By
Teresa Varley
Steelers.com
It’s
not often athletes get the chance to play for their hometown team but
sixth-round draft pick Ryan Mundy has that opportunity staring him right in the
face.
Mundy
is from Pittsburgh and played at Woodland Hills High School. He then headed to
Michigan where he played three seasons before transferring to West Virginia for
his final year of eligibility.
And
now, he is back home and couldn’t be happier.
“Oh
man, it is crazy and I have definitely come full circle,” said Mundy, the 6-1,
205 pound safety. “This is a very exciting time for me and my family right now.
I couldn’t really ask for a better place than to come back home and play for the
hometown Steelers.”
Mundy
was a player the Steelers had on their radar leading up to the draft, something
that did take him by surprise at first.
“I knew
that the Steelers were interested in me when they came down to my pro day,” said
Mundy. “They really took me by surprise because I really didn’t hear too much
about them prior to my pro day. After my pro day they had me up there for a
visit. I knew that there was some interest there from the organization. I was
just hoping that it would work out and fortunately it
did.”
This
isn’t the first time that Mundy had the opportunity to play in front of the home
crowd. He could have attended the University of Pittsburgh, but his mother
thought it would be best for him to branch out so he headed to
Michigan.
“I
easily could have stayed at home and gone to Pitt and stayed in a comfort zone
but my mother really pushed me to get out of the city and get out on my own and
see things for myself and that really helped me mature with the situations that
I have been through,” said Mundy. “Like I said it is full circle now; I am
coming back home and it feels good.”
After
playing three seasons at Michigan, in addition to a redshirt junior year, Mundy
needed a change. He made a move that got him a bit closer to home and turned out
great for him.
“I just
needed a fresh start and West Virginia provided that opportunity to me,” said
Mundy. ”I could have stayed at Michigan but I felt like the opportunity came for
me to go to West Virginia so I said to myself ‘sometimes in life you have to
take risks.’ This was definitely one risk that I took that worked out in my
favor.”
Another
risk Mundy took along the way was wavering in his loyalty to the Steelers. Mundy
watched the team growing up, enjoying seeing players like Rod Woodson, Carnell
Lake, Greg Lloyd and Kevin Greene excel on defense. But, he did have one moment
where he slipped up.
“The
funny thing is a lot of people in my family give me flack because when the
Steelers went to Super Bowl XXX against the Cowboys I was actually rooting for
the Cowboys because I was the ultimate Deion Sanders fan,” admitted Mundy.
“Wherever Deion was, that was who I was rooting
for.”