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13 Former Practice Squad players on Steelers Roster

CoolieMan

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http://www.pennlive.com/steelers/index.ssf/2016/01/steelers_practice_squad_1.html

PITTSBURGH - None of the teams the Pittsburgh Steelers enter the AFC playoffs with do so with as many of their own former practice squad players on the active roster.

The 13 that Pittsburgh carries are, in part, why the team has a playoffs to play in. They're also products of a Mike Tomlin philosophy and how the Steelers function as a franchise.

"The bottom line is: If they're in the building, if they're a part of our organization, we coach them. And that seems like nothing but that's something," Tomlin said. "I believe our developmental guys, our practice squad guys know that they're not tackling dummies, that they're not scout teamers, that they help us prepare and in doing so they get better and prepare themselves.

"And I think that that mentality permeates throughout, not only with those guys but in the men that coach them."

Pittsburgh is far from unique for having hurt players and replacing them. The Kansas City Chiefs roster holds 11 in-house practice squad graduates. The Houston Texans' holds 10. But the way the Steelers manage their 10 extra players that can't play until they're promoted to the 53-man roster does set them apart, veteran players said.

Toiling through the week, feigning opposing offenses and defenses - wears down practice squad prospects. For the first time in their lives, former practice squad tight end Xavier Grimble said, players are going through weeks in the fall working on the game they love, all while knowing they won't get to play it on the weekend.

This happens in Pittsburgh, but the Steelers make it easier. Their practice squad memebers are told where they stand, coached like they'll play and, rather than being looked over for free agents, get promoted and do take the field more than most.

"Hey man, it's a special place. That's what it is," Darrius Heyward-Bey said.

Heyward-Bey is a veteran wide receiver of eight seasons and three NFL teams, including the Steelers. Elsewhere, he said, an active roster player goes down and his front office looks for unemployed veterans to sign.

The open market comes before the 10 practice squad players in the building. And while Pittsburgh doesn't always go to its in-house reserves for help, the team finds it's simply practical to.

"So if you're not running the route right, we're not just going to skip over you because you're not playing. We're going to coach [Marcus Tucker] up, like he's playing, because he needs to be better because he might play. Just like [No.] 15. If we weren't coaching [No.] 15 up, [No.] 15 wouldn't be out there," Heyward Bey said, referring to Demarcus Ayers. "We would've lost to the Ravens.

"Or it would've been somebody outside of here out there. But then that's difficult because now you got to learn the playbook, do you know what you're doing? He's known what he's been doing since OTAs."

Tucker, the practice squad wide receiver Heyward-Bey turned over his left shoulder to point to, is Pittsburgh's only practice squad receiver not to have been promoted to the active roster this season. Cobi Hamilton and Demarcus Ayers were.

They were two of three former Steelers practice squad players on the field for Pittsburgh's AFC North-winning drive. The other, left tackle Alejandro Villanueva, protected Ben Roethlisberger's blind side.
 
What makes it even more noteworthy is on bad teams you are prone to see teams taking chances with players, with so many needs/holes. Or you would think so.

But for a good team to be able to activate PS players, and for them to be productive.

impressive...........
 
Diamonds in the rough! I love to see guys from the practice squad make it to the active roster and do well.
 
This season has looked to be good on Tombert. The scouting doesn't get enough credit when things go good. So kudos to those guys

impressed what they did thru the draft and the PS.....
 
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As much as possible you have to create the culture that if the UDFA is better than the first/second rounder he plays. Unfortunately, with a guy like Jarvis Jones that really didn't happen.
 
Early on in Tomlin's career we lost a lot of developmental talent not promoting from within and trying to fill holes with off the street bums... that burned us some...

Its very important to note that to a young player, staying in a system for a couple years is key to many of them developing... when they bounce around they dont get fair shots because they are behind in team specific knowledge and cause coaches tend to stick with familiar guys over someone's else's picks unless they bust the door down right away....

i think this is A1 on the list of areas tomlin has grown over the years
 
But ... we have been told that MISTER HEAD COACH MICHAEL VINCENT LOMBARDI TOMLIN sucks at coaching. What the blue hell is this **** all about?
 
But ... we have been told that MISTER HEAD COACH MICHAEL VINCENT LOMBARDI TOMLIN sucks at coaching. What the blue hell is this **** all about?

is it possible that many who post those comments here are just ******* idiots?
 
I love the very concept of the practice squad. These are guys who may have slipped through the cracks in the past.
 
I don't mind the practice squad... i still wish they bumped the roster to 65 and let IR players come back for the playoffs... or at least let the practice squaders suit up for the last regular season game... this sport is stuck in the stone ages when it comes to injuries... the roster forces teams to play hurt guys all the time... that leads to bigger injuries, crappy football, and stars being lost for the season too often...
 
I don't mind the practice squad... i still wish they bumped the roster to 65 and let IR players come back for the playoffs... or at least let the practice squaders suit up for the last regular season game... this sport is stuck in the stone ages when it comes to injuries... the roster forces teams to play hurt guys all the time... that leads to bigger injuries, crappy football, and stars being lost for the season too often...

We saw that this year more than ever with the Steelers. I can't even remember how many games they were dressing players who had zero chance of playing because the inactive list was already full.
 
is it possible that many who post those comments here are just ******* idiots?

besides the trolls I think most think he is a good coach.....

I think he is cemented into good coach status

Now is he a great coach?

Steelers are on the clock and the elite three are playing together for the first time in the playoffs....

There is time for him to be great

it is on the doorstep........
 
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