Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Duck’s Tale?

Hodges eager for another shot as Steelers quarterbac­k

- By Will Graves

PITTSBURGH — Devlin Hodges has nothing to lose. He knows he’s always been considered too something — too short, too small, too unknown, too average — to carry the burden that comes with high expectatio­ns.

Yet rather than make him angry, it’s freed him.

The 23-year-old Pittsburgh Steelers quarterbac­k knows he’s not supposed to be here. That most undrafted rookie free agents signed as “camp arms” evaporate at cutdown day no matter how well they perform, most likely never to be heard from again.

It’s a path Hodges seemed destined to follow when the Steelers released him on the last day of August despite an auspicious summer in which he surprised teammates and coaches at nearly every turn by playing with a fearlessne­ss that was equal parts endearing and effective.

Fast forward three months, however, and Hodges is still here. Still competing. Still impressing and — because of a combinatio­n of injuries, persistenc­e and more than a little swagger — now an unlikely starting quarterbac­k after coach Mike Tomlin nudged the player known as “Duck” to the top of the depth chart in place of struggling Mason Rudolph.

“No one probably thought I’d ever be in this situation,” Hodges said Wednesday. “There’s probably just a select few in my corner that thought that.”

Tomlin pointed to the fact that Hodges “didn’t kill us” during a season-turning road victory at the Los Angeles Chargers on Oct. 13 — when Hodges was pressed into action while Rudolph dealt with a concussion — as one of the reasons he is turning to Hodges for Sunday’s pivotal rematch with Cleveland (5-6). Yet Tomlin stressed the move was for one game only, adding “we’ll worry about next week next week.”

That’s fine by Hodges. Asked if the stakes feel higher for him this time because there’s a chance it could lead to him claiming the job down the stretch, the easygoing kid who has a side gig as a competitiv­e duck caller shrugged.

“The only thing I’m going to do is do whatever it takes to get the win,” Hodges said in his Alabama drawl. “That’s all that matters this week is getting a win and then we’ll go from there.”

Hodges played steadily if not spectacula­rly against Los Angeles, throwing for 132 yards with a touchdown and an intercepti­on, most of his 15 completion­s coming on underneath routes to running backs or tight ends. With the offense sputtering in Cincinnati last Sunday, Tomlin pulled Rudolph in favor of Hodges in the third quarter. On his third snap, Hodges found a streaking James Washington in the middle on a pass that Washington turned into a goahead 79-yard touchdown.

The rest of the game was a mixed bag at best. Hodges, however, took care of the ball and let the running game and Pittsburgh’s resurgent defense do most of the work. It’s a formula that the Steelers believe can help them erase the bad taste of a 21-7 beatdown by the Browns two weeks ago that ended in an ugly brawl between Rudolph and Cleveland defensive end Myles Garrett.

Now Rudolph will spend Sunday on the sideline watching Hodges go to work while Garrett remains suspended indefinite­ly for hitting Rudolph in the head with Rudolph’s own helmet. Enter Hodges, who went duck hunting with Washington after learning he was elevated to starter. Yes, really.

“It’s a nice getaway from football,” Hodges said. “Just kind of clear my mind and have a good time.”

 ?? [FRANK VICTORES/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? Steelers quarterbac­k Devlin Hodges looks to pass during the game against the Bengals, Nov. 24 in Cincinnati.
[FRANK VICTORES/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] Steelers quarterbac­k Devlin Hodges looks to pass during the game against the Bengals, Nov. 24 in Cincinnati.

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