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Steelers can find quality projects in the middle rounds

By Jim Wexell for The 5 min read
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(This is the first of a 10-part series on the NFL Draft. TodayĢƵ story highlights the edge rushers.)

Reporters were up close at the NFL Combine when the greatest of all the Greek heroes, Hercules Mata’afa, took the podium.

“I was the biggest baby in my family,” explained Hercules Mata’afa. “So it was between Anthony and Hercules, and my mom chose Hercules. I’m glad she did.”

Isn’t the mortal son of Zeus a lot to live up to?

“You got it,” he said with a serious look. “With a name like this, you’ve got to live up to it.”

Mata’afa has. Last season at Washington State he was a consensus All-America, PAC-12 Defensive Player of the Year, and what he called his greatest honor, the Polynesian College Football Player of the Year.

Mata’afa had 10½ sacks last season and 22½ tackles for loss — as a defensive tackle.

He played both the 1-technique (shade nose) and the 3-technique (playmaking tackle), or more specifically “the boundary defensive tackle inside the rush linebacker,” where he was told to disrupt the pocket with his quick first step.

“My get-off is the fastest in this draft,” he said boldly and confidently from his Combine podium. But at 6-2¼, 254 pounds, Mata’afaĢƵ too small to play full-time on an NFL interior. At least the Steelers think that way. They see Mata’afa as an edge rusher and sent Joey Porter to meet with him.

Can Mata’afa play on the edge? And off the ball?

“I have experience playing D-end in college,” he said. “Circumstances made me play D-tackle at the end of (2016) season. I like playing either position. I just love getting after the football, getting after the quarterback. It doesn’t matter where I’m at.”

But, his Combine numbers have tempered enthusiasm. Small at 6-2¼, 254 with 31½-inch arms, Mata’afa ran well enough at 4.76 in the 40, with a strong 26 bench reps, but he had less-than-explosive jumps (31½ vertical/9-0 broad).

HeĢƵ too small to play three downs on the line and heĢƵ a major projection at any position — even in the Steelers’ 3-4 base — that requires him to drop into coverage.

ItĢƵ similar to the problem Tedy Bruschi faced when he came out of Arizona in 1996 as a defensive tackle/end. He projected to linebacker because of his size (6-0 5/8, 250), and Bruschi did run a 4.68 40 with an oustanding 42-inch vertical jump. He was projected for the fifth-sixth rounds, but was chosen in the third round (86th overall) by the New England Patriots and became one of the NFLĢƵ great off-the-ball linebackers.

Bruschi is the optimistic comparison for Mata’afa. And the Steelers just need depth at outside linebacker and have the patience to draft a project.

There are a handful of other productive edge-rushers who’ve been knocked for one reason or other and could present great mid-round value to the Steelers:

n Obo Okoronkwo (6-1 5/8, 253) — The Oklahoma OLB is a personal favorite. Obo went on a screed at the Combine about how his lack of height wouldn’t be a problem because of his length (33¾-inch arms), bend (6.84 3-cone time) and motor (8 sacks, 17½ tackles-for-loss).

n Kemoko Turay (6-4, 5/8, 253) — A defensive end, Turay displays exceptional ankle flexion, which Mike Tomlin said last season is becoming one of his favorite talent indicators. Turay has been set back by injuries and poor coaching at Rutgers, but emerged as an exceptional prospect after showing terrific bend at the Senior Bowl and running a 4.65 40 at the Combine.

n Uchenna Nwosu (6-2 1/8, 251) — The USC OLB looks for all the world like a future captain who has the instincts to play inside. He agreed with that assessment at the Combine, but heĢƵ being called a fifth and sixth-rounder by top analysts. Those close to him believe he has the heart of a first-rounder, and Pro Football Focus called NwosuĢƵ production the second best among Power 5 edge prospects with 61 QB pressures last season.

n Shaquem Griffin (6-¼, 223) — Lost a hand at the age of four, this outside linebacker overcame his disability with sheer will. ItĢƵ as evident on the field as his 4.38 40 speed, the best time by a linebacker in Combine history. GriffinĢƵ expected to have trouble getting off blocks and intercepting passes in the NFL, but for the Steelers — a team thatĢƵ had three special-teams captain types in for free-agent visits to replace Rob Golden — Griffin would fit the bill as a core special-teamer and third-down rush specialist. Griffin would also become a locker-room inspiration with the enthusiasm he displays in spite of his handicap.

n Marquis Haynes (6-2 3/8, 235) — A la Mike Hilton, Haynes was given the Chucky Mullins jersey number 38 at Ole Miss last year. Haynes finished his five-year career with 32 sacks and 47¼ tackles-for-loss to demolish school records. HeĢƵ strictly a pass-rusher, and will turn 25 this December, so his valueĢƵ lower than his quick-twitch rush skills would suggest.

MY TAKE

If it were up to me — rash and impatient analyst — I might draft Okoronkwo in the first round. But, that appears to be an overvalue. He might be available in the second, and if not they should look for one in that round or the next to develop behind Bud Dupree, on whom the team has an expensive decision upcoming.

VALUE BOARD

Second Round — Obo Okoronkwo, Oklahoma; Kemoko Turay, Rutgers.

Third Round — Uchenna Nwosu, USC; Shaquem Griffin, Central Florida; Hercules Mata’afa, Washington State.

Fourth Round — Marquis Haynes, Ole Miss.

Fifth Round — Kylie Fitts, Utah; Jeff Holland, Auburn.

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