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My Combine Mission: Bring Back Marcus Allen

By Jim Wexell for The 8 min read
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INDIANAPOLIS — There are degrees and meanings of these meetings we hear about between prospects and teams at the NFL Combine.

Damon Webb, for instance, is a late-round, under-the-radar free safety from Ohio State who met with the Steelers’ position coach, Tom Bradley, for an “informal.”

But Justin Reid, the silky smooth center fielder from Stanford, younger brother of NFL free safety Eric Reid, had a “formal” sitdown with Mike Tomlin.

Ronnie Harrison, the hard-hitting strong safety who learned to play free safety with national champion Alabama, had both, an informal meeting with an assistant coach before he was scheduled to sit down formally Sunday night with the head coach.

Jessie Bates, the fast, physical and smart free safety at Wake Forest, he also had a formal meeting scheduled.

With Tomlin?

“The owner, the GM, all of them,” said Bates. And he wasn’t trying to sound cocky.

Clearly, and without doubt, the Steelers are looking at free safeties. There are several others to discuss at a later time. However, I was sent on a mission to come home with a strong safety — specifically the strong safety from Penn State, Marcus Allen.

Why Marcus Allen?

“When he comes here you’ll find out,” Penn State receiver DaeSean Hamilton told me on Friday.

“Marcus, heĢƵ a big ball of energy. I love Marcus. He has a smile on his face all the time. He always has a lot of energy and heĢƵ always bringing it. He has fun with all of us, with every teammate, everyone in the locker room. HeĢƵ one of the most vocal and outgoing people on the team.”

Funny, I had just run into the great Rod Woodson here and he said that what he wants to see most out of the DBs in their workouts on Monday is how the Power 5 guys interact with the guys who went to lesser athletic programs.

“Team unity is soooo important in the league,” Woodson said.

The Steelers have a guy like that in Maurkice Pouncey, I told Woodson.

“Maybe they need one on defense,” he said.

But it wasn’t Woodson who ordered me to bring back Marcus Allen — or “Chico Hendrix,” as heĢƵ known to the cool kids.

“Chico. Chico Hendrix,” repeated Penn State linebacker Jason Cabinda. “Big social media guy. I’m not sure where it originated, but thatĢƵ what we call Marcus. The kids know.”

And thatĢƵ what I’m getting at. While watching Allen rock foe after foe with a striking ability thatĢƵ more solid and sure than anything we’ve watched this past season from the Steelers, my daughter asked if I was watching the famous Marcus Allen.

No, I told her. That guy retired a long time ago.

“No,” she said. “Marcus Allen, the guy on social media who plays in college. HeĢƵ hilarious. If he could be on JuJuĢƵ team, that would be so awesome.”

Yeah, the bring-Marcus-to-Pittsburgh directive came from my teenage daughter.

“Oh, thatĢƵ cool,” Allen said Sunday after I relayed the story. “That would be real cool. Anywhere, any team that takes a chance on me, itĢƵ going to be a blessing. But, JuJu, heĢƵ definitely a cool guy.”

Has Allen heard from the Steelers?

“I’ve heard from a lot of teams,” he said.

Allen might be a personality, but heĢƵ clearly a businessman. Some of these guys don’t tell reporters their meeting plans, per the teams’ requests. Few prospects honor those requests, though, because they’re only human and they’re excited and at this point in their nascent NFL careers they think they should probably answer to the media.

AllenĢƵ too savvy for that. After all, heĢƵ going into broadcast journalism after football with his Penn State degree.

But he does have Pittsburgh ties. A lot of them. He works out near his home in Maryland with Sean Davis. And, AllenĢƵ father was born in Homewood, grew up as a close childhood friend of Curtis Martin, who became AllenĢƵ godfather.

And Malik Golden, AllenĢƵ safety-mate at Penn State for three years, is with the Steelers.

“ThatĢƵ my boy,” Allen said.

Why is he your boy?

“We played on the same team at Penn State,” Allen said with a look that kind of identified me as being among the unhip.

Dang it.

“ThatĢƵ my MAN,” Allen clarified. “Anybody at Penn State (is my boy). I get along with everybody. But me and Malik, we have a bond as well. We talk to each other. I’m a loving guy.”

I told Allen that he might not love me after my next question.

“A-ite,” he said, ready to be tested.

One interception in your four-year career as a safety. Why only one interception?

“I don’t like to make excuses,” Allen said, “so I’m just going to say I had one interception in my career. ThatĢƵ something that I definitely want to work on. And, thatĢƵ that.”

Are teams talking to you as a linebacker type?

“I’ve talked to a lot of teams about safety,” said the 6-2, 215-pounder. “But if thatĢƵ what they look at me as, I have no problem. Right now I’m here doing DB drills.”

Allen went on to explain that he hopes to show teams heĢƵ more than a box safety. ThatĢƵ how he was used at Penn State and might explain his dearth of interceptions.

It also might explain his 328 tackles, which ranks fifth in the tradition-rich annals of Penn State football. He was the teamĢƵ “enforcer because I’m physical,” he said. “But I can play in the deep end. I can play half. I can play middle third. I can cover. Those are things I can do and I can showcase my talents here at the Combine, me opening up my hips, all that good stuff.”

Allen made the turning-point play of the post-Paterno Penn State era in 2016 by blocking a 45-yard field goal attempt late in the fourth quarter that would’ve given Ohio State a seven-point lead.

Allen blocked the kick and teammate Grant Haley returned it 60 yards to reverse the score. It sent the Nittany Lions on their way to the 2016 Big Ten Championship and marked a significant turnaround for a program that had lost nine games in the two years (2012-13) after Paterno left and before Allen arrived.

A second post-Paterno coach came in with Allen in 2014, and Penn State lost six more games in James FranklinĢƵ first year and six more in his second. The magic, it appeared, was leaving State College.

And then Allen blocked the kick.

“But this isn’t about me,” Allen said from the podium Sunday. “Winning that game is what meant a lot for me. It put the whole team, the whole Penn State organization, back on the map.”

“Me, Christian Campbell, Grant Haley, Troy Apke, we all came in at the same time, at a time when Penn State was at its lowest point,” Allen said of the departing secondary. “We all stuck together and made sure that we were going to work hard and get Penn State back on the map. And itĢƵ crazy that we really saw where it was to where it is, and we’re a big part of that.”

Want to know what crazy is? Me covering ApkeĢƵ dad when he played at Pitt back in the 1980s, and now trying to find out for my daughter if the next great social media star of the NFL will be coming to Pittsburgh.

Of course, Allen would do more than just star with JuJu Smith-Schuster in social media. He would join a team that appears to be looking for a free safety with ball skills, but really needs a striker who can tackle — consistently, reliably and without prejudice. And no college safety I watched this past season strikes the rising blow the way this seemingly cordial young man from Penn State does.

“I appreciate that,” Allen said. “I definitely take a lot of pride in that. ThatĢƵ something I thrive on. Anytime I get a good hit, I’m going to get juiced up.”

ThatĢƵ what big hits do. They juice up the player, the team, and, frankly, the stadium.

But Allen looks like way too nice of a guy to be juicing up NFL stadiums.

“I know. I know,” he said with a gigantic smile. “A lot of people say that. ItĢƵ cool, though, because it changes once I go out on the field.”

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