By
BOB LABRIOLA
Steelers.com
Maybe you were
surprised that the Steelers didn’t pick an offensive lineman until the fourth
round of the 2008 NFL Draft, but Larry Zierlein wasn’t.
Zierlein is the
team’s offensive line coach, and as he watched the top of the first round
unfold, he had a feeling it was going to be a while before the Steelers handed
him a rookie.
“There were some of
those guys (offensive linemen) who went really fast,” said Zierlein, “and from
that point on it became a situation where the guys still on the board were
pretty good players that we had a chance to get at other positions. I’ve never
seen eight tackles taken in the first round – that’s
amazing.”
Seven of them – Jake
Long, Ryan Clady, Chris Williams, Brandon Albert, Gosder Cherilus, Jeff Otah and
Sam Baker – were picked before the Steelers had their initial opportunity in
this draft. Partially as a result of that, the team was able to select a running
back in Rashard Mendenhall who was ranked as high as the No. 2 player at his
position.
The Steelers believe
they made a similar value pick in the second round when they selected Limas
Sweed, and then it became a matter of them getting what they perceived to be the
proper value for each of their picks from that point
forward.
In the fourth round,
it’s possible the Steelers were set to pick Texas A&M defensive lineman Red
Bryant, but when Seattle grabbed him two turns before they went on the clock
they opted instead to trade down with the New York Giants and add an extra
choice in the sixth round.
It was when the
Steelers finally made their No. 4 pick, 130th overall, that they added their one
and only offensive lineman of this draft – Tony Hills, a left tackle from
Texas.
“I think he can go
both ways,” said Zierlein about Hills’ ability to handle both ends of the
offensive line. “I think he can probably play the right, but he’s been a left
tackle. In college, he started out behind Jonathan Scott (of the Detroit Lions),
and the guys down at Texas compare him – I have friends on that staff – and they
feel that he’s a better prospect than Scott was. Scott is starting for Detroit,
and they think this kid has more upside than Jonathan
did.”
Hills indeed has a
lot of upside, as well as the athletic ability NFL teams look for in left
tackles. So, why was he available at the end of the fourth
round?
Hills was a Parade
All-American as a high school tight end in Texas, but in a state semifinal
playoff game, he sustained a severe knee injury that included a torn lateral
collateral ligament as well as damage to his peroneal
nerve.
The nerve damage led
to Hills losing all feeling in his left foot, and he actually made his
recruiting visit to Texas while confined to a wheelchair. Two separate surgeries
fixed Hills’ case of “drop-foot,” and by the time he enrolled at Texas in 2004
he had grown from a tight end into an offensive tackle.
After backing up
Scott and sharing time at left tackle on the team that won the national
championship, Hills broke into the starting lineup in 2006, but then his 2007
season was cut short by a broken left fibula that forced him to miss the final
two games as well as the scouting combine.
“There are a lot of
things that the GMs and the coaches looked at and might have put a red flag up,”
said Hills, “but if they followed my career and my history they would see that I
have always been able to battle back from tough situations. Obviously,
Pittsburgh looked at it and paid attention to that, and I am happy to be with
the Steelers.”
It’s unrealistic to
expect Hills to compete for a starting spot as a rookie, which means the
Steelers figure to use training camp to pick five players to put in front of Ben
Roethlisberger from the same pool they had last year, minus guard Alan Faneca
and plus center Justin Hartwig.
This prospect doesn’t
particularly unnerve Zierlein, who has come to understand that an offensive line
that grows to function as a five-man unit doesn’t necessarily need to be manned
by a quintet of Pro Bowl players.
The work will begin
this weekend during the Steelers’ only mandatory minicamp of the offseason, and
they will have until Sept. 7 to get it all figured
out.