Steelers need Washington to ‘get it’ now
PITTSBURGH — Don’t ask Ben Roethlisberger if he misses guys like Antonio Brown, JuJu Smith-Schuster, Eli Rogers and Martavis Bryant, because he’ll just talk about Justin Hunter and Darrius Heyward-Bey.
RoethlisbergerĢƵ loyal to vets that way.
But with rookies, like James Washington, the veteran quarterback realizes he must begin anew.
“We’ve got to work through some things to get certain guys on the field,” Roethlisberger said. And, of course, the second-round draft pick is primary among the “certain guys.” In fact, Roethlisberger wasn’t shy about running into the red zone to illustrate the specifics of a new route he wanted Washington to master.
Washington didn’t, but the session was a start.
“We work with whoĢƵ here,” Roethlisberger said with a shrug when asked about it later.
As casual as Roethlisberger wants to make spring workouts seem, there appears to be more urgency surrounding Washington. Not that the rookie feels it.
“It doesn’t seem like that,” Washington said. “But, at the same time, he wants you up to par as quick as possible.”
Washington might not sense the urgency, but the Steelers NEED him to get it, and get it now. So, on some days it seems like the whole worldĢƵ a critic.
Washington receives instant feedback on his routes, how to make better use of his body positioning, how he needs to know where heĢƵ at on the field. There was also the dreaded incomplete-due-to-juggling sign he got from an official after thinking he had caught a ball in the corner of the end zone.
Then again, there are days when Washington simply goes up to catch a ball, comes down with both feet inbounds and hears booming praise from his position coach, Darryl Drake, and gets a pat on the butt from a veteran cornerback.
“He comes to work every day at practice and doesn’t complain,” said cornerback Cameron Sutton. “He doesn’t drop his head when things aren’t going right for him throughout the day. HeĢƵ made some plays out there, as well. I’m excited for him this year and excited for everything heĢƵ doing right now. Just got to keep building off of it.”
So, he looks like a player?
“Oh most definitely.”
ThatĢƵ what Mike Gundy, his coach at Oklahoma State, told one TV analyst, who repeated during a game that Gundy believes Washington will end up in the Hall of Fame one day.
“HeĢƵ never told me that, but I heard about it,” Washington said. “HeĢƵ always told me how good I can be once I reach my full potential, but I feel in college I never really reached my peak. I feel like I’m just now getting started.”
With the aforementioned receivers either traded, injured or just skipping the voluntary OTAs, Washington has received a ton of work the past three weeks. He said his biggest adjustment has been “to the speed of the game. ItĢƵ so much faster than in college. You’ve got defensive linemen that get to the flats so fast. I mean, itĢƵ going to have to take time.”
But, compared to where he was during the first of 10 OTAs, “I’m a lot more comfortable,” he said. “I’m kind of getting used to the speed of the game and the concepts are getting easier to understand and remember. It all comes with more time on the field and meeting with coaches after everyone leaves.”
And working with a 15th-year quarterback.
“HeĢƵ a good teacher,” Washington said of Roethlisberger. “I run a route and he’ll tell me what I did right, what I need to improve on. HeĢƵ testing me, throwing balls everywhere, seeing my range of motion.”
Roethlisberger, in kind, praised WashingtonĢƵ ability to make “combat catches.”
“At Oklahoma State, thatĢƵ how I was coached every day, to make those combat catches in traffic,” Washington said. “At this point, no catch is going to be just wide-open clean now. EverybodyĢƵ good at this point.”
Washington is a receiver with average size — 5-11, 213 — and average speed — 4.54 — but one with a gigantic heart and the work ethic of a farmer.
Of course, Washington is a farmer. He grew up working his fatherĢƵ land in Stamford, Texas. And, he realizes that instead of dealing with the up-and-down struggles of becoming an professional wide receiver, Washington could be there.
“ItĢƵ probably about 105, 110 back in Texas,” he said.
When told that sounds awful, Washington shot back with his first smile of the interview: “I love it. When I come back I’ll be in perfect shape for training camp.”
ItĢƵ a wheat and cotton farm that Washington will run one day, but when he returns to Stamford following next weekĢƵ mini-camp, Washington said, “I’ll probably be working on tractors and cleaning up around the barn. My dad just finished planting cotton. ThatĢƵ the hard part. ThereĢƵ not really much left to do.”
On the same day Terrell Owens was telling the Hall of Fame that he won’t be attending his own induction, Washington was expressing disappointment that his dad had to do all the hard work on the farm back home. Either Washington is a new breed of NFL receiver or heĢƵ completely unique.
“HeĢƵ a great guy, a great locker room guy,” said Brian Allen, another veteran cornerback. “HeĢƵ right next to me, so we talk all the time.”
And on the field?
“Oh, I like him a lot,” Allen said. “From what I’ve seen so far he has great hands, great routes, great speed. I think he can replace what we lost with Martavis. I’m excited for him and I’m ready to see what he can do.”
WashingtonĢƵ best asset?
“Quickness coming off the ball is one of the things I like about him,” Allen said. “But, he still needs to get used to the speed of the game coming from college. For right now, from what I’ve seen right now, his greatest asset that I’ve seen so far is his hands. He has great hands.”
Great hands go nicely with a gigantic heart.
“No doubt,” Allen said. “I feel like he can come in and play right away.”