Pouncey weighs in on ‘Sleeper to Watch’
PITTSBURGH — ItĢƵ that time of the year when we reveal Maurkice PounceyĢƵ “Sleeper to Watch” for 2018.
Pouncey, if you recall, nailed Mike Hilton as the top sleeper last year, and it wasn’t PounceyĢƵ first successful spring-time call, either. The Steelers’ center has an eye for talent, and as the leader of the locker room has his finger on the pulse.
A couple of weeks ago, I wrote about my guess for PounceyĢƵ choice: Jake McGee. But the tight end from PounceyĢƵ alma mater, Florida, was lost for the season with an Achilles’ tendon injury. Before that injury, I assumed Pouncey might mix his appreciation for McGeeĢƵ great hands with love of school.
“Jake was going to be my guy for sure, a hundred thousand percent,” said Pouncey. “I feel so bad for Jake. He works his butt off. HeĢƵ a great dude. You’ve seen him out there catching all the time, even on the first-team guys. He’ll come back a lot stronger. They’ll definitely give him a chance to try to come back and work his way through it.”
It does, though, look like the Steelers found another Gator to play inside linebacker this season.
“Bostic,” Pouncey said of Jon Bostic. “HeĢƵ doing a really good job, a really good job. HeĢƵ fast. Obviously you see heĢƵ physically gifted. I think he did a good job playing with the Colts. I thought he was a really good player then. He played well against us, him and Morris, their other Gator, number 44.”
Antonio Morrison?
“ThatĢƵ him,” Pouncey said.
He was in a good mood, and with only one day of practice remaining at the time of this Wednesday interview, it was a good time to ask him about the line.
I started with a nugget sent to me by Pro Football Focus, that David DeCastro finished third overall and Marcus Gilbert finished fourth at tackle in the media organizationĢƵ 2017 grades.
“Pro Football Focus?” Pouncey asked with a sneer. “Who are those guys?”
Yeah, Ramon Foster doesn’t like them either. But, Pounce, at least they put an eye on offensive linemen every play. ThatĢƵ something, isn’t it?
“I just think they have a bunch of guys that don’t really know football,” Pouncey said. “If they can come in here and sit down and prove to me they know something, then I’ll respect them, but, c’mon, letĢƵ be serious, they don’t know football.”
But they do a good job with DeCastro and Gilbert, didn’t they?
“ThatĢƵ not hard to say those two played well. ‘LetĢƵ go find the Pro Bowlers and say they’re great,'” Pouncey said. “C’mon, letĢƵ be real. Gil should’ve made the Pro Bowl the year before last. But Pro Football Focus, I think agents pay those guys to talk about their players — in my opinion.”
Allowed.
Not every answerĢƵ going to be the one you want (and I swear we’re going to get to the answer you want very soon.) But, Pounce, tell me about your expectations for your group this season.
“I just think we can get better,” he said. “When we watch film there are a lot of things we could’ve corrected last year. But I do like where we’re at. We’re not going to try to overdo things, we’re just going to keep doing what we’re doing and work our butts off every day. Our O-line doesn’t get complacent. Our guys are still hungry. EveryoneĢƵ feeling great and young and they still want to compete.”
And, again, the O-line came through the spring with perfect attendance. Pouncey and Foster took one day off, but they were there, on the sideline in sweats.
“Yeah, sometimes they give us the whole day off. That was them, the coaches,” Pouncey said.
With the big money guys taking this stuff off, why can’t you?
“ItĢƵ in shorts,” Pouncey said with another c’mon-get-real look on his face. “I feel the same way the other guys feel, because it is just shorts, but I like the team camaraderie. Still, at the end of the day this isn’t real football. I come because of the other O-linemen, the camaraderie with those guys, and I have so much respect for Munch. But at the end of the day — you know what I mean? We’re not tackling, we’re not hitting, you can’t run the ball, you’re throwing the ball 40 times, 50 times a practice. So itĢƵ not real, you know? They see it now. LetĢƵ be real. Le’Veon missed the whole thing, even the preseason games, and he came out the best running back last year.
“By the way,” Pouncey said in an attempt to change direction, “Why are you asking me these wrap-up questions today instead of tomorrow? ThatĢƵ the last day.”
Because you veterans skip out early and the only people left in the locker room are rookies who don’t know where to go.
Pouncey laughed. “You’ve been doing this job for a while, haven’t you?” he said, and of course, the next day, Pouncey led Ben Roethlisberger out of practice early through a secret side door of which only the most tenured veterans (and sportswriters) are aware.
But, Pounce, we have a job to do here. WhoĢƵ your Sleeper to Watch for 2018? Your guy last year, Hilton, has turned into a monster. He went from quiet and diligent to brash and cocky. HeĢƵ doing a lot of trash talking out there. HeĢƵ actually become a team leader.
Pouncey laughed again. “ItĢƵ confidence. ItĢƵ confidence,” he said. “But, honestly, this year I’m going to have to go with Chuks. He’ll probably be the swing tackle and he did a lot of good things. A lot of good things.”
Are you just naming Chuks Okorafor as Sleeper to Watch because heĢƵ an offensive lineman?
“No, no, no, no,” Pouncey said. “I’m saying that because he did a really good job. Most of the times, when a guy like Jerald (Hawkins) goes down, the team will try to go shopping for a tackle. But I think he did well enough to show them that they don’t need to do that. We’ll see.”
Well, OkoraforĢƵ no sleeper. A third-round draft pick would made the team anyway, wouldn’t he?
Pouncey gave me a look that said I don’t appreciate the importance of the first tackle off the bench.
“We need a true swing tackle,” Pouncey said. “And I think he’ll fit that role. He uses his hands really well. HeĢƵ not a waist-bender. I think he has a really good chance.”