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A healthy Maurkice Pouncey is critical to Steelers’ postseason run

By Christopher B. Mueller for The 4 min read
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PITTSBURGH — Several NFL athletes maintain that the game they play is their platform, but not their purpose. For Steelers’ All-Pro center Maurkice Pouncey, itĢƵ more of an equal balance.

Steelers coach Mike Tomlin alluded during his weekly press conference that Pouncey will sit out the final regular season game against the Browns on Sunday in preparation for the postseason. It all but guarantees that Pouncey will be the one snapping the ball to Ben Roethlisberger when the Steelers kickoff their seventh playoff appearance of the Tomlin era in the AFC wild-card round.

ThatĢƵ not something that could be said a year ago.

The Steelers faced the AFC North rival Bengals in a game that resembled more of a brawl than the playoffs. Pouncey was in the midst of a string of seven surgeries due to a broken left fibula he suffered in the preseason. He watched as Roethlisberger took shots below the waist after the whistle, and as Antonio Brown was knocked to near unconsciousness on a dirty hit from Vontaze Burfict.

Pouncey, a known enforcer on the Steelers’ offensive line, wanted to be on the field. Except he couldn’t even walk.

“I didn’t start walking until March,” he said. “I had seven different surgeries. … After two surgeries, it was tough.”

For someone who loves the game of football as much as Pouncey does, defining it as merely ‘tough’ wouldn’t be doing the situation justice.

“You’re so involved. I’ve been doing this since I was 6 years old,” Pouncey said. “I’m a big fan of this thing. I love it inside and out, and to be able to not go out there and help the team that you’re on and you have to sit back and just watch. … You just want to be out there with your boys.”

Recovering from a broken leg is a process in itself, but Pouncey also faced an uphill battle from a mental standpoint. The initial surgical wound didn’t heal properly, which resulted in several staph infections that required the repeated surgeries. It was PounceyĢƵ second season-ending injury in three years. He was completely out of football, and with that, he needed a support system. The Steelers offensive line didn’t break tradition — coming over to his house every Thursday night for film study, haircuts and team-bonding sessions — that Pouncey credits to helping him weather the time off. His teammates saw firsthand how difficult it was.

“That guy went through a lot with those surgeries,” Steelers lineman Ramon Foster said. “He was going to the doctor almost every day to get his medicine and everything. It speaks volumes. He says it all the time, ‘Ramon, you don’t want that.’ The mental part of it is what kills you the most. For him to go through that and come back the way he has in Pro Bowl form, back at the level heĢƵ done it during his career, I think everybody realizes his presence in the game right now.”

Pouncey has started all 15 games en route to his fifth Pro Bowl selection and paved the way for a career year for Le’Veon Bell, who ranks second in the NFL in rushing yards (1,268) and rushing yards per game (108.7). It is Pouncey who is tasked with similar pre-snap responsibilities to Roethlisberger in terms of identifying defensive fronts, indicating strong and weak side linebackers and making protection calls. In a sense, heĢƵ the focal point for the offensive lineĢƵ success. ItĢƵ a group that, in addition to BellĢƵ numbers, has allowed just 17 sacks to rank second in the league. Out of the 17, Pouncey has been responsible for one.

“ItĢƵ an intangible thing to where you play better with a guy like that. He brings everybody up,” guard David DeCastro said. “The rising tide lifts all the ships. ItĢƵ extremely, extremely true in his case, and itĢƵ one of those things that people don’t really notice but itĢƵ really there.”

That may just be part of the reason as to why Pouncey will be resting on Sunday while the rest of the offensive line has helmets on. His presence – like that of Roethlisberger, Bell and Antonio Brown — will be critical to a potential Super Bowl run.

“You know how important he is if the coach is pulling the center out of the game,” said Foster.

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