Albuquerque Journal

Oh brother! Pounceys, Watts to battle

Chargers-Steelers contest to feature siblings vs. siblings

- BY WILL GRAVES

PITTSBURGH — On the surface they’re identical. Below the surface too. Large. Loud. Remarkably athletic and remarkably close. Well compensate­d and well tattooed.

Still, Pittsburgh Steelers center Maurkice Pouncey believes there is one surefire way to tell him and Los Angeles Chargers center (and very slightly older brother) Mike apart on Sunday night when the Chargers visit Heinz Field.

Just have the twins switch places at halftime and let Maurkice snap the ball to Los Angeles quarterbac­k Philip Rivers for a quarter or two. Then the difference­s between the Pounceys will be unmistakab­le.

“I’ll take that team to the next level baby,” Maurkice Pouncey said. “They’ll definitely notice.”

Maurkice is kidding. Mostly, though he does have a slight edge over Mike in Pro Bowl selections (six to three). The 29-year-olds are well aware of the unique opportunit­y playing against each other offers. Separated by a minute at birth, the Pounceys were virtually inseparabl­e growing up until Maurkice left the University of Florida for the NFL in 2010.

They’ve spent their profession­al lives rooting for each other from afar — today is only the fifth time they’ll be together in the same NFL stadium — and both feared Mike’s career might be in jeopardy after a hip injury limited him to five games with the Miami Dolphins in 2016.

“It was a point that we both thought that and it was tough,” Maurkice said. “Lord willing, a lot of hard work, and the doctors did a great job. Obviously he’s playing at a high level and he’s been blessed to be out there.”

Mike returned to play a full 16 games last season, but found himself looking for work after the Dolphins cut him in a salary-cap move in March. The Chargers sprinted to scoop him up, bringing him to the West Coast on a two-year, $15 million deal just four days after getting released. The change of scenery provided Mike Pouncey with a midcareer jolt, and his presence has played a significan­t role in the Chargers’ hot 8-3 start.

“We knew it was a big signing when we signed him,” Los Angeles coach Anthony Lynn said. “But it’s even better than what I thought.”

Asked what the Mike Pouncey experience is like, Lynn laughed.

“I’m pretty sure it’s similar to what you guys have in Pittsburgh,” he said.

Translatio­n: a lot of jokes. A lot of trash talk. And a relentless work ethic that belies their copious amounts of swagger.

“He’s the same player as me,” Mike Pouncey said. “He’s going to go out there and give you everything he has on each play. (My teammates) more excited (than I am) because we have a real good friendship on this team, and they go out there and talk smack to my brother to make me feel a little bit better. It’s going to be fun.”

The entire Pouncey clan was to descend on Maurkice’s house in the Pittsburgh suburbs on Saturday. As for split allegiance­s, Maurkice’s offer to host came with one very simple directive: If you root for the Steelers, you can crash at his place. If not? You’re on your own.

How tight are they? Maurkice admits Mike might be the only person in the world outside of his children he actually calls on the phone rather than just texting.

It’s the same for Derek and T.J. Watt, though the two brothers — T.J. is a second-year linebacker for the Steelers, Derek is in his third season as a fullback for the Chargers — won’t have the luxury of standing on the sideline watching the other play like the Pounceys do.

There’s a very real chance that T.J. and Derek will find themselves on a collision course sometime tonight, the first time that’s ever happened somewhere other than the family backyard or the random University of Wisconsin football practice when both were playing for the Badgers.

Not that T.J. believes there’s going to be time to think about bragging rights. If his assignment on a play is to ram into the guy wearing No. 34, then that’s what he’s going to do.

“It’s a football game to me,” T.J. said. “I don’t think anything is going to really change. I don’t think in that split second you can determine who’s who and what’s what, so whatever happens, happens.”

Older brother J.J., the star defensive end for the Houston Texans, hopes they are forced to ram into each other at least once so “we can settle it once and for all.” Provided, of course, there’s no cheating on either side.

“I basically just said, no cut-blocks,” J.J. said. “That’s the only thing. Just don’t go at his knees. Otherwise, everything’s fair.”

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