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Prediction: Steelers find their CB

By Jim Wexell for The 4 min read
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Kevin Colbert got something off his chest at the Steelers’ pre-draft press conference this week, and it came off as odd for a guy who normally fares well with “elevator music,” as his partner, Mike Tomlin, likes to say about worthless chatter.

“ThereĢƵ so much misinformation,” Colbert started, “and itĢƵ really irresponsible on whoever puts information into the media. I think itĢƵ really bad for our profession when people put whatever means they use to get information out to try to influence a draft and they talk about a kidĢƵ test score, a kidĢƵ injury, a kidĢƵ character. I think thatĢƵ awful. I think itĢƵ disrespectful to our profession. ItĢƵ disrespectful to the game. ItĢƵ disrespectful to the kid. I think itĢƵ horrible. In knowing that we really don’t pay attention to it, we’re just going to be true to what we believe. We don’t believe in mock drafts and what people are saying about other teams because so much of it is misinformation. You just lose your mind trying to figure out what everyoneĢƵ going to do. We’ll just be true to what we do and feel good about it and live in it.”

Huh?

And then it struck me: ColbertĢƵ worried about the PR of a player heĢƵ going to draft.

HeĢƵ going to draft Marcus Peters.

They like him. They need him. They certainly believe they can lean on him. HeĢƵ a coachĢƵ son, after all.

But thereĢƵ the ugly rumor that Peters “tried to strangle a coach on the sideline.”

At least thatĢƵ what an anonymous scout told Bob McGinn of the Milwaukee Journel-Sentinel last December. ItĢƵ been credibly denied, but since I heard it I haven’t been able to forget it.

That has to be what ColbertĢƵ talking about.

But I hope they draft Peters, and believe they will.

I sorted through Peters’ trials and tribulations at the University of Washington in yesterdayĢƵ edition, and in my opinion — and I believe in the Steelers’ opinion — heĢƵ the kind of guy who’ll survive and likely thrive, in a stable organization with coaches who’ll easily command his respect.

FIRST ROUND

n Marcus Peters, CB, Washington — Physical, press-man corner who has ball skills, can support the run, and plays with swagger. Put the ornery guys out on the flanks anyway. ItĢƵ been my season-long contention that heĢƵ the best cornerback in the draft.

SECOND ROUND

n Eli Harold, OLB, Virginia — Opened as the favorite on my tote board but received zero public backing. My guess is that on draft day he’ll receive little NFL support as well. Harold will be able to help the nickel front a bit.

THIRD ROUND

n Rashad Greene, WR, Florida — Would be a great place to grab a nickel corner and put some real excitement into the Steelers’ secondary, but they’ve left themselves with a gaping hole on the WR depth chart and it must be filled with quality. This polished route runner is that.

FOURTH ROUND

n Bobby McCain, CB, Memphis — Well, hello Mr. Excitement. The Steelers haven’t shown McCain (5-9½, 195) any interest, of which I’m aware, but I really like him. He’ll not only fit the slot, he’ll return kickoffs. And interceptions. Of his 12 picks in college he returned four for scores. Yes, replace McCain with McCain.

FIFTH ROUND

n Shaq Mason, G, Georgia Tech — Won’t be the five-position reserve that could be Max Garcia here, but the 6-1¾, 304-pound Mason could become a starter by 2016.

SIXTH ROUND

n Matt Jones, RB, Florida — This might be the better spot to land a nickelback or a guard, because with this pick the Steelers should be filling a bigger roster need at DE. But I can’t find a DE to fit here, so that may have to be addressed in Rounds 4-5. But I like McCain and Mason too much.

SEVENTH ROUND

n A.J. Derby, TE, Arkansas — The Steelers brought in several late-round tight ends, and not Derby. I just like this converted QB because he told me more about Heath MillerĢƵ move from QB to TE in college than Heath ever did. An athlete with upside.

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