Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Practice plan could create bad relapse of September

- Gerry dulac

The idea to rotate first-team practice reps between Mitch Trubisky and Mason Rudolph would appear to make practical sense, at least according to the way offensive coordinato­r Matt Canada explained it.

But it also has some potentiall­y negative consequenc­es that could pivot the offense back to what we saw earlier this season.

Because of the injury to Kenny Pickett, who is in concussion protocol, Canada said the Steelers wanted to get Rudolph as much work as possible in the event something happened to Trubisky against the Carolina Panthers — should Trubisky be the quarterbac­k and not Pickett.

Rudolph, of course, has been inactive for every game and has not taken any practice snaps with the first- or second-team offense this season.

“I think we certainly don’t want to have happen what happened on Sunday — on the fifth play of the game, our quarterbac­k got banged out,” Canada said. “I think it would be a disservice to everybody to sit there and have Mason come in and play not having had any reps.”

The move, however, could appear to show a lack of confidence in Trubisky after he threw three intercepti­ons in Sunday’s 16-14 loss to the Baltimore Ravens.

Granted, it’s important to get Rudolph some work in practice to get him accustomed to playing with someone other than thirdteam or practice-squad players. But sharing snaps with the starter — if Trubisky is the starter?

It might send the wrong message.

The best thing Trubisky has done since he was benched at halftime in a Week 4 game against the New York Jets is come off the bench against Tampa Bay and the Ravens and each time play the position as well or better than at any point this season.

And the reason he played so well is because he did what he didn’t do in the first part of the season — he played loose. He played unencumber­ed. He played like he wasn’t looking over his shoulder, like he wasn’t worried about making a mistake or giving Mike Tomlin a reason to go to his No. 1 draft choice, the player whose name the entire city had been feverishly chanting since the first day of training camp.

Even though he threw three intercepti­ons against the Ravens, Trubisky moved the offense into scoring position on six occasions. Two were for touchdowns. Another resulted in a blocked field goal that would have decided the game. He attacked down the field, and, yes, he even attacked over the middle — the same area of the field every social media critic claimed was being grossly ignored. He passed for 276 yards and averaged 9.2 yards per attempt, highest of the season.

Point is: The very freedom with which Trubisky has been playing might now be compromise­d by the curious decision to share practice snaps with a quarterbac­k who has been inactive all season. OK, maybe it is harmless. Maybe it means nothing more than what Canada said it is.

Nonetheles­s, the appearance of another quarterbac­k waiting in the wings is being dangled over Trubisky’s neck like the sword of Damocles. And that might not be a good thing. Roughing under review Despite what some think is an overzealou­s attempt to protect the quarterbac­k, penalties for roughing the passer are actually down this season, falling from 121 at this point a year ago to 76 with four weeks remaining.

That includes several that shouldn’t have been called, including the penalty

against Miami’s Jaelan Phillips for his hit on Chargers quarterbac­k Justin Herbert on Sunday night — a call the NFL acknowledg­ed was wrong.

Because of that and other flags thrown for debatable hits on quarterbac­ks this season — New Orleans’ Grady Jarrett on Tom Brady, Kansas City’s Chris Jones on Derek Carr — the NFL began discussion­s at the recent owners meeting to decide if those penalties should be reviewable by replay.

The league will present the possibilit­y to the competitio­n committee, which will decide if a proposal should be presented to the owners at the annual meetings in March. Mike Tomlin is a member of the competitio­n committee.

However, there might not be a lot of support for such a proposal.

For starters, league owners are very much concerned about the length of games and have taken several steps over the years to make sure the pace doesn’t get bogged down.

That’s what happened in 2019 when the owners adopted a proposal that allowed pass-interferen­ce calls to be reviewable. But the rule was scrapped after one year because of the incessant amount of delays and interrupti­ons to the game.

That rule was proposed and passed based solely because of one much-publicized incident — the nonpass interferen­ce call in the NFC playoff game between the Los Angeles Rams and New Orleans Saints. This possible proposal isn’t much different. It is being suggested because of several isolated incidents, not some wide-spread injustice.

Expect the owners to throw the yellow flag at that idea.

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 ?? Pittsburgh Post-Gazette file ?? Steelers quarterbac­ks Mitch Trubisky and Mason Rudolph throw in front of quarterbac­ks coach Mike Sullivan during training camp July 29 at Saint Vincent College.
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette file Steelers quarterbac­ks Mitch Trubisky and Mason Rudolph throw in front of quarterbac­ks coach Mike Sullivan during training camp July 29 at Saint Vincent College.

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