Pouncey says tight end position this year’s sleeper
PITTSBURGH — The seer has spoken — although he spoke like a sportswriter.
Yes, Maurkice Pouncey is overthinking his spring sleeper this year.
In 2017, Pouncey easily identified Mike Hilton as the player to watch at training camp. Last year, the team captain called out rookie Chuks Okorafor following minicamp. Both Hilton and Okorafor made the team, started, earned coaching raves, and remain with the team.
This year, Pouncey couldn’t narrow it down to one player, only a position.
“Man, honestly, itĢƵ going to be one of the young tight ends,” Pouncey said. “I don’t even know who itĢƵ going to be yet — maybe the guy we drafted from Michigan, maybe the undrafted kid, 87. But I think one of the young tight ends will be one of the guys. And obviously, I like my Florida kid. HeĢƵ looking really good in practice, too.”
Undrafted rookie guard Fred Johnson is PounceyĢƵ “Florida kid.” The 6-7, 326-pound Gator was playing right guard on the second-team line, even with David DeCastro, the first-teamer, back at practice. Johnson was the only rookie playing on the first or second line during veteran days at minicamp.
Later in the afternoon, when Pouncey was pressed to make a call and not intellectualize his sleeper pick with team needs, he could only drop Johnson to honorable mention status.
“The two tight ends are my picks,” Pouncey said. “I like both of them. ItĢƵ going to be out of those two because, you know, we need one of them.”
The Steelers return veteran tight ends Vance McDonald and Xavier Grimble, but they lost Jesse James in free agency, didn’t re-sign Jake McGee or Ryan Malleck off injured reserve, and then released practice squad TE Bucky Hodges a day before the draft.
To replace them, the Steelers signed No. 87, Kevin Rader, to a futures contract on January 9, and then selected No. 81, Zach Gentry, in the fifth round of AprilĢƵ draft.
The Steelers also return English rubgy player Christian Scotland-Williamson to their roster via the NFLĢƵ International Player Pathway program, but heĢƵ still learning the game. They also added Texas A&MĢƵ Trevor Wood, a 6-6, 265-pounder with long-snapping ability, after the draft.
But Pouncey chose Rader and Gentry, even though he couldn’t find a particular order.
“I haven’t seen enough yet because we haven’t done a lot since we don’t have pads on, so I can’t pick the guy,” Pouncey said. “The other guys, like when I picked Hilton, it was like ‘This (expletive)ĢƵ blitzing and picking plays off.’ And Chuks played on the line so I already knew he could play. But out of those two guys, trust me, itĢƵ gonna be one of them. Mark my words now.”
Pouncey agreed to let one of the veteran tight ends break the tie, but the most tenured of that group, Grimble, couldn’t decide.
“Hmmmm, 81 and 87,” Grimble pondered. “Too close to call. I have to wait till camp.”
Gentry consistently worked with the top groups during spring workouts. His touchdown on the last play of the final team scrimmage of minicamp sparked a raucous celebration for the offense.
The 6-8, 265-pounder caught 49 passes at an impressive 16.7 yards per catch and scored four touchdowns in his only two seasons as a starter at Michigan. He grew up in Albuquerque, N.M., and went to Michigan as a quarterback, but was moved to tight end. When he arrived in Pittsburgh, he was given his college number, 83, but acquiesced to Ben RoethlisbergerĢƵ request to switch numbers out of respect for the great Heath Miller, who wore 83 throughout his 11-year career with the Steelers.
Rader (6-4, 250) was born in Pittsburgh and attended Pine-Richland High in the north suburbs before heading off to Youngstown State as a defensive end. He was moved to tight end as a redshirt sophomore, caught 41 passes at 14.7 yards per catch, and was signed after the 2018 draft by the Green Bay Packers.
Rader drew raves from Mike Tomlin on the practice field Tuesday after a downfield block inside the 5-yard line catapulted Tevin Jones into the end zone to complete a long catch-and-run.
“ThatĢƵ my game,” Rader said later. When asked if he meant downfield blocking, he said, “No, playing until the whistle.”
Rader grew up idolizing Miller and believes No. 83 should be retired by the Steelers.
We’ll have much more on both Gentry and Rader next week. But since Pouncey was in a talkative mood, he wanted to deliver one final spring comment on the evolution of the teamĢƵ chemistry following a chaotic 2018 season featuring since-departed superstars Le’Veon Bell and Antonio Brown.
“EveryoneĢƵ locked in,” Pouncey said. “It actually has a good feeling to it. Things have been fun at practice because itĢƵ all about football.”
Are the Steelers making a point of coming together?
“Yeah,” Pouncey said. “Honestly, man, it was all worth it. Things happen, man. When you have a relationship thatĢƵ lasted so long, with so many ups and downs, some days I love ’em, some days I hate ’em. ThatĢƵ just how it is. Sometimes people don’t understand the real meaning of that and what that actually leads to. But actually, man, things have been great. We appreciate everything that everybodyĢƵ done in the past and thereĢƵ no more talking bad about anyone. We respect everything they’ve done and we’re glad for them. Go on and carry on your career somewhere else and be happy about it.”
Pouncey paused before putting a wrap on the spring.
“I just like the whole vibe of the team,” he said. “Everyone seems happy. EveryoneĢƵ locked in. EveryoneĢƵ having a good time.”