ĢƵ

close

After 10 years, Mike Tomlin (almost) is the same as he ever was

By Chris Bradford, For The Greene County Messenger 4 min read
article image -

PITTSBURGH — Neither his second Super Bowl ring nor the passage of time have softened Ike TaylorĢƵ memories of the Steelers’ 2007 training camp, the first under Mike Tomlin.

“It was hard as hell,” the former cornerback said in his thick New Orleans accent.

Ryan Clark remembered that August heat similarly.

“His first training camp was awful, and I hated it,” the former safety says. “I wish he would get the frick away.”

Well, a decade later and Tomlin isn’t about to go anywhere. This season, which gets under way in earnest Thursday when players report to Saint Vincent, marks the Steelers’ 10th under Tomlin as head coach.

In most NFL markets that milestone might be cause for celebration — league-wide, coaching tenures are measured in months (38.5 on average), not years. But itĢƵ status quo in Pittsburgh, where the previous two coaches — Chuck Noll (1969-92) and Bill Cowher (1992-06) — averaged 19 years on the job.

So, does a decade on the job mean anything to Tomlin?

“Not really, no,” Tomlin said flatly at the conclusion of last monthĢƵ mini-camp.

Then, just as the cameras turned off, the coach added: “You really didn’t expect me to say anything, did you?”

Um, not really, no.

Getting Tomlin to talk about himself is like pulling teeth from an alligator, but the resume can speak for itself. His 92 regular-season victories are the fourth-most in league history by a coach through nine seasons. That doesn’t take into account his six playoff berths, four division titles, two Super Bowl appearances and one Lombardi Trophy.

Now 44 years old, Tomlin may no longer be confused as Omar Epps’ doppelganger, but the self-described “football junkie” has aged fairly gracefully since taking the reins from Cowher on Jan. 22, 2007. Tomlin is the NFLĢƵ fifth-longest tenured coach but is remarkably still itĢƵ fourth-youngest.

And it started in the summer heat of 2007 at Saint Vincent. In Steelers lore, TomlinĢƵ first training camp, one of the last under the NFLĢƵ old collective bargaining agreement which still allowed two-a-day practices in pads, has taken on almost mythical proportions. To hear those who endured, it was more Stalingrad than “Hard Knocks.”

Tomlin, then a 34-year-old who had never held a coordinator position, announced his presence with authority on a team that was just 18 months removed from the franchiseĢƵ fifth Super Bowl championship.

“He had to lay it down,” said Taylor. “We didn’t know him and he didn’t know us.

“As players we were going to give (effort), but a lot of guys were probably upset because they had those days off under coach Cowher. Coach T came in and was like, ‘LetĢƵ go!'”

To a man, TomlinĢƵ players say his demeanor, on and off the field, has remained the same. More than Xs and Os, TomlinĢƵ greatest strength lies in his ability as a master motivator. Though he is loath to admit it, Tomlin is a players’ coach. The players who play for him play for him.

“He is the exact same as he was when he first got here,” said quarterback Ben Roethlisberger.

But TomlinĢƵ staying power is a result of adjusting to the team around him, Clark said. Times have changed over the last decade in the NFL. The team that Tomlin inherited leaned heavily on a suffocating defense, but the Steelers’ identity now lies with Roethlisberger, Antonio Brown, Le’Veon Bell and a high-powered offense.

“Coach Tomlin adapted so well to the team he had,” said Clark, who played in Pittsburgh from 2006-13. “And I kind of saw him adapt to the different personalities of the young men, the individuals he would bring in each year. He learned how to coach an elite quarterback (Roethlisberger) and allow him to be those things. HeĢƵ definitely adjusted and adapted who he is sometimes as a coach and as a decision-maker, but heĢƵ always been the same guy.

“HeĢƵ always very stoic, very straightforward about the way he approaches the press and deals with the things that come from outside the actual organization. I think heĢƵ done a good job of staying true to himself but also adjusting with time.”

Training camps have also evolved since 2007. They are no longer the grueling affairs that they were pre-CBA of 2011, but TomlinĢƵ camps, still on a small college campus in Westmoreland County in the foothills of the Laurel Highlands, remain among the most physical in the NFL. In that respect, some things never change with Tomlin.

“When you’ve got time over the years to kind of figure it out, and do it the way you want to do it, and have the success that heĢƵ had,” Taylor says, “HeĢƵ got the blueprint down pat.”

CUSTOMER LOGIN

If you have an account and are registered for online access, sign in with your email address and password below.

NEW CUSTOMERS/UNREGISTERED ACCOUNTS

Never been a subscriber and want to subscribe, click the Subscribe button below.

Starting at $4.79/week.