Steelers’ Hawkins injured in OTA practice
PITTSBURGH — Jerald Hawkins, the man being groomed to replace Chris Hubbard as the Steelers’ swing tackle, went down in WednesdayĢƵ OTA practice with a left knee injury that has teammates fearing the worst.
“Hopefully itĢƵ something minor,” said right tackle Marcus Gilbert. “But when you scream like that, it can’t be that good, right?”
According to teammates, Hawkins’ cleat stuck in the ground while he was pass-blocking “on air,” as Gilbert called the drill which perfects technique.
“He heard a pop,” Gilbert said. “It can’t be good.”
“Kind of freakish,” said right guard David DeCastro. “ThatĢƵ how it happens, man. It sucks. He was playing well, too.”
Hawkins is being viewed as the replacement for the departed Hubbard as the Steelers’ third tackle, or tackle who can swing to either side in case of an in-game injury. Hawkins saw his first regular-season action last season as a mop-up tackle and third tight end after Hubbard was promoted to the starting line.
Hawkins was a fourth-round draft pick in 2016 out of LSU.
“Hawk was really coming along,” said Gilbert. “From the first week to this week he made a big jump. Yesterday in practice he was, like, wow.”
“He was playing really well,” said DeCastro. “I was just talking about him. I was like, ‘Man, heĢƵ looking good.’ ThatĢƵ how it goes, huh?”
Even though Hawkins remained on the ground and was helped off slowly, no prognosis had been made as of press time.
Could Hawkins have just been more scared than injured?
“He could be,” DeCastro said. “ItĢƵ happened before.”
If Hawkins is out for a lengthy period of time, third-round draft pick Chuks Okorafor is expected to move into the No. 3 tackle spot.
A 39-game starter at Western Michigan, Okorafor is primarily considered a left tackle because of his mobility and long arms on his 6-6, 320-pound frame. But he also played right tackle at WMU, which turned out high draft picks Willie Beavers and Taylor Moton, also tackles, the previous two drafts.
“HeĢƵ coming along,” Gilbert said of Okorafor. “HeĢƵ learning real fast. HeĢƵ probably the most ready rookie that we’ve had, talent-wise.”
Okorafor moved to Detroit from Botswana at the age of 12. The first football game he watched was Super Bowl XLV between the Steelers and Green Bay Packers. He began playing as a junior in high school and the Steelers spotted him at WMU in 2016 while scouting teammates Moton and Corey Davis.
Okorafor has a thick accent but Gilbert said it hasn’t hindered his ability to communicate.
“HeĢƵ learning. HeĢƵ getting there,” Gilbert said. “HeĢƵ doing everything we’re asking him to do right now. HeĢƵ doing it and heĢƵ getting better. Of course there are going to be a couple slip-ups, but heĢƵ just working his behind off, staying humble, keeping quiet.”
The Steelers added 6-6, 320-pound tackle Jake Rodgers on May 2. ItĢƵ the third time heĢƵ been signed by the Steelers. Rodgers has been with five other teams since being drafted in the seventh round in 2015 out of Eastern Washington.
Another possible tackle is current second-team guard Matt Fieler, who played tackle in college at Division II Bloomsburg.
Tight end Jake McGee, a member of the practice squad last season, was helped off the field later in practice. Medical details were not made available. It caused Mike Tomlin to hold the team after practice to discuss proper etiquette.
“Everybody just stand up and practice like professionals, not try to hurt each other,” Gilbert said of the talk. “Guys are finishing a little too hard. Just be professional out there, don’t try to hurt anybody, stay on your feet, don’t trip the athletes. All that good stuff.”