By
Teresa Varley
Steelers.com
Head coach Mike Tomlin knows how
important intangibles are. He knows that chemistry is a key for his football
team, as is camaraderie and other things that can’t be measured.
And
there is no better place for that to develop than at training camp.
The Steelers will report to St. Vincent
College on Sunday, an idyllic setting in the Laurel Mountains where distractions
are few and time spent with teammates is plentiful.
Sure there are questions that need
to be answered on the field, but before that happens, Tomlin is focusing on the
intangibles.
“More than anything it’s about the
group dynamics, the development of leadership, the chemistry; the things that
you can’t measure are always a question to me,” said Tomlin. “Some of the other
things are always more obvious and sort themselves out where they should on the
grass at training camp and in the preseason games.
“I am more concerned and more interested
in the development of the things that you don’t measure; the camaraderie, the
natural leadership, the ever-changing roles that are involved on a football
team.”
One area where that all important
chemistry will be most obvious is on the offensive line, where some changes
could take place. While Tomlin hasn’t inked in any starters yet at the majority
of positions, center will make for an interesting battle and one that will
hopefully play itself out early.
“It is open, like all of our positions
are open,” said Tomlin. “We have
two guys there, Sean Mahan of course who played quite a bit for us last year and
started every game, and Justin Hartwig who was picked up in free agency and has
been a starter at that position. That will be a hotly contested battle and one
that I am excited about watching unfold.
If I write in pencil at this time it is very light, and I’ve got a nice
eraser at all positions.”
Tomlin is also excited to see what last
year’s rookie class, led by Lawrence Timmons and LaMarr Woodley, will do this
year in camp. He is expecting big things out of them, and others, in their
sophomore season.
“We will put a bunch of pressure on
those two men as we will everybody else in that draft class,” said Tomlin. “I
think that when you look at the changes that occur on a football team from
year-to-year, those second-year men have the biggest and best opportunity to
make a dramatic jump in how they approach their business and in their level of
productivity in their roles on the football team.
“Those are two men who have worked
extremely hard in the offseason and have shown that at this point they are going
to be ready to make that jump. They have to do it with their actions and I think
that they are in the right frame of mind to do that. I am excited about watching
those roles grow and expand, as I am with guys such as Matt Spaeth, Daniel
Sepulveda, Ryan McBean, William Gay, Darnell Stapleton and Gary Russell. All of
those guys, Dallas Baker, the second-year guys that weren’t on our 53-man active
roster, the practice squad guys who have been through the 12-month calendar if
you will, and it is their second lap around the track.
”There are no unknowns for those guys. There is a great deal of comfort in
that, and hopefully that produces the outcome that we are looking for, which is
quality play from them.”