backs line up with one shoulder already on the sled and they push it.
-Parker doesn’t move the sled too effectively.
-Redman moves the sled much better. Seems fairly strong.
-Summers blows the sled across the field easily. He may not be flexible, but sure as hell is strong at driving the sled.
-Mendenhall is only slightly stronger at pushing it than Parker.
The tight ends are firing out of the chute into a sled.
-Johnson rings the iron when he hits the sled. Nice drive block.
-Spaeth is coming out of the chute lower this year than last year, but he doesn’t hit it with nearly the same authority as Johnson. Still he looks better than last year.
-McHugh hits it better than Spaeth, but not as well as Johnson.
The QB’s are throwing to receivers with no DB’s in the mix.
-Ben hits Vincent on a slant in the numbers.
-Batch hits Nance in the hands on a slant.
-Reilly throws behind Grisham on a slant from the left slot.
-Ben lobs one down the left sideline and Williams drops it. Right off his hands.
-McDonald runs a very precise route and pulls one in, then stops on a dime at the sideline and cuts it up. Not sure who he is, but he looks polished. Of course, that’s with nobody lined up across from him.
-Dixon hits Ward on a deed slant, and the crowd roars.
-Dixon leads Wallace nicely on a crossing pattern. Dixon looks like a completely different Qb this year. He’s not throwing every pass 10MPH too fast. He’s stepping into his throws nicely. As far as his throwing mechanics are concerned, he looks great, and he is accurate.
-Reilly hits Sweed in the hands on a deep out. Sweed is running far better routes than he did last year. He doesn’t look like he’s all elbows and knees. He’s smooth coming out of his cuts, and his body position is excellent. If he can manage to hold onto the ball, he should have a nice year.
-Across the field, the LB’s are practicing interceptions, and Farrior shows off great hands. But, you knew that already (sorry, sometimes I peek at the veterans, even though I know what they can do, just get an eyeful of good football)
-Grisham makes a nice adjustment on a Reilly pass behind him on a deep out.
-Sweed makes a great catch on a ball way behind him on a deep out.
-Williams brings a deep out smoothly into his chest. He’s very fluid.
To our right, one of my favorite drills, the running backs and tight ends try to block blitzing linebackers. This is where the half circles in the end zone come into play. The pass rusher can’t go outside of the outside line, and the back has to keep him from getting inside the inner line (penetrating the pocket).
-Timmons runs at Parker, head fakes, and blows right by him with a super short and swift swim move.
-Frazier rips under Moore’s arm and gets right by him.
-Johnson picks up Fox nicely.
-Vincent stuffs Woods.
-Silverback runs right through Mendenhall like he was a tackling dummy. Didn’t even need a move, just double fisted him in the chest.
-McHugh stops Woodley. I’m a bit surprised.
-Davis stuffs #44 (don’t have a defensive #44 on my roster, this might have been #47, because the guys pull their jerseys up and stuff them up under their pads to stay cool, so it disorts the numbers sometimes)
-Timmons with a very nice spin move right past Summers. Set it up nicely with a hrad plant to the right, then spun left (unusual, most guys spin right).
-Farrior blows right through Mendenhall. (Right now, I’m not sure which of our Rb’s is the worst at picking up the blitz. It’s a dead heat for last)
-#50 comes into Moore with a forearm shiver, lifts him off his feet and deposits him on his butt. A power move Silverback would be proud of. Wish I knew who 50 is, he’s showing a lot of power and speed. If he’s an UDFA, he’s a steal. This guy’s gonna make the team IMO.
-Woods uses a rip move to get by Redman.
-Redman stuffs Schantz.
-Korte gets by McHugh with a swim move.
-Bailey rips under Summers’ left arm and gets by him.
-Redman looks at the wrong guy and his man does past him untouched. Embarrassing moment of the day so far.
-#50 drives Redman back to the back of the pocket, but Redman barely holds on to keep him out.
-Fox knocks McHugh on his butt with a bull rush.
-Johnson stuffs Silverback on the bull rush.
-Summers blocks Hood (who came over from the d-line drills)
-Woods swims by Johnson. Well, Johnson may be strong enough to hold up to a Silverback bull rush, but he was pretty weak matched up against a speed move.
And we have the first scrimmage of the day!
1st play- Ben hits McHugh on a quick slant for 5-10.
2nd play- Kemoeatu stuffs Paxson, Ben overthrows Spaeth on a 15 yd skinny post, #21 has the ball in his hands and dropsn the interception. (I assume #21 is Clark wearing Taylor’s number again, so I’ll say Clark whenever 21 shows up from now on.)
3rd play- Ben hits Parker in the left flat, Polamalu is right there to hold it for a short gainer or loss.
4th play- Ben hits Ward, who manages to get Mundy isolated in a deep zone. Sweed has Townsend absolutely beat like a drum on the play. In fact, there hasn’t been a play yet that Sweed wasn’t open on. I don’t know how many catches he’ll have, but Sweed will be open a lot IMO. He’s really working off the line nicely and when he gets into full stride, forget about it.
5th play- Ben hits McHugh on a quick slant to the left, but Woods is right there to keep it to a very short gainer.
6th play- Parguet stuffs Eason on a stunt, giving Batch time to throw. Batch throws way low and behind Wallace, but Wallace twists around at full speed and picks the ball up off his back ankle on a deep crossing pattern where he’d beaten the corner and Cater deep.
7th play- Sweed beats Deshea on a 10 yard curl, uses his body well to shield him off and Batch hits him in the hands.
8th play- Hood tries a fake inside on Parquet then tries to swat him in as he jumps outside, but Parquet picks it up nicely. Batch has time and hits McDonald in the hands on a ten yard out, but McDonald drops the ball. After the play, Tomlin give Hood an earful about the weak swat.
9th play- Batch throws a quick out in Sherrod’s direction, but Sherrod never turns around. He was running the wrong route.
10th play- Capizzi does a nice job blocking Woodley (I don’t think Woodley looks like 100% to me. Maybe he’s till hung over from the offseason or something) Batch throws to Mendenhall in the right flat, throws it high and behind him, but Mendy makes a nice catch and immediate juke, then takes it up field.
11th play- Dixon can’t find anyone open, checks down to Davis in the right flat, but throws a sinker at Davis’ feet.
12th play- Dixon looks at McDonald too long, but McDonald never breaks open, so Dixon tucks it under his arms and takes off for what would be a hug gain.
13th play- Dixon hits Nance, leading him perfectly on a 7 yard slant. Nance drops the ball.
The team breaks into punt coverage and blocking drills. Looks like the first time they worked on this, so a lot of this was just instruction. But at one point, Arnold Harrison is giving Johnson fits for the third time in a row, and Tomlin gets involved to put a flame under Johnson’s butt.
Scrimage #2:
Play #1- Silverback picks up Starks and gives him a ride into the backfield, Ben throws in that direction, trying a check down to 38 because Ike has Holmes covered and Gay has Ward covered, but Silverback is right in his face and knocks it down.
Play #2- Ward drops down to the slot, Ben hits hit on a quick turnaround. The play is unremarkable in that it’s just a quick hitter designed to get a couple yards. But what is remarkable is how quickly Gay reads the play, comes off his man and comes up to meet Ward. I can’t remember a Steeler corner reacting that quickly. Gay gave up no completions that I saw. Now, they played him about 6-8 yards off the line when he was lined up against Sweed, and, as I stated earlier, I thought Sweed was open on a bunch of plays, but now I’m not so sure. If Gay reacts that quickly to a ball thrown toward Sweed, it’s a good chance he picks it off. As far off as he plays, and as quickly as he reacts, I’m betting Gay gives Troy a run for the team INT title this year. He’s already a better cover back than McFadden ever was.
Play #3- Ben hits Mendenhall in the left flat, Mendenhall jukes Clark out and takes it up field but not in the direction that would get him the most yards.
Play #4- Arnold Harrison blows by Hills. Batch does a nice job sidestepping and throws low and too far out front on a deep out to Wallace. Wallace makes a nice two-handed grab off the top of the grass (these two don’t seem to be on the same page. I’m saying Batch throws low and outside, but it’s more likely that Wallace isn’t running the route correctly since he’s a rookie)
Play #5- Batch hits Mendenhall in the right flat, Mendenhall immediately doubles back. Mendenhall looks like he did as a rookie. He’s reverted IMO, to not hitting the line hard. I don’t know if that’s because of the shoulder, but nobody’s hitting him hard here, so he should be hitting the primary hole, and he’s dancing around back there like Barry Sanders. It’s not that he doesn’t have nice moves, but he’s not running hard and smart IMO. Parker on the other hand looks great. He’s running strong and looks to be at top speed. I really had high hopes that Mendenhall would come into this camp polished up.
Play #6- Korte beats Hills with a speed rush, forces Batch to rush his throw to Baker over the middle. Batch never sees Fox and Fox intercepts and takes it to the house. Nice read by Fox, and nice pressure by Korte, whoever the hell that is.
Play #7- Dixon hits Vincent in the short left flat, but Hoke blows by Shipley and is there as the ball arrives to drop it for a loss.
Play #8- Shipley stuffs Hood and gets his hands down so Dixon can hit Williams on a 7 yard slant. I thought Hood would play the backside DE, but I only saw him there once. They’re lining him up inside, and he’s not having a lot of success. They seem to be grooming him to play the strong side tackle in the two down linemen set on 3rd or 4th and long. Seems to be the best chance he'll contribute this year.
Play #9- Parquet stuffs Hood, giving Dixon time to hit Black on a deep corner route for a TD. Beautiful pass.
Play #10- Paxson pressures Ben with a speed rush on Colon and gets in his face. Ward breaks wide open on a deep corner route, but the pass is too far in front of him.
Play #11- Moore swings out of the backfield to the right, but Woodley has him in tight coverage. Ben forces the ball and Moore can’t see it with Woodley in his face.
QB’s, LB’s, DB’s, RB’s, and TE’s go into a 7 on 7 drill:
-Ben hits Ward on a 10 yard curl.
-Ben hits Baker on a 10 yard curl in front of Ike. Ike has tight coverage and gets his hand in there as the ball arrives, but Baker holds onto it.
-Ben forces a deep post to Speath, Frazier steps right in front of it and intercepts.
-Ben seems Holmes is being covered by Mundy and hits him on a 10 yd slant.
-Dixon with a perfect pass to Grisham on the deep out.
-Dixon hits Grisham again on a 10 yd curl.
-Dixon his Grisham again, this time to the left with a nice 20 yard touch pass over the linebacker and under the corner.
-Dixon hits McDonald in the hands on a crossing pattern, McDonald drops it.
-Ben goes to Ward on the medium corner route, and Lewis reads it well, makes a nice interception. I don’t know how Lewis will look in man-to-man, but he makes excellent reads in the zone, and really attacks the ball nicely. I was worried about our corner situation, but he looks like he might be a nice find.
On the other field, the linemen go mano-a-mano in the Oklahoma drill:
-Silverback blows past Hills on a speed rush.
-Harris puts a beautiful spin move on Foster and beats him clean.
-Legurski stuffs Paxson.
-Hood puts Urbik on roller skates and drives him way into the backfield.
-They try again, and Urbik gets rolled again. Tomlin steps in and tells Urbik to “have some dignity†(not a good sign for Urbik, IMO)
-Woodley fakes outside then rips inside Parquet to get by him under his left arm.
-Silverback fakes outside and blows right past Hills inside. Dead QB.
-Foster stuffs Harris.
-They try it again, and Foster stuffs him again.
-Legursky gives ground, but holds off McLendon.
-Reffert shoves Urbik into the backfield.
-Silverback blows by Hills on the outside speed rush.
-Hills stuffs Harris
-Harris fakes in and rips past Foster.
-Hood uses the long arms to swat better this time and gets right past Urbik.
-They try again, and his time Urbik does better. He still gets drive back too much, but he doesn’t get beat.
-Paxson swims past Hills.
-Essex stuffs McLendon.
Final scrimmage!
Play #1- Handoff to Parker. Nice hole between Kemo and Stapleton (who is playing center today, not sure where Hartwig is)
Play #2- Kirshcke drives Starks back. Mendenhall gets the handoff and runs right into Starks’ back in the backfield.
Play #3- Ben with a swing pass to Davis, orte haas it sniffed out for a loss.
Play #4- Mendenhall off left tackle. Arnold Harrison stuffs the hole.
Play #5- Moore sweep right. Frazier and Deshea stuff it at the line. Wow, our run blocking looks ugly.
Play #6- Batch to Mendenhall in the left flat. Harris is right there, but Mendenhall fakes him out of his jock, and gets around him, but instead of getting a nice play straight ahead, he reverses field again and tries the Barry Sanders thing.
Play #7- Vincet between right guard and right tackle. Hood holds the point well this time, for a short gain.
Play #8- Redman to the right, #50 stuffs the play with a very strong hit at the point of attack. Redman tries to cut it in and 50 shoves his man inside to seal the hole.
Play #9- Hood gets straightened up and moved 2 yards off the ball. Vincent cuts through the hole for a nice gain.
Play #10- Woodley beats Spaeth like a drum, Ben tries to hit Holmes on the quick out, ball bounces off Holmes’ hands and Clark intercepts.
Play #11- Colon gets Woodley sealed inside, Mendenhall cuts around for a decent gain
Play #12- Silverback pushes Sherrod into backfield, Kirschke stuffs Kemo, Vincent has nowhere to go.
Next installment, Monday’s practice.
-The new turf has odd markings in each corner of each of the three field’s end zones. It’s a half circle with another half circle outside of that one, about ten yards wide and ten deep. Gotta be boundaries for some sort of drill.
-McLendon, the rookie tackle gets the nod as the first player down on the field. Undrafted rookies from Troy need to show the coaches they’re hustling, kudos to him for the effort.
The plyers are in shoulder pads and helmets, and shorts. No full pads today, means the linemen won’t be working on run stuffing and blocking. We’re gonna be working predominantly on passing today. The tight ends and receivers begin warming up by having balls shot at them out of the two-wheeled machine at ten yards away. First they take a couple while standing squared up to the machine, then they turn to one side, then the other. The idea is to keep both feet planted while they make the catch (like dragging the toes on the sideline)
-Spaeth is first up. He looks a little thinner to me than he did last year. He catches three or four smoothly, absorbing the balls velocity and pulling it in. He’s wearing gloves in this heat? He bobbles one, then catches the rest.
-McHugh takes a turn and the ball hits his hands a little harder. He gets a little slap on it when he catches it, and he doesn’t really absorb the balls velocity. But he doesn’t drop or bobble any.
-Johnson takes a turn. He’s very stiff when he tries to turn his body to snag balls that go off to the side. He’s much more muscular than the other TE’s. But the hand eye coordination isn’t there. He catches on one the forearm instead of the hands.
-Miller takes a turn and shows them how it’s done. While he absorbs the velocity, he doesn’t let the ball carry his hands six or eight inches like Spaeth does, and that allows him to tuck it in quicker. That’s key since a lot of his catches are in traffic. Well, I guess for the money he’s getting paid, he better know how to catch it.
-Sherrod takes a turn and drops one.
-Sweed comes over and showboats. Pulls the ball in effortlessly and in one smooth motion tosses each one behind his back to the coach. It’s nice that he caught every ball cleanly, but I’d rather see him do on the practice field what he’s going to do in games. Hopefully he doesn’t make catches and then toss the ball behind the back to the opponent.
They take turns catching the balls in various forms of readiness. Sometimes, they’re looking away then they spin and catch it. Kinda like the Marques Colston commercial.
-Spaeth catches his.
-Miller catches his.
-Johnson drops his. It’s pretty obvious early on that Johnson better be a hell of a blocker, because he’s not much of a receiver, as far as TE’s go.
-Spaeth catches another.
-McHugh catches his.
-Ratliff sneaks in and catches one.
-Sherrod makes a nice catch on one that’s way behind him.
-Miller and Spaeth catch a few more.
-Johnson comes back and catches one.
-On another part of the field, rookies Wallace and Lewis are tossing the ball back and forth. Wallace throws a couple nice passes. Not necessarily Randal El, but he’s got a nice spiral on it. Might be something to look at in the future. Oops, he throws it behind Lewis. Maybe he better concentrate on playing WR for now. Lewis makes a nice one-handed catch on it. It looks like he’s got good hands for a CB.
Offense and defense splits to go through walk-throughs of some plays. These are slow motion plays just to make sure everyone knows where they’re supposed to go.
-I watch a couple of the defensive plays, and I’d love to write what they were here, but have no clue what the hell to call them, and it’s impossible to describe what the 11 players did, particularly since they line up deceptively, etc.., so I’ll stick with the offense for the most part during the walk-throughs.
-Ben hits McHugh on a center FB screen. Nice way to make use of the TE in the backfield.
-Ben fakes a handoff, looks at Holmes slanting, fakes the reverse, then throws deep to Speath down the middle. Three fakes, eh? Looks like sack begging to happen IMO.
-Ben throws a screen to Parker. Just like the ones they used to run back in 2006.
-The defensive line is working on overload stunts in the middle out of the base defense. Something that no doubt seems more appealing with Timmons in there than it did with Foote.
-Ben throws a 10 yard out to Baker. Baker catches it but waits for it to get to him. I wish he’d go back for it aggressively even in the walk-throughs. There were a couple times last year I thought Baker should have come back for it instead of waiting.
-Wallace apparently runs the wrong route in the walk through and gets instruction on where he’s supposed to be. Right now, they’re lining him up on the outside to the right on 4 wides.
-Batch throws a 10 yard post to McDonald, and McDonald makes a nice two-handed catch on the ball way over his head. He looks small out there, so the likelihood that passes will go over his head are high.
-Dixon hits McHugh on a 10 yard turn-in down the middle.
-Dixon hits McDonald on a 15 yard curl and comeback to the right.
-Over on the defensive walk-through, LeBeau is giving #50 one on one instruction on where to go on a particular stunt. I don’t have a #50 on my roster, so I don’t know who it is.
-Dixon hits Grisham out of the slot on a 6 yard slant.
-The defense is working on a 6 man blitz package. No two plays look anything alike. It looks like someone sets off 6 bottle rockets that shoot in random directions at random times and intertwine like pretzels, but all 6 players end up at the QB.
-Summers lines up on the punt cover walk-through as the all-important second from the gunner on the left.
-Carter takes a turn as the right-side gunner.
-Moore takes the next turn as the right-side gunner.
-Johnson takes a turn at the second from the left gunner, and shows a lot more enthusiasm at it than Summers does. With a left-footed punter, that’s the short side. We better have someone over there who can block.
-Bailey takes the second from the right gunner, the attack spot.
-Special team coach stops the action to instruct Summers. He’s sliding his feet when he drops back to punt block instead of chopping them, and maybe getting too early of a release (not sure exactly what that last part was that he was telling him)
-#50 takes a try at the second from the right gunner spot, but his feet look too slow to me. He’s big. Maybe a DE that got converted to OLB.
-Tomlin steps in to give the punt coverage team hopefuls an earful or a pep talk. Can’t tell which. Maybe a bit of both (he usually doesn’t step in unless he’s unhappy with the way something is going, so I’d say the former) Either way, he’s making a big deal out of it, so that hopefully they take it seriously instead of looking at it as a chore (which is how some of them looked).
The players go into their stretching exercises.
-Summers is stiff as a board. While the other players bend over and grab their toes, straight legged, Summers can barely reach his knee, and he’s really stiff at the hips. If he’s swinging out of the backfield and the ball’s thrown low, it’s either gonna clank off his shins, or he’s gonna have to drop to the turf to get it. And forget about him turning and catching a ball thrown behind him.
-Ubrik is very flexible for someone his size.
-Hoke does his Russian dance. It’s a tradition. The crowd goes nuts.
The team splits up for drills.
-The defensive front seven practice coming off the ball as a unit on a simulated snap. Timmons is the quickest off the ball on the first group.
-Farrior takes the title for the second group.
-The d-linemen are firing out of the chutes into a sled, and McLendon comes out too high and taps the top of the chute.
-Hood fires out low and quickly.
The o-linemen are paired up, standing across from each other. The man playing the “defender†has the o-lineman by the inside of the pads and tries to get him off balance, while the o-lineman has to get hand position inside the defener’s hands and has to keep his balance doing it.
-Parquet gets pushed back fairly easily by Colon and never establishes his hands inside the defender’s.
-Capizzi holds up well against Starks, doesn’t get moved much and gets decent position with his hands.
-Essex works his hands well, but has slow feet while he’s trying to keep position, but he doesn’t get moved.
-Parquet has slow feet as well, but he gets moved.
-Shipley holds his place well, but gets instruction from Zirlein on the use of his arms….which really are short. I mean, they’re short. I’m surprised he can reach down and snap the ball.
-Urbik shows decent feet sliding side to side, but Essex pushes him around with ease when he goes at him straight forward. He bends Urbik over backward. Zirlein comes over and tells Urbik to keep his head up, that he’s got his head down and he’s leaning, which makes it Easy for Essex to pull him forward and then quickly push him back. They try again, and it’s no better. It’s early in the practice, but I’d say Urbik is weak in the lower torso, the butt, the thighs and the calves. And his technique is terrible. Anyone who thought he might be an immediate help to the line can pretty much forget that. He needs a year in the gym and to work on his technique. Seems like a decent athlete, and he’s not as bad as Hills was last year, but I doubt he makes any significant contribution this year.
-Capizzi takes another turn and holds up very well.
The running backs line up with one shoulder already on the sled and they push it.
-Parker doesn’t move the sled too effectively.
-Redman moves the sled much better. Seems fairly strong.
-Summers blows the sled across the field easily. He may not be flexible, but sure as hell is strong at driving the sled.
-Mendenhall is only slightly stronger at pushing it than Parker.
The tight ends are firing out of the chute into a sled.
-Johnson rings the iron when he hits the sled. Nice drive block.
-Spaeth is coming out of the chute lower this year than last year, but he doesn’t hit it with nearly the same authority as Johnson. Still he looks better than last year.
-McHugh hits it better than Spaeth, but not as well as Johnson.
The QB’s are throwing to receivers with no DB’s in the mix.
-Ben hits Vincent on a slant in the numbers.
-Batch hits Nance in the hands on a slant.
-Reilly throws behind Grisham on a slant from the left slot.
-Ben lobs one down the left sideline and Williams drops it. Right off his hands.
-McDonald runs a very precise route and pulls one in, then stops on a dime at the sideline and cuts it up. Not sure who he is, but he looks polished. Of course, that’s with nobody lined up across from him.
-Dixon hits Ward on a deed slant, and the crowd roars.
-Dixon leads Wallace nicely on a crossing pattern. Dixon looks like a completely different Qb this year. He’s not throwing every pass 10MPH too fast. He’s stepping into his throws nicely. As far as his throwing mechanics are concerned, he looks great, and he is accurate.
-Reilly hits Sweed in the hands on a deep out. Sweed is running far better routes than he did last year. He doesn’t look like he’s all elbows and knees. He’s smooth coming out of his cuts, and his body position is excellent. If he can manage to hold onto the ball, he should have a nice year.
-Across the field, the LB’s are practicing interceptions, and Farrior shows off great hands. But, you knew that already (sorry, sometimes I peek at the veterans, even though I know what they can do, just get an eyeful of good football)
-Grisham makes a nice adjustment on a Reilly pass behind him on a deep out.
-Sweed makes a great catch on a ball way behind him on a deep out.
-Williams brings a deep out smoothly into his chest. He’s very fluid.
To our right, one of my favorite drills, the running backs and tight ends try to block blitzing linebackers. This is where the half circles in the end zone come into play. The pass rusher can’t go outside of the outside line, and the back has to keep him from getting inside the inner line (penetrating the pocket).
-Timmons runs at Parker, head fakes, and blows right by him with a super short and swift swim move.
-Frazier rips under Moore’s arm and gets right by him.
-Johnson picks up Fox nicely.
-Vincent stuffs Woods.
-Silverback runs right through Mendenhall like he was a tackling dummy. Didn’t even need a move, just double fisted him in the chest.
-McHugh stops Woodley. I’m a bit surprised.
-Davis stuffs #44 (don’t have a defensive #44 on my roster, this might have been #47, because the guys pull their jerseys up and stuff them up under their pads to stay cool, so it disorts the numbers sometimes)
-Timmons with a very nice spin move right past Summers. Set it up nicely with a hrad plant to the right, then spun left (unusual, most guys spin right).
-Farrior blows right through Mendenhall. (Right now, I’m not sure which of our Rb’s is the worst at picking up the blitz. It’s a dead heat for last)
-#50 comes into Moore with a forearm shiver, lifts him off his feet and deposits him on his butt. A power move Silverback would be proud of. Wish I knew who 50 is, he’s showing a lot of power and speed. If he’s an UDFA, he’s a steal. This guy’s gonna make the team IMO.
-Woods uses a rip move to get by Redman.
-Redman stuffs Schantz.
-Korte gets by McHugh with a swim move.
-Bailey rips under Summers’ left arm and gets by him.
-Redman looks at the wrong guy and his man does past him untouched. Embarrassing moment of the day so far.
-#50 drives Redman back to the back of the pocket, but Redman barely holds on to keep him out.
-Fox knocks McHugh on his butt with a bull rush.
-Johnson stuffs Silverback on the bull rush.
-Summers blocks Hood (who came over from the d-line drills)
-Woods swims by Johnson. Well, Johnson may be strong enough to hold up to a Silverback bull rush, but he was pretty weak matched up against a speed move.
And we have the first scrimmage of the day!
1st play- Ben hits McHugh on a quick slant for 5-10.
2nd play- Kemoeatu stuffs Paxson, Ben overthrows Spaeth on a 15 yd skinny post, #21 has the ball in his hands and dropsn the interception. (I assume #21 is Clark wearing Taylor’s number again, so I’ll say Clark whenever 21 shows up from now on.)
3rd play- Ben hits Parker in the left flat, Polamalu is right there to hold it for a short gainer or loss.
4th play- Ben hits Ward, who manages to get Mundy isolated in a deep zone. Sweed has Townsend absolutely beat like a drum on the play. In fact, there hasn’t been a play yet that Sweed wasn’t open on. I don’t know how many catches he’ll have, but Sweed will be open a lot IMO. He’s really working off the line nicely and when he gets into full stride, forget about it.
5th play- Ben hits McHugh on a quick slant to the left, but Woods is right there to keep it to a very short gainer.
6th play- Parguet stuffs Eason on a stunt, giving Batch time to throw. Batch throws way low and behind Wallace, but Wallace twists around at full speed and picks the ball up off his back ankle on a deep crossing pattern where he’d beaten the corner and Cater deep.
7th play- Sweed beats Deshea on a 10 yard curl, uses his body well to shield him off and Batch hits him in the hands.
8th play- Hood tries a fake inside on Parquet then tries to swat him in as he jumps outside, but Parquet picks it up nicely. Batch has time and hits McDonald in the hands on a ten yard out, but McDonald drops the ball. After the play, Tomlin give Hood an earful about the weak swat.
9th play- Batch throws a quick out in Sherrod’s direction, but Sherrod never turns around. He was running the wrong route.
10th play- Capizzi does a nice job blocking Woodley (I don’t think Woodley looks like 100% to me. Maybe he’s till hung over from the offseason or something) Batch throws to Mendenhall in the right flat, throws it high and behind him, but Mendy makes a nice catch and immediate juke, then takes it up field.
11th play- Dixon can’t find anyone open, checks down to Davis in the right flat, but throws a sinker at Davis’ feet.
12th play- Dixon looks at McDonald too long, but McDonald never breaks open, so Dixon tucks it under his arms and takes off for what would be a hug gain.
13th play- Dixon hits Nance, leading him perfectly on a 7 yard slant. Nance drops the ball.
The team breaks into punt coverage and blocking drills. Looks like the first time they worked on this, so a lot of this was just instruction. But at one point, Arnold Harrison is giving Johnson fits for the third time in a row, and Tomlin gets involved to put a flame under Johnson’s butt.
Scrimage #2:
Play #1- Silverback picks up Starks and gives him a ride into the backfield, Ben throws in that direction, trying a check down to 38 because Ike has Holmes covered and Gay has Ward covered, but Silverback is right in his face and knocks it down.
Play #2- Ward drops down to the slot, Ben hits hit on a quick turnaround. The play is unremarkable in that it’s just a quick hitter designed to get a couple yards. But what is remarkable is how quickly Gay reads the play, comes off his man and comes up to meet Ward. I can’t remember a Steeler corner reacting that quickly. Gay gave up no completions that I saw. Now, they played him about 6-8 yards off the line when he was lined up against Sweed, and, as I stated earlier, I thought Sweed was open on a bunch of plays, but now I’m not so sure. If Gay reacts that quickly to a ball thrown toward Sweed, it’s a good chance he picks it off. As far off as he plays, and as quickly as he reacts, I’m betting Gay gives Troy a run for the team INT title this year. He’s already a better cover back than McFadden ever was.
Play #3- Ben hits Mendenhall in the left flat, Mendenhall jukes Clark out and takes it up field but not in the direction that would get him the most yards.
Play #4- Arnold Harrison blows by Hills. Batch does a nice job sidestepping and throws low and too far out front on a deep out to Wallace. Wallace makes a nice two-handed grab off the top of the grass (these two don’t seem to be on the same page. I’m saying Batch throws low and outside, but it’s more likely that Wallace isn’t running the route correctly since he’s a rookie)
Play #5- Batch hits Mendenhall in the right flat, Mendenhall immediately doubles back. Mendenhall looks like he did as a rookie. He’s reverted IMO, to not hitting the line hard. I don’t know if that’s because of the shoulder, but nobody’s hitting him hard here, so he should be hitting the primary hole, and he’s dancing around back there like Barry Sanders. It’s not that he doesn’t have nice moves, but he’s not running hard and smart IMO. Parker on the other hand looks great. He’s running strong and looks to be at top speed. I really had high hopes that Mendenhall would come into this camp polished up.
Play #6- Korte beats Hills with a speed rush, forces Batch to rush his throw to Baker over the middle. Batch never sees Fox and Fox intercepts and takes it to the house. Nice read by Fox, and nice pressure by Korte, whoever the hell that is.
Play #7- Dixon hits Vincent in the short left flat, but Hoke blows by Shipley and is there as the ball arrives to drop it for a loss.
Play #8- Shipley stuffs Hood and gets his hands down so Dixon can hit Williams on a 7 yard slant. I thought Hood would play the backside DE, but I only saw him there once. They’re lining him up inside, and he’s not having a lot of success. They seem to be grooming him to play the strong side tackle in the two down linemen set on 3rd or 4th and long. Seems to be the best chance he'll contribute this year.
Play #9- Parquet stuffs Hood, giving Dixon time to hit Black on a deep corner route for a TD. Beautiful pass.
Play #10- Paxson pressures Ben with a speed rush on Colon and gets in his face. Ward breaks wide open on a deep corner route, but the pass is too far in front of him.
Play #11- Moore swings out of the backfield to the right, but Woodley has him in tight coverage. Ben forces the ball and Moore can’t see it with Woodley in his face.
QB’s, LB’s, DB’s, RB’s, and TE’s go into a 7 on 7 drill:
-Ben hits Ward on a 10 yard curl.
-Ben hits Baker on a 10 yard curl in front of Ike. Ike has tight coverage and gets his hand in there as the ball arrives, but Baker holds onto it.
-Ben forces a deep post to Speath, Frazier steps right in front of it and intercepts.
-Ben seems Holmes is being covered by Mundy and hits him on a 10 yd slant.
-Dixon with a perfect pass to Grisham on the deep out.
-Dixon hits Grisham again on a 10 yd curl.
-Dixon his Grisham again, this time to the left with a nice 20 yard touch pass over the linebacker and under the corner.
-Dixon hits McDonald in the hands on a crossing pattern, McDonald drops it.
-Ben goes to Ward on the medium corner route, and Lewis reads it well, makes a nice interception. I don’t know how Lewis will look in man-to-man, but he makes excellent reads in the zone, and really attacks the ball nicely. I was worried about our corner situation, but he looks like he might be a nice find.
On the other field, the linemen go mano-a-mano in the Oklahoma drill:
-Silverback blows past Hills on a speed rush.
-Harris puts a beautiful spin move on Foster and beats him clean.
-Legurski stuffs Paxson.
-Hood puts Urbik on roller skates and drives him way into the backfield.
-They try again, and Urbik gets rolled again. Tomlin steps in and tells Urbik to “have some dignity†(not a good sign for Urbik, IMO)
-Woodley fakes outside then rips inside Parquet to get by him under his left arm.
-Silverback fakes outside and blows right past Hills inside. Dead QB.
-Foster stuffs Harris.
-They try it again, and Foster stuffs him again.
-Legursky gives ground, but holds off McLendon.
-Reffert shoves Urbik into the backfield.
-Silverback blows by Hills on the outside speed rush.
-Hills stuffs Harris
-Harris fakes in and rips past Foster.
-Hood uses the long arms to swat better this time and gets right past Urbik.
-They try again, and his time Urbik does better. He still gets drive back too much, but he doesn’t get beat.
-Paxson swims past Hills.
-Essex stuffs McLendon.
Final scrimmage!
Play #1- Handoff to Parker. Nice hole between Kemo and Stapleton (who is playing center today, not sure where Hartwig is)
Play #2- Kirshcke drives Starks back. Mendenhall gets the handoff and runs right into Starks’ back in the backfield.
Play #3- Ben with a swing pass to Davis, orte haas it sniffed out for a loss.
Play #4- Mendenhall off left tackle. Arnold Harrison stuffs the hole.
Play #5- Moore sweep right. Frazier and Deshea stuff it at the line. Wow, our run blocking looks ugly.
Play #6- Batch to Mendenhall in the left flat. Harris is right there, but Mendenhall fakes him out of his jock, and gets around him, but instead of getting a nice play straight ahead, he reverses field again and tries the Barry Sanders thing.
Play #7- Vincet between right guard and right tackle. Hood holds the point well this time, for a short gain.
Play #8- Redman to the right, #50 stuffs the play with a very strong hit at the point of attack. Redman tries to cut it in and 50 shoves his man inside to seal the hole.
Play #9- Hood gets straightened up and moved 2 yards off the ball. Vincent cuts through the hole for a nice gain.
Play #10- Woodley beats Spaeth like a drum, Ben tries to hit Holmes on the quick out, ball bounces off Holmes’ hands and Clark intercepts.
Play #11- Colon gets Woodley sealed inside, Mendenhall cuts around for a decent gain
Play #12- Silverback pushes Sherrod into backfield, Kirschke stuffs Kemo, Vincent has nowhere to go.
Next installment, Monday’s practice.
Re: Notes from Saturday's practice
Great job on the report vrabinec.Felt like I was sitting right next to you watching practice.Really appreciate all the work and effort you put into this post for us readers that cant watch it ourselfs.I've been waiting for practice,scrimmage,traing camp to start to see how things are going to look this year.Some of the areas I've been curious about are,#3 QB Dixon's developement.I Know old reliable Batch isnt going to be around foreever and it sounds like Dixon should be able to jump right intro the #2 slot soon.Mendy was another of my concerns too.Sounds like hes a little gun shy at the moment,hopefully he can come back from his injury.And then theres Sweed.I know its early yet,but its good to hear positive reports on anybody.I'll just have to wait until preseason, then the first couple of games to see how these 3 players do.I havent been to concerned with the defensive side of the team too much.It seems like for years now,that when we have some openings in the roster,that we have had some solid replacements in the waiting to fill the void.I know its not a good thing to "assume" that it will always work out,but we have seemed to take care of the defensive side of the team for many years vs the offensive side of the team.Again,thanks for the report,got my fix for now,looking forward to your next report.
- steelcitymetal
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Re: Notes from Saturday's practice
i think ALL the o-linemen need to show some hustle.-McLendon, the rookie tackle gets the nod as the first player down on the field. Undrafted rookies from Troy need to show the coaches they’re hustling, kudos to him for the effort.
or spike it like plax, haha-Sweed comes over and showboats. Pulls the ball in effortlessly and in one smooth motion tosses each one behind his back to the coach. It’s nice that he caught every ball cleanly, but I’d rather see him do on the practice field what he’s going to do in games. Hopefully he doesn’t make catches and then toss the ball behind the back to the opponent.
are they looking better with screens this year?-Ben hits McHugh on a center FB screen. Nice way to make use of the TE in the backfield.
haha, yeah. or fake, fake, scramble, scramble, pass.-Ben fakes a handoff, looks at Holmes slanting, fakes the reverse, then throws deep to Speath down the middle. Three fakes, eh? Looks like sack begging to happen IMO.
how is dixon looking overall? developing well?-Dixon hits Grisham out of the slot on a 6 yard slant.
hahaha-The defense is working on a 6 man blitz package. No two plays look anything alike. It looks like someone sets off 6 bottle rockets that shoot in random directions at random times and intertwine like pretzels, but all 6 players end up at the QB.
i am enjoying the thorough practice details, i'll have to come back later to read the rest.Play #3- Ben hits Mendenhall in the left flat, Mendenhall jukes Clark out and takes it up field but not in the direction that would get him the most yards.
- steelcitymetal
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Re: Notes from Saturday's practice
sounds promising from dixon. i wonder what kind of teammate he will be... how patient he will be in a backup role. will he get antsy in 3 three years if he's not starting?-Dixon with a perfect pass to Grisham on the deep out.
-Dixon hits Grisham again on a 10 yd curl.
-Dixon his Grisham again, this time to the left with a nice 20 yard touch pass over the linebacker and under the corner.
-Dixon hits McDonald in the hands on a crossing pattern, McDonald drops it.
hahahahaha-They try again, and Urbik gets rolled again. Tomlin steps in and tells Urbik to “have some dignity†(not a good sign for Urbik, IMO)
Wow, our run blocking looks ugly.
:(instead of getting a nice play straight ahead, he reverses field again and tries the Barry Sanders thing.
thanks again, vrabinec. this was very cool and i'm looking forward to the next one.
- thesteelhammer
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Re: Notes from Saturday's practice
Awesome write up.
- SteelCityFan
- Seasoned Veteran
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Re: Notes from Saturday's practice
Could #50 be LB Bruce Davis? I had high hopes for him when we drafted him out of UCLA. He was a BEAST on the pass rush. I haven't heard to much about him. Thanks for the great write up! Looking forward to the next installment!
- Sun and Steel
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Re: Notes from Saturday's practice
Indeed, Davis is reported to be # five-oh in the Trib
PROVING GROUND: Two players who contributed very little as rookies squared off under the watchful eye of Tomlin yesterday. Linebacker Bruce Davis, a third-round pick in 2008 and tackle Tony Hills, last year's fourth-round selection, faced each other in one-on-one drills that received Tomlin's rapt attention. On one play, Tomlin used colorful language to motivate Hills. When Davis, trying to anticipate the snap count, jumped offsides, Tomlin said, "C'mon, 5-0 (Davis' number)!"
PROVING GROUND: Two players who contributed very little as rookies squared off under the watchful eye of Tomlin yesterday. Linebacker Bruce Davis, a third-round pick in 2008 and tackle Tony Hills, last year's fourth-round selection, faced each other in one-on-one drills that received Tomlin's rapt attention. On one play, Tomlin used colorful language to motivate Hills. When Davis, trying to anticipate the snap count, jumped offsides, Tomlin said, "C'mon, 5-0 (Davis' number)!"
Sunlight-Falling on your steel
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Life is like a wheel
Death in life is your ideal
Life is like a wheel
- Witchblade
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Re: Notes from Saturday's practice
Nice
A little government and a little luck are necessary in life, but only a fool trusts either of them.
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P. J. O'Rourke (1947 - )
- steelcitymetal
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Re: Notes from Saturday's practice
nice to see that tomlin has some fire in training camp... hungry for more.
there is NO WAY we will have the same hangover we had in 2006.
there is NO WAY we will have the same hangover we had in 2006.
- thesteelhammer
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Re: Notes from Saturday's practice
Combined with what you're saying about Summers being stiff in the hips,
This ain't good either.
http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/sports/steelers/s_636497.html?source=rss&feed=9
gotta hold on to the ball to make he team.
this is good news about some other rookies though.
This ain't good either.
http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/sports/steelers/s_636497.html?source=rss&feed=9
Two days into training camp, running back Frank "The Tank" Summers got his welcome-to-the-NFL moment. Near the end of practice Sunday, cornerback William Gay lowered his shoulder into the 5-foot-10, 240-pound rookie on a running play. The collision jarred the ball loose, giving Gay the hit of the day in what turned out to be a lively practice.
"When you carry a nickname like 'The Tank,' guys are going to try you," Steelers coach Mike Tomlin said. "They want him to prove that that nickname is earned. That's the story of the National Football League. This is a show-me game. He's starting to understand that."
When asked if he welcomed such physical play among teammates, Tomlin said, "I'd rather say 'Whoa' than 'Sic 'em.'
gotta hold on to the ball to make he team.
this is good news about some other rookies though.
Steelers first-round draft pick Ziggy Hood faced third-round pick Kraig Urbik in one-on-one drills Sunday afternoon. Both players had their moments, but Urbik had more of them. The first time they lined up, Hood beat Urbik, who was playing right guard, with an outside rush. The next time, Urbik stopped Hood's bull rush. On the third try, Urbik stopped another Hood outside rush. Hood and Urbik went against each other three more times, with Urbik winning twice. Overall, Urbik won four of the six matchups. Urbik also looked good matched against veteran defensive end Aaron Smith
Rookie defensive back Keenan Lewis played well Saturday, breaking up a long pass intended for fellow third-round draft pick Mike Wallace and also recording an interception. Yesterday, the tables turned on Lewis, who was beaten deep by Wallace, outjumped for a long pass by Limas Sweed and was beaten on a short route by rookie free agent Tyler Grisham
- steelcitymetal
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Re: Notes from Saturday's practice
smheart78 wrote:Incredible stuff. I miss this site!! This is why I come back.
yeah definitely. i can't make it out to camp this year so this is MUCH appreciated.
plus he knows what he is seeing a lot more than i would
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