ĢƵ

close

Josh Dobbs explains grasping Steelers playbook, adjusting to full-time football

By Christopher B. Mueller for The 3 min read
article image -

PITTSBURGH — Through three weeks of Steelers organized team activities, the rookies have been tasked with learning a playbook likely twice the size of what they had during college, and with different positions come several different challenges.

As a quarterback, Josh Dobbs has more responsibility than most. In addition to his own personal assignments, Dobbs must know that of the 10 other players around him.

Whether itĢƵ his pre-snap calls, his check-downs, the footwork in his drop, identifying defensive coverages, slide protection from the offensive line or, most importantly, anticipating the routes and breaking points of each receiver; Dobbs has a lot to learn in a short amount of time.

“You just take it day by day,” Dobbs told the Times after OTAs on Wednesday. “ItĢƵ cool seeing the comparison from college to here. ItĢƵ a lot of similar concepts, but of course, thereĢƵ different variances with trying to isolate different matchups, different reads and different progressions.”

ItĢƵ widely known that Todd HaleyĢƵ system is one of the most complex in the NFL. Ben Roethlsiberger has run-pass autonomy at the line of scrimmage where a variety of different plays can stem from the same offensive formations and packages.

Dobbs, a dual-threat quarterback, ran a spread offense in college and has now been forced to adjust to taking snaps under center, rolling out of play-action fakes and operating out of a huddle. Though his pre-snap reads and audibles were similar to what heĢƵ doing now, he said.

“ItĢƵ a similar thought process,” said Dobbs, who threw for 7,138 yards and 53 touchdowns while at Tennessee. “That really never changes, but communicating the motions, communicating your hots, your slides and your different things. ThereĢƵ always going to be a learning aspect to it. I’m trying to gain as much knowledge as I can and apply it as quickly as possible.”

As Dobbs weathers the learning curve, heĢƵ doing so with a lot more time on his hands. Dobbs’ aerospace engineering major required him to equally divide his time between football and academics. He grew accustomed flipping a switch from his time on the field and his time in the books. Now, heĢƵ still in a book, but itĢƵ strictly his playbook 24-7. He described the structure of his typical day during OTAs as full-time football.

“ItĢƵ a huge difference, but itĢƵ a good thing,” Dobbs said. “You wake up early, get here and get your lift in. Then, get some extra film study in. Then, go to meetings; get on the field and go out to practice. Get more meetings in after. Watch more film to get a head start on tomorrow, and a head start on next week.

“You go home and you sit there and you’re hanging out and think to yourself, ‘Hey, don’t I have something to be doing? Don’t I have homework?’ But you really don’t. You get your work done, rest to take care of my body and then get ready to do it tomorrow.”

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.