The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Steelers rookie QB Rudolph ready for preseason debut

- By Dan Scifo

LATROBE » Pittsburgh Steelers rookie quarterbac­k Mason Rudolph exudes confidence heading into his first NFL preseason game Thursday against the Eagles.

Rudolph admitted that jitters may be there as the Steelers prepare to face the defending Super Bowl champions in Philadelph­ia. But the Steelers’ third-round pick has settled into a comfort zone two weeks into training camp.

“It’s just football,” Rudolph said. “I think everyone has a little bit of nerves because it’s going to be the first one back. But just like your debut in college, you get out there, you make a completion and it starts flowing like football has always been.”

Rudolph is in a fight for the backup quarterbac­k spot behind Ben Roethlisbe­rger. Steelers coach Mike Tomlin said Rudolph will see time under center against the Eagles, along with veteran Landry Jones and Josh Dobbs, the Steelers’ fourth-round pick a year ago.

Tomlin is eager to see how Rudolph can direct the offense and maintain possession.

“Mason’s done a really good job, but he hasn’t been hit,” Tomlin said. “Ball security is much more difficult in-stadium because a training camp environmen­t is controlled in a lot of

Two teams with Super Bowl possibilit­ies meet at Lincoln Financial Field, though the regulars barely will get on the field.

Pittsburgh, of course, is without outstandin­g running back Le’Veon Bell, who is holding out. All-Pro receiver Antonio Brown and QB Ben Roethlisbe­rger will sit.

With Carson Wentz still not cleared for contact and Nick Foles, the Super Bowl MVP, sidelined by muscle spasms in his shoulder and neck, third-year pro QB Nate Sudfeld starts.

ways. You don’t touch or get close to the quarterbac­k, so a quarterbac­k’s ability to secure the football doesn’t get tested until they play in-stadium preseason football.”

Rudolph will have an opportunit­y to show how far he’s come since the Steelers traded up to select the Oklahoma State star with the 76th overall pick, the highest the organizati­on has taken a quarterbac­k since Roethlisbe­rger was the 11th overall selection in 2004.

During spring practices, Rudolph impressed, but he also missed a couple center-quarterbac­k exchanges after working almost exclusivel­y out of the shotgun both in high school and at Oklahoma State.

“We cleaned it up for the most part,” Rudolph said. “I’m just starting to feel a lot more comfortabl­e under center after not doing it the last eight years of my life.”

Rudolph also had an inauspicio­us start at training camp when he ran a bootleg to the right and fumbled his first pass attempt backward. That gaffe is far from Rudolph’s mind.

“I could (not) care less about the first pass,” Rudolph said. “I have a lot of first passes. I had my first pass in OTAs and rookie minicamp. I’m thinking about the next pass. If one play goes bad, the next play can be the one that wins it, or gets you back in the game.”

Rudolph has found his groove after a rocky first week at camp. The rookie looked comfortabl­e and crisp while running the twominute offense at the end of a practice last week. Rudolph finished the drill an efficient 5 of 6 for 52 yards, which included a practice-ending 14-yard touchdown pass to rookie running back Jaylen Samuels.

“I just want to progress,” Rudolph said. “You obviously dream about playing in the NFL, but once you get here, you take it one day at a time. I think that’s the way I’ve approached practice and it has gone well.

“I’m just focused on completing passes and making sure I’m taking mental steps forward every day.”

 ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Eagles will see a lot of Pittsburgh Steelers quarterbac­k Mason Rudolph, throwing at practice in Latrobe on Tuesday, in Thursday’s game.
KEITH SRAKOCIC — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Eagles will see a lot of Pittsburgh Steelers quarterbac­k Mason Rudolph, throwing at practice in Latrobe on Tuesday, in Thursday’s game.

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