Confident Rudolph seeking to become primary backup
LATROBE — Mason Rudolph would seem to have it all going on for himself.
The tall, smart, good-looking rookie quarterback kept his mouth shut last season and worked hard without complaint, glad to be part of the NFL while pocketing a cool $1.4 million.
Did I say heĢƵ easygoing?
That, too.
But only to a point. Ask him how he came out of his rookie season.
“I was very disappointed,” said Rudolph. “Anytime you don’t play, anytime you can’t suit up on Sundays, itĢƵ a huge shock.”
However, the big guy can’t stay mad very long.
“There was plenty of positive stuff to take from it,” he added. “I loved game-planning each week and doing what I could to bring some little nugget of something to the table for Ben or Randy. ThatĢƵ going to continue to be my routine and try to help our team in any way I can.”
This sitting on the bench like a good soldier, though, isn’t his plan for much longer. To that end Rudolph went out and got better. He dialed up pitching guru Tom House, who introduced Rudolph to Adam Dedeaux, who runs 3DQB where seemingly all of the modern-day greats have trained.
If the name sounds familiar, it isn’t — unless you remember legendary USC baseball coach Rod Dedeaux, AdamĢƵ grandfather.
And so Dedeaux, the buzz at camp has gone, provided Rudolph with a stronger arm.
Is that even possible?
Well, RudolphĢƵ arm does appear to be stronger. And that added strength has led to more confidence. And that confidence has led to more presence in the pocket, which has led to the belief in most camp circles that Rudolph is in the process of separating from Josh Dobbs in the battle to become Ben RoethlisbergerĢƵ primary backup this season.
Is the arm stronger? Can throwing coaches actually make that possible?
“ItĢƵ possible,” said Rudolph.
Really?
“I would say yay and nay,” said Steelers offensive coordinator Randy Fichtner. “I definitely think arm strength gets improved when decisions get sped up and you’re confident, so then you might see a little more zip on the ball and things like that. He has a plenty strong enough arm. He always has. I think you’re just seeing footwork transitioning and balls are coming out quicker. You just know thereĢƵ a confidence level that lets him just throw that ball, as opposed to ‘Am I right?’ And so I think now you’re seeing balls zipping, and itĢƵ coming out of his hand clean, a tighter spiral.”
A touchdown pass to Tevin Jones on Monday was the perfect example. Jones ran a skinny post and Rudolph didn’t question what he saw, so when the small window opened up, the ball was there, right in stride, probably 25 yards down the middle of the field. And since Rudolph hit Jones running in stride, the receiver was able to continue sprinting past cornerback Herb Waters and then safety Jordan Dangerfield to the end zone for a 65-yard touchdown. Better processing added 40 yards to the total, and RudolphĢƵ per-completion yardage jumped quite a bit.
Is that what the QB guru did?
“Just mechanically taking a look at yourself,” was how Rudolph explained the process. “There were another set of eyes on you — separate from your coaches who have a lot going on and can’t always spend as much detailed time on your throwing motion, mechanics, footwork.
“I think there are always ways to improve. I think just driving the intermediary stuff for me was big. I knew I could throw the deep ball. I’ve done that my whole life. But I wanted to be a lot more accurate and show a little more velocity on the intermediary stuff, and I think I’ve done that.”
He did it with Jones. But what does the receiver who knows Rudolph better than any other, James Washington, RudolphĢƵ primary receiver at Oklahoma State, think of the new Mason?
“HeĢƵ a lot more relaxed,” said Washington. “He seems like when he gets in there he knows how to talk to guys, gets guys to move around. He studies the playbook like nobody else, so I’m not surprised that heĢƵ more confident and relaxed.”
What about his arm strength?
“For me it feels the same,” Washington said. “HeĢƵ always had a strong arm.”
And is he still throwing to you?
“Oh, yeah,” Washington said with a smile. “We’re still boys like that.”
RudolphĢƵ coach is happy, too.
“I’m pleased with where he is right now, because heĢƵ really competing,” said Fichtner. “ItĢƵ not easy, I don’t think, for young guys to find their way when you know that you have a franchise starting quarterback thatĢƵ here and the role ultimately in the end is to be the best solid backup he can be for this football team. We never address backup; we never address any of that. When you’re in the huddle, you’re the first guy and here we go. But you know inside, thereĢƵ a competition for the two spot, but thereĢƵ not a competition for the one spot. ThatĢƵ somewhat hard.”
Fichtner had to deal with the dynamic of merely backing up Roethlisberger with Charlie Batch, Byron Leftwich and Mike Vick, among others. And those were three quarterbacks with impressive records as starters. But the dynamic holds for all quarterbacks.
“There isn’t a young guy out there that ever doesn’t think they shouldn’t be the one,” Fichtner said. “They’ve been the one everywhere they’ve been. Josh was a starter all those years at Tennessee, and Mason did everything at Oklahoma State. So, I love the drive of that and know thatĢƵ why they’re here, because of that drive to be the best and to want to be in the first group in the first huddle. But, you still have to navigate certain things.”
At least in training camp and preseason, there exists the competition to become the No. 2 and at least dress for games.
To that end, how does Rudolph feel about his performance through the first week of training camp?
“Great,” he said. “I think I’m been doing well. I think I’ve been productive and I think I’m going to be a lot more comfortable going into the first preseason game with communication with receivers, bringing the young guys along, communicating. And our offensive line, the young guys there are doing well and Coach (Shaun) SarrettĢƵ doing a great job. ItĢƵ going to be fun to play.
ItĢƵ going to be fun to watch him play, too.
NOTES: The Steelers claimed WR Brandon Reilly off waivers from Detroit and waived CB Alexander Myres with a non-football illness designation. Reilly is a 6-1, 200-pounder out of Nebraska who spent time on the Buffalo Bills’ active roster in 2017 and the Dallas Cowboys and Lions practice squads in 2018. … Sitting out of TuesdayĢƵ practice with minor injuries were Sean Davis, Donte Moncrief and Anthony Chickillo. David DeCastro was given the day off.