James-Harrison-Signs-Steelers

James Harrison Signs Contract With Pittsburgh Steelers

The Pittsburgh Steelers have re-signed legendary outside linebacker James Harrison this morning. The veteran pass rusher shared the news via his Instagram account.

James-Harrison-Signs-Steelers

With Jarvis Jones being placed IR with the designation to return, the signing made perfect sense. Behind Jones, the only backup on the active roster at outside linebacker is Arthur Moats. The details of the deal haven’t been released, but expect it to be a one year contract. The team is currently sitting with a little over $4 Mil in salary cap space.

James Harrison Steelers

Report: Steelers Close To Signing James Harrison

The Steelers are reportedly close to bringing back legendary outside linebacker James Harrison. According to multiple media outlets, the deal is all but done.

https://twitter.com/AdamSchefter/status/514199696756453376

https://twitter.com/BCTBradford/status/514209106505506817

The recently retired linebacker will provide depth at a position that was already thin before Jarvis Jones dislocated his wrist last night. Harrison’s agent says that the veteran linebacker is in the best shape he’s been in since 2008 or 2009. A couple hours before the news broke, Silverback posted the following video to his Instagram account.

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Roger Goodell is drawing up a fine for the signing at this very moment. 😉

 

jarvis jones

Steelers Place Jarvis Jones On IR With Return Designation

The Pittsburgh Steelers have placed OLB Jarvis Jones on Injured Reserve with the designation to return. Jones reportedly dislocated his wrist last night during the victory over the Carolina Panthers. The injury occurred when Jones had his wrist slam into Brett Keisel’s knee. According to Ian Rapoport, JJ already had surgery today.

With the return designation, the earliest Jones can return to game play is Sunday, November 30 vs. New Orleans. He will miss at least 8 weeks. The team can only designate one injured player for return per season.

Ike Taylor

WWW’s Thoughts After The Win @ Carolina

A solid all-around performance produced our most convincing win since… well, since long, long ago.

264 yards rushing, no turnovers from our offense, 12 plays for more than 10 yards (including an 81 yard run by Bell and a 50 yard run from Blount), with our O shut down for 3 & outs only twice in the game. We finally got our first two takeaways of the season, a TD by our special teams, 3 sacks and consistent pressure. That’s why we won the game yesterday.

We saw a smarter and much more adequate O & D Playcalling, according to our strengths. Getting into specifics:

Our Offense played up to our strengths while lessening exposure to our weaknesses:

  • Short, quick passes kept Ben clean and helped us move the ball, opening up the running game too. Even though during the 1st half the Steelers only got FGs, being able to have ball control and sustain long drives wore down Carolina’s Defense for the 2nd half. Kudos to coach Haley for not giving up with the run.
  • Starting with the Oline, our offense had a much needed breakout performance. With DeCastro and Pouncey leading the way, Cody Wallace filling in for a banged up Foster (who was inactive), but particularly with Gilbert opening lanes all night, either for Bell or Blount, our offensive line shined the way they needed to to bounce back. Even though Beachum allowed a sack and committed a penalty early in the game, this unit provided a solid performance against what was supposed to be one of the best front 7 in the entire NFL. DeCastro needs to understand he’s a veteran, and can’t get called for penalties for what happens after the play. I mean, a holding penalty here or there will be called sporadically.
  • Bell and Blount can be a great 1-2 punch, relying on good blocking. We need to see this consistently and keep these guys out of trouble (and you know what I mean). Bell could face a 2 week suspension if his case isn’t solved before Nov 1st. Bell is now a maturing running back, who has the necessary patience to wait for a lane, which he reads with exceptional skill. Blount looked like a game closer, something we have missed since… well, since 36 was still here.
  • Antonio Brown had another solid performance, with a couple of clutch catches and finding a way to get open while Ben was scrambling from the pocket (Yes, I know it seems that a copy/paste for this line each week). Markus Wheaton delivered, and was half a shoe away from scoring his first TD as a Steeler. By the way, why wasn’t it called a penalty? When a player gets out of bounds and is the first one to touch the ball, it’s a 5 yard penalty, repeating the previous down, so it should have been 3rd & G from Carolina’s 11 yard line.
  • Justin Brown made solid blocks all night, and managed to grab 2 passes for 10 yards, playing most of the snaps as the 3rd WR, while Darrius Heyward- Bey was most notable for drawing a 42 yard pass interference call, setting up our first FG.
  • Where’s Lance Moore? Not hurt, but was in for only 1 play. It looks like Justin Brown’s blocking ability and DHB’s deep threat speed kept Moore from entering the game (also, it was his first week of practice recently, so he must have been off-tempo). He’ll get his reps, and will be widely used in the next couple of weeks.

As for our D, something changed and it was pass-pressure.

  • McLendon, Kiesel and Heyward created pressure by themselves, and often helped by blitzes by both ILB and OLB. Our defense was able to stop the run (Carolina only rushed 10 times for 42 yards) after giving up a mile to both Cleveland and Baltimore, without having to stack the box.
  • Jones and Worilds coupled for the inflexion point in the game, creating a turnover deep into Carolina’s territory. Moats filled in for an injured Jones with an A performance, creating pressure and getting his first sack as a Steeler. This might have gone unnoticed, but we had no substitute once Jones was out and Moats was in for him. If he had gone down, Timmons could had shifted to OLB with Williams getting ILB reps.
  • Timmons was all over the place, and while you can blame him for injuries to Shazier and Taylor, it’s a product of his intensity. Shazier was having a good game.
  • Cortez Allen is not helping the FO look good after the contract they gave him, while he seemed to be a bit late when targeted and failing to intercept a potential game-changing pass for the 2nd consecutive week.
  • William Gay may be the most reliable DB on the roster right now, and that says a lot of how others are playing. He covers and gets close to his receiver. Even though he has an issue with his tackling technique, where he tries to tackle without grabbing the ball carrier. Remember AP’s hit after Gay tried to tackle him without having an adequate approach? Coach Lake must work on this if he’s going to start again at CB.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R978jQELomo

  • Antwon Blake is not the answer at 5th DB (and I’ll elaborate later).
  • Mitchell and Polamalu were absent against the run, since they were not playing close to the line of scrimmage, trying to keep the ball in front of them. While that helped not giving up the long ball, they were not even close to tackling Olsen on this long TDs. Polamalu is aging, and we know that, but Mitchell still hasn’t made a case for himself being Clark’s replacement.

Our special teams delivered, and were special: with Suisham converting 3 FGs (25, 42 and 45 yd), extending his consecutive streak to 23 converted attempts, and recovering a crucial fumble for a TD after a muffed punt (which, by the way, was led by a 59 yard punt from Wing, with the Steelers up by 10) which helped ice the game.

Penalties are still an issue, part III. While some of them are lack of awareness and concentration (false starts, illegal motion), we also had one penalty nullifying a sack (for a loss of 9 yards) by Heyward. We continued having penalties on STs, an unncesary roughness from DeCastro, two of our TEs (none called Miller) had offensive pass interference calls (one of them being a very questionable call). Methinks the over/under for total penalties for the year should be set at 150, and will get some gamblers taking the over. This issue needs to be fixed before it proves costly. This was the third consecutive game where we had an alarming amount of penalties.

On the injury front:
Shazier, Jones and Taylor’s absences should be read differently, but do not expect us to enter the trade market: Trading an offensive weapon (which are the only valuable options we can effectively trade right now) will only risk talent development to cover an immediate need.

We should promote from within to cover Shazier’s absence for 3-4 weeks (Spence and Williams at ILB, still having Garvin as 3rd option, not needing to sign a FA) and Moats at OLB.
Jones has been designated to IR with ability to return (after 8 weeks), and we need a FA, which means we’ll need depth at the position. Moats and Worilds will handle the duties, but after them right now we only have the option to move somebody from ILB, play some hybrid position (as last year Polamalu did at ILB) or using more nickel packages with 3NT/DE, 2ILB and an OLB. Resuscitating Harrison’s career didn’t look to be an option until now. He’s already a fan favorite, and will help Coach Porter develop the young guys. How much gas does he have left in the tank? Well, it seems he has not even a scratch from last year’s tenure with Cincy, and, for sure, will be playing with a chip on his shoulder. Other options could be promoting from practice squad, but knowing a bit of LeBeau’s resistance to start unproven players, JH will be the most suitable option right now.
Taylor’s absence will be felt for what he makes us play at CB#3. Between him, Allen and Gay we had somehow decent coverage (no ball hawks). But without one of them, we have no real 3rd CB, as Antwon Blake is not the answer for the immediate future. Expect Shamarko Thomas getting reps the next following weeks, and Shaq Richardson to be promoted from practice squad, so one of them becomes the 5th DB against passing packages from opposing offenses.
• But his absence will also be felt because of what he represents to the team, Coach LeBeau, Coach T and Polamalu. He has that special charm, and is a locker room favorite for both coaches and veterans. My only experience near him occurred last year, at Oakland, while they were in warm-ups. When he heard people screaming for him, he got close, signed some stuff and even posed for a picture, making him a fan favorite instantly for the guys who witnessed that attitude from him.

An IR designation might mean the end of his career with the Steelers (and most probably, in the NFL). A kid from Louisiana, who grew up playing as a running back, cornerback and placekicker who made a 12 year career with the Steelers had his most notable tenure during the postseason in January 2006, where he had an interception in the AFC Championship game vs Denver, and another one in SB XL. If you look up under-appreciated in the dictionary, his photo will show up someday. Here’s hoping he’s able to somehow come back this season, at least as a farewell. It’s really hard to see a guy’s career end with an injury, particularly a long-tenured starter who has stayed out of trouble his whole career. Watching Coach T yesterday kissing his head was really an emotional moment.

Ike-Taylor-Steelers

By the numbers:

0: Interceptions by Steelers Defense this season
1-8: Record of our 3 following opponents combined
1: Snap played by Lance Moore
1: Sack allowed
2: Turnovers created
3: Sacks from our D
19: Consecutive 5 reception-50 yard games for Antonio Brown (ties NFL Record by L. Coles)
23: Consecutive field goals from Shaun Suisham (Steelers Record)
28: Years since the last time two Steelers running backs had 100 yards in the same game
31: Penalties for the Steelers this season so far (2nd in the league behind SF’s 36)
264: Rushing yards, the most in the Coach Tomlin era
461 All-purpose yards for Le’veon Bell so far

Band-aid

Report: Jarvis Jones Likely Needs Wrist Surgery

According to ESPN’s Adam Schefter, OLB Jarvis Jones will likely need wrist surgery and is sidelined indefinitely.

Arthur Moats looked good last night, but outside linebacker is one of the most depth poor positions on the Steelers roster.

Schefter also reports that Shazier has a sprained MCL and is waiting on an MRI. It’s difficult to speculate as to how long he could be sidelined without more information, but your average MCL sprain carries a 2-4 week recovery timeline.

With Ike Taylor being out of the picture, expect the Steelers to make a move for another CB.

Steelers news

Ike Taylor Broke His Forearm And Other Injury Updates

Coach Tomlin gave some injury updates during his post-game press conference after tonight’s 37-19 win over the Carolina Panthers. Ike Taylor broke his forearm. Jarvis Jones suffered a right wrist injury and Ryan Shazier suffered an injury to his right knee. Tomlin said that the two linebackers were still being evaluated.

“Obviously we have some adjustments to make,” said Tomlin. “We had some guys go down with significant injuries in this game. Ike Taylor broke his forearm.  Shazier has a knee injury that is being evaluated. Jarvis Jones has a wrist injury that is being evaluated. I’ll let you know more about that when we get back to Pittsburgh.”

According to Mark Kaboly of the Trib, Jarvis Jones says he’ll be back next week.

Here’s the replay of Ike Taylor’s injury. He caught some friendly fire from Lawrence Timmons.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aT2YYaXdPZY

 

steelers

Archer, McLendon Limited; Lance Moore Returns

There is some good news on the injury front as WR Lance Moore has returned to full practice participation. “I feel better than I have in weeks, it’s encouraging and exciting,” said Moore via Steelers.com. Moore added that he’s not out of the woods yet.  “I don’t want to put the cart before the horse. I have a long week of practice coming up and I am just trying to feel better and better during the week and go from there.”

The Steelers are waiting to see how Moore responds after a full practice, but the writing on the wall right now indicates he’ll be playing Sunday. The only two players Coach Tomlin mentioned as limited during his press conference today are NT Steve McLendon (shoulder) and RB/WR Dri Archer (ankle). McLendon participated in individual drills yesterday and was replaced by Cam Thomas during practice. “That was just today. I’ll be back to practice on Wednesday,” McLendon told reporters.

Steelers news

Lessons from Week 2: WWW’s Thoughts

Hard to swallow. It would also have been a painful loss If it had been with a close margin, as it seemed to be a trademark for these games, but we got pounded. And no one saw that coming.

“Two early hits lead Baltimore to victory on what was almost a shutout” could make a nice header for any billboard . And I’m not talking about baseball.

First series: Ben gets hit by Upshaw. 8 plays later, we reached Baltimore’s 17 yardline with a deep pass from Ben to Miller, which was called back by a holding penalty (DeCastro). One play later, Stewart hits A. Brown. That set the tone for the game as two plays later, on what had been an 8 minute- 65 yd drive, J Brown lost the football at the Baltimore 15 yard line.

That series pretty much foreshadowed what happened the rest of the game: We lost three major categories that usually decide who wins these kinds of games: Hits, penalties, turnovers. And most of that is execution.

The Steelers executed some pretty conservative playcalling, both O & D. I’ll elaborate:

Offense: Is run up the middle our solution to every down situations?

Bell not used at his potential. Bell had an average game, even though he averaged more than 5 yards per carry. He had some decent runs and a couple of nice catches. Why wasn’t he involved more in the passing game? He’s in clear advantage when a LB is covering him. Why are we still trying to rush him up the middle, when his biggest ability comes when he runs outside?

Where’s the deep pass threat? If Baltimore was without their best CB, why didn’t we challenge their secondary more often? No pass for more than 30 yards was intended, and D Heyward Bey was ignored most of the time (he had a holding penalty too).

Passing situations- only 3 targets? We usually went with only 3 receivers on passing downs (RB and TE stayed on pass protection), and while we had 7 people protecting Ben, the Ravens defense usually pressured with 5 and still made it to our QB. While you can blame playcalling for this, it’s also an execution problem from our OL, RB and TE for not blocking them. Particularly, Gilbert (yes, our RT who recently got a contract extension to ‘protect’ Roethlisberger through 2019) was abused all night by Dumervil.

Defense, dropping too many into coverage: all day to throw, open lanes to run.

Where are our Blitzes, part II? No sacks, no pressure on Flacco all night. The hardest hit he received came on a QB sneak, trying to score deep into the 4th Quarter. He wasn’t hurried and didn’t experience a knockdown. Coach DL dropped 7 men into coverage most plays, and tried to create pressure with 4. When none of your front 4 is able to win one-on-one matchups, either you excel in coverage, or you’ll end up giving the opposing QB enough time to let one of his receivers get open.

Lot of respect to their WRs… while covering them with 7 men? So, let’s get back to the dropping 7 man into coverage part of the equation: if you drop 7, why are your DBs giving 10 yards of separation from scrimmage to each one of their receivers? That allowed Flacco to make audibles and adjustments to throw short, quick passes that created an open field opportunity to their receivers challenging our tackling abilities, which were exposed for the 2nd week in a row.

No, our DL is not generating pressure. They are not a solid unit. Where are our Blitzes from our LBs and DBs?

The Plays Inside The Game

You will not win many games when you lose the turnover battle. If you also lose the penalty battle, your win probability chances get slimmer. And those two are exclusive responsibility from the players.

Our 3 turnovers were costly, as two of them were inside their Red Zone, ending potential scoring drives, and Millers fumble was at our 25 yard line, leading to the field goal that put the game out of reach for the Steelers.

Individual Spotlights

Bright spot: Wheaton. This kid is developing into what Sanders was supposed to be, and he’s making a good impression, both on the coaches and Ben’s confidence. Yes, also within the fanbase.

Brown and Bell had good games too, but we already expect that from them. Here’s hoping Wheaton soon falls into this category, where we always expect a big game from him.

Dark spots: Mitchell hasn’t shown anything for him to be called a younger, faster version of Ryan Clark. I’m starting to think W Allen or Golden, or even Shamarko (who is a SS that hasn’t had enough reps at FS) could be a better option for us.

M Gilbert: One of your coaches will soon be calling for Mike Adams, to see if he can do it any worse. Pathetic performance from a guy who had the confidence of Coach Munchak (who will be under fire until his unit develops a complete game).

J. Brown had issues with route running, as he seemed to be off-spot on at least 3 passes from Ben, as well as his fumble. Last week he had some nice receptions, but seemed to take a couple of steps back. Could be on his way to the be deactivated on gameday as soon as Bryant and Moore get healthy.

Stats Of The Week

0 turnovers created by our D.
0 3 & outs from our Defense on the 2nd half.
2 turnovers lost at Baltimore’s Redzone
2nd consecutive season where what’s happening at PNC Park seems more competitive than what happens at Heinz Field.
6 Quarters without a TD.
6 Sacks given up by our Oline in 2 games.
20 Penalties in 2 games
37 passing attempts, and only 4 players with more than 1 reception

What to expect next?
While we have a lot of issues and priorities, the ones to highlight among them:
We have to stop the run and pressure the QB. If our players aren’t good enough to win individual matches, our coaching staff needs to get creative.

Our Oline needs to improve from within. We’re not getting any help from free agents. We’ll soon start hearing proposals about benching Gilbert in favor of Adams, even though It will not make our FO look smart (while they gave Gilbert a contract extension recently).
If we are not able to fix those issues, it will be a long season.

Steelers Preseason

Steelers Offensive And Defensive Snap Counts Vs. Ravens

Here are the snap counts from last night’s loss to the Ravens. On offense, Cody Wallace subbed in for Ramon Foster at LG for one play. FB/TE Will Johnson was on the field for one play as well. On defense, Sean Spence subbed in for Ryan Shazier, and saw action for 7 snaps at LILB. DE Stephon Tuitt was on the field for about 21% of the defensive snaps.

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Mike Tomlin

Steve McLendon Was The Only Injury Of Note Tonight

Coach Tomlin addressed the media tonight after the loss to the Baltimore Ravens. Aside from some bumps and bruises, and a shoulder injury to Steve McLendon, there were no major injuries according to Tomlin.

“A bunch of bumps and bruises. Steve McLendon had a shoulder and wasn’t able to return. I’ll have an update for you at the appropriate time. I don’t have anything other than that,” said Tomlin. Lawrence Timmons looked to be in a lot of pain after one play late in the game, and when asked about him, Tomlin replied, “He went back into the game.” I guess he was one of the bumped and bruised.