| Jerry D's Top 30 Players
With the 30th Selection...
By Jerry DiPaola
Success in the NFL is tied to a variety of theories and practices.
Preparation, focus and talent are chief among them, but coaches,
bless their little clichd hearts and minds, love to refer to
the ability to have a short memory.
Quarterbacks must forget their most recent interception. Cornerbacks
cannot dwell on the wide receiver who juked them into next week.
Running backs must not let the pain in their knee, perhaps sustained
only one play earlier, affect their next carry.
And so it is for team executives, such as Steelers' director
of football operations Kevin Colbert. He, his scouts and coach
Bill Cowher must prepare for the NFL Draft April 23-24 as if their
team did not win 16 of 18 games and place itself solidly among
the league's elite.
The Steelers need help, people!
This is a team that appeared to have it all last season, but
enters a new season seemingly in need of everything.
The Steelers were wildly successful in 2004, but ...
„ Did rookie quarterback Ben Roethlisberger catch the rest of
the league looking the other way?
„ Did Jerome Bettis wring one final big season out of his now
33-year-old, battered and bruised body, and is another one too
much to ask?
„ Did defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau's genius hide the problems
at cornerback and the loss for most of the season of Pro Bowl
nose tackle Casey Hampton?
„ The Steelers survived a series of injuries to several key players,
but can they continue to play with fire and not get burnt?
Yes, players such as Chris Hoke, Keydrick Vincent, Bettis, Roethlisberger,
James Harrison, Larry Foote and Willie Williams stepped up admirably
and effectively and replaced injured starters.
But Vincent left via free agency to, presumably, make the AFC
North rival Baltimore Ravens a better team. The rest of players
on that list are either aging or had no prior history of strong
play in the NFL before last year.
Nonetheless, the Steelers bet big money on Foote's continued
improvement, giving him a five-year, $13.43 million contract extension
with a $3.25 million signing bonus.
Look at the roster and the thought arises that the Steelers can
go in almost any direction in any round and end up addressing
a need.
For example:
„ There is little depth on the offensive line. The loss of Vincent
robs the team of a starter at right guard and a backup who could
have replaced almost anyone on the line. Losing right tackle Oliver
Ross to the Arizona Cardinals shoves second-year player Max Starks
into the starting lineup, with almost nothing (other than 33-year-old
Barrett Brooks) in reserve.
„ Kendrell Bell contributed nothing to the team in 2004, but
he is a talented player whose loss in free agency to the Kansas
City Chiefs leaves special-teams ace Clint Kriewaldt and Harrison
as the only backups at inside linebacker. If Harrison is needed
inside, who backs up outside linebackers Joey Porter, entering
his seventh season, and Clark Haggans? And don't say Alonzo Jackson.
Don't believe that Cowher would be comfortable with that scenario.
„ OK, how about wide receiver? For better or worse, Plaxico Burress
is the New York Giants' problem now, but can newly acquired Cedrick
Wilson, Antwaan Randle El and/or Lee Mays be an adequate replacement?
It's possible, perhaps likely, that Randle El will emerge as a
reliable complement to Hines Ward, but Roethlisberger was not
happy to lose Burress.
„ Cornerback is a huge area of need for the Steelers, who re-signed
Williams, but he will be 35 by the end of the season. The team
is hoping, but can't be sure, that Ricardo Colclough or Ike Taylor
will ably step into the void left when Chad Scott was released.
Deshea Townsend has played well on the right side, but he will
be 30 and entering the final year of his contract by the start
of the '05 season.
Many fans and other critics expected the Steelers to look to
free agency for help, but that turned out to be largely impossible.
Remember, the Steelers are paying multiple millions of dollars
to nine Pro Bowl players and other veterans, pushing the team's
payroll dangerously close to the NFL's $85 million spending limit.
For that reason, the Steelers didn't make a serious pitch to sign
cornerback Ty Law, for example.
The Steelers were in salary-cap jail before making several adjustments
that included releasing Scott and tight end Jay Riemersma and
doing something that chairman Dan Rooney abhors, restructuring
contracts before their expiration date. That included a significant
pay cut for running back Jerome Bettis, one of the team's most
important players last season.
That also meant pushing cap charges into the future, the dreaded
"credit-card spending" that not even Colbert likes. Restructurings
were done for running back Duce Staley, linebackers James Farrior
and Clark Haggans, center Jeff Hartings and offensive tackle Marvel
Smith.
With so little salary cap wiggle room available to make moves
in free agency, the Steelers must turn to the draft for help.
Colbert said the draft class is strong in four areas, running
back, wide receiver, offensive line and cornerback. The Steelers
need significant upgrades at each of those positions, but no more
than it needs help on the defensive line and in its depth at linebacker.
How long can the Steelers expect right defensive end Kimo von
Oelhoffen, 34, to continue to play at a high level? Thanks to
Harrison, the team survived injuries to Haggans and Porter's pregame
meltdown in Cleveland. But is Harrison, who was considered too
short to be drafted, a long-term answer?
It would not be a surprise if the Steelers secretly hoped that
one of the top running backs fell to the bottom of the first round,
the team picks 30th, to alleviate the eventual retirement of Bettis
(even if it's next year) and the recent tendency of Staley and
Verron Haynes to miss time due to injuries.
They would have to settle for the fourth-best back, however,
because Cedric Benson of Texas and Cadillac Williams and Ronnie
Brown of Auburn will be early first-round picks. Would the Steelers
place a telephone call to old friend Ron Zook, the former coach
at Florida, who watched closely the development of Ciatrick Fason?
Vernand Morency of Oklahoma State ran for 1,474 yards last season
and is a thought after the first round.
The receiver crop may have some fruit still to be picked late
in the first round, and Roddy White of Alabama-Birmingham (a 4.42
speedster who stands 6-foot-1) would be intriguing, if he falls
to 30. Mark Clayton of Oklahoma has been productive, but can scouts
get past his short, 5-foot-10 frame?
Nebraska cornerback Fabian Washington has run a 4.28, and might
be of interest in the second round. Or, the Steelers may want
to use a first-round pick and grab one of the top cornerbacks
such as Carlos Rogers of Auburn, Brandon Browner of Oregon State
or Justin Miller of Clemson.
Many draft experts, including Mel Kiper, have mentioned the Steelers
and a first-round tight end in the same sentence, and Heath Miller
of Virginia or Alex Smith of Stanford will attract the team's
attention. There is no doubt that the team needs a run-blocking
tight end, a serious problem since the departure of Mark Bruener,
but investing a first-round choice may not be wise.
Good coaching and veteran leadership had as much to do with the
Steelers' success last season as a deep roster, but it needs to
be replenished. The hits it took in free agency must be repaired,
even if it's only with an eye on starters beyond 2005 or immediate
help off the bench.
Want to know what the Steelers need in the draft? Line up the
names of all positions, with the exception of quarterback, on
a wall. Throw a dart and when it sticks, you have your answer.
Jerry DiPaola is the assistant sports
editor for the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. |