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Steelers Way-too-early 7-Round Mock Draft 1.0

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Week 1 of the NFL Season for the Pittsburgh Steelers. James Connor looked solid and could play a part in becoming Le’Veon Bell’s (who, if you’ve been living under a rock, has gone AWOL) long-term replacement. Jesse James looked like nothing more than a solid backup, Ben Roethlisberger threw wildly, and the defense was surprisingly […]

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Week 1 of the NFL Season for the Pittsburgh Steelers. James Connor looked solid and could play a part in becoming Le’Veon Bell’s (who, if you’ve been living under a rock, has gone AWOL) long-term replacement. Jesse James looked like nothing more than a solid backup, Ben Roethlisberger threw wildly, and the defense was surprisingly […]

More...

That didn't take long. LOL
 
You know what they say,......... TIE one game and you're looking towards next season..........................................





Salute the nation
 
What pick are you expecting to land this draft class? 12-20?
 
We should trade down with Cleveland and pick up an additional 2 and 3!
 
Round 1: Mack Wilson, ILB (Alabama)

The Steelers find their long-term replacement for Ryan Shazier with the Wilson pick. Wilson plays instinctively and offers a mix of physicality and speed the Steelers haven’t had since Shazier. He’s solid in coverage and is able to fight off blockers, though he is still raw and may require some refining.

>> Nah his head isn't big enough.


Round 2: Michael Jackson, CB (Miami)
Jackson is an inconsistent, but very high-upside CB out of Miami. Steelers stick to their best player available strategy and take the CB to replace either Joe Haden (if he shows signs of aging) or Artie Burns (if he continues to struggle). Jackson is a large boundary corner with the ability to make tackles and even stop the run. He is excellent in zone coverage, making him the perfect fit for the Pittsburgh Steelers.

He's " Bad" A smooth criminal with some off the field issues. Not a bad singer though.

Round 3 (1 of 2): Myles Gaskin, RB (Washington)
The Steelers will take a hard look at L.J. Scott, a large power back out of Michigan State, but go with Gaskin instead. Connor, Ridley, and Samuels all offer size and some power, but none offer the fluidity, speed, and quickness that Gaskin does. He can play a Darren Sproles-esque role in a rotation with the other backs, and his elusiveness is something no one else on the roster can offer.

>>> Because the NFL is full of smurf RB's like Sproles...

Round (2 of 2) (Predicted Compensatory): Michael Jordan, G/C (Ohio State)
Jordan is a powerful run-blocking offensive lineman for Ohio State, through his footwork needs some work and he is not the best in pass protection. With the help of Mike Munchak, he should be able to sort those things out and live up to his potential. With Maurkice Pouncey and Ramoun Foster aging, and B.J. Finney and Matt Feiler being Free Agents by the end of the year, the Steelers take an interior offensive lineman to possibly be a long-term replacement.

>>>Sounds like a baller to me. Word is he wasn't a good teammate and gambles too much on golf.

Round 4: Isaac Nauta, TE (Georgia)
Nauta is a physical specimen who can run and catch, but also has some upside as a blocker. Steelers love TEs who are good blockers, and Nauta could be a solid piece alongside Vance McDonald, who has struggled with injuries and has been inconsistent in the past. If they retain McDonald and Jesse James, the Steelers may even begin looking at more 2-TE sets.

>>> This pick would make too much sense

Round 6 (1 of 2): Lil’Jordan Humphrey, WR (Texas)
Humphrey is a big-bodied receiver who can replace either the terribly incontinent, but high-upside Justin Hunter, or the special teams-limited Derrius Heyward-Bey. He can, at 6’4, 220, be a redzone threat who can out-muscle conerbacks on fade routes in the endzone. Big Ben loves big receivers, but hasn’t really had one since Martavis Bryant, who didn’t offer much in the redzone.

>>> Limas Sweed 2.0? No thank you.

Round 6 (2 of 2): Andrew Van Ginkel, OLB (Wiconsin)
Bud Dupree has been a question mark. And so has Anthony Chickillo. They both are inconsistent, but have potential. They excel in pass coverage, but lack the skills to be a consistent threat as a pass rusher. Ola Adeniyi and Keion Adams, on the other hand, are dominant pass rushers, but don’t have the athleticism to cover well. Van Ginkel looks to be more of a coverage linebacker to replace Chickillio (who only has a year left on his contract), but he offers some upside as a pass rusher. He doesn’t offer much as a pass rusher, but with a good bit of coaching, he could see vast improvement.

>> I'd rather have Steve Van Zandt

Round 7 (1 of 2): Wes Hills, RB (Slippery Rock)
Steelers here take an almost unheard of, small-school local kid here. They add another piece to the RB rotation and get a guy with much more talent then he is given credit for. He has great size at 6-2, 218, and the Steelers have been known to have a liking for bigger backs. He will challenge Ridley for a spot on the roster.

>>> Love the local Rudy picks!


Round 7 (2 of 2): Austin Seibert, P (Oklahoma)
The Steelers are finally done with the crazy inconsistent Jordan Berry. Seibert’s averages at 42.3 yards in 2017, and 41.1 yards in 2016, are not great, but with Baker Mayfield and Rodney Anderson consistently moving the ball down the field, Seibert was more concerned about pinning opposing teams deep rather than kicking it far.

>>>Berry sucks.
 
they are trading Bell and with those picks they will move up and take Ed Oliver

Houston is 2-0, has two blow out wins over Rice and Arizona. Rice threw it 41 times. Arizona threw it 50 times. Oliver did not get a sack in either game.

If Oliver is going to be a top 5 pick, he's going to need more than 5.5 sacks playing American conference level competition. I'm not saying he can't do it, I'm saying he has not passed that mark in two full seasons.
 
Houston is 2-0, has two blow out wins over Rice and Arizona. Rice threw it 41 times. Arizona threw it 50 times. Oliver did not get a sack in either game.

If Oliver is going to be a top 5 pick, he's going to need more than 5.5 sacks playing American conference level competition. I'm not saying he can't do it, I'm saying he has not passed that mark in two full seasons.

Oliver plays nose guard...he did not get any sacks but he did have 4 TFLs with his 18 tackles and several QB pressures (I think the # is 8). Through 2 seasons and 2 games he has something like 43 tackles for loss, something no DL has ever done. If you were to watch a game (Arizona was nationally televised) you would have seen how disruptive he is. Several times his push from the middle caused the QB to roll right into pressure from the outside and the OLB got the sack. The Arizona QB (who was a Heisman hopeful) chunked several balls out of bounds while being chased by Oliver and crew The game was out of hand and he sat much of the second half until Arizona actually tried to make a game of it. UH plays Texas Tech (their second Power 5 school game) this weekend and there should once again be a lot of pass attempts for Oliver to bring pressure. The game is on Fox at 3:00 central time Saturday.

Doesn't matter if he is Top 5, when he goes in the Top 10 you get a vacation.

Oh and while I know he is not likely to win, ESPN has him #2 on their updated Heisman watch list....
 
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Oliver plays nose guard...he did not get any sacks but he did have 4 TFLs with his 18 tackles and several QB pressures (I think the # is 8). Through 2 seasons and 2 games he has something like 43 tackles for loss, something no DL has ever done. If you were to watch a game (Arizona was nationally televised) you would have seen how disruptive he is. Several times his push from the middle caused the QB to roll right into pressure from the outside and the OLB got the sack. The Arizona QB (who was a Heisman hopeful) chunked several balls out of bounds while being chased by Oliver and crew The game was out of hand and he sat much of the second half until Arizona actually tried to make a game of it. UH plays Texas Tech (their second Power 5 school game) this weekend and there should once again be a lot of pass attempts for Oliver to bring pressure. The game is on Fox at 3:00 central time Saturday.

Doesn't matter if he is Top 5, when he goes in the Top 10 you get a vacation.

Oh and while I know he is not likely to win, ESPN has him #2 on their updated Heisman watch list....

Stop explaining football to coach, he has his narrative, he doesn't need your football facts
 
Coach not seeing one game and forming a opinion. Nothing has changed I see....................
 
Oliver plays nose guard...he did not get any sacks but he did have 4 TFLs with his 18 tackles and several QB pressures (I think the # is 8). Through 2 seasons and 2 games he has something like 43 tackles for loss, something no DL has ever done. If you were to watch a game (Arizona was nationally televised) you would have seen how disruptive he is. Several times his push from the middle caused the QB to roll right into pressure from the outside and the OLB got the sack. The Arizona QB (who was a Heisman hopeful) chunked several balls out of bounds while being chased by Oliver and crew The game was out of hand and he sat much of the second half until Arizona actually tried to make a game of it. UH plays Texas Tech (their second Power 5 school game) this weekend and there should once again be a lot of pass attempts for Oliver to bring pressure. The game is on Fox at 3:00 central time Saturday.

Doesn't matter if he is Top 5, when he goes in the Top 10 you get a vacation.

Oh and while I know he is not likely to win, ESPN has him #2 on their updated Heisman watch list....



You never agreed to my terms! You backed out, looking for an injury clause. I asked you for a PM for the record on the terms. Still no dice....

I also offered a bet that he would not win the Heisman Trophy. You knew better.

Oliver won't be a nose tackle in the NFL. First off he's a little light for the position. He's a 3 technique gap shooting type of defensive tackle. Also, his competition is weak. If he's that good, he'll will need to prove it in a college all-star game. Perhaps the Hula bowl.

Besides he doesn't always play in a 3-4 line, if the coaching staff has brains they use 4 man lines on 3rd and long...

Oliver beating college guards and centers in a below average football conference, most of whom who won't even make an NFL camp to me is not impressive. His season best? 5.5 sacks, or 1.5 sacks more than Watt got in one game last week. If Oliver has 15 or more sacks, then we wonder what type of pass rusher he can be in the NFL.

To put into context, our very own Javon Hargrave had 16 sacks one season vs weaker competition too. He's very limited in the NFL as a pass rusher.
 
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Coach not seeing one game and forming a opinion. Nothing has changed I see....................


You don't see well. I have two full seasons of data, plus two games this year. And let's not pretend that Houston plays in a tough conference. They don't. Many guys in the SEC, Big Ten, or ACC have far more sacks as an interior defensive lineman. I am saying point blank, he's small for a nose tackle, and not a sack man at all.

I put in a few other facts in the above post. You can read them. Whether you comprehend them or not, I can't say.
 
You never agreed to my terms! You backed out, looking for an injury clause. I asked you for a PM for the record on the terms. Still no dice....

I also offered a bet that he would not win the Heisman Trophy. You knew better.

Oliver won't be a nose tackle in the NFL. First off he's a little light for the position. He's a 3 technique gap shooting type of defensive tackle. Also, his competition is weak. If he's that good, he'll will need to prove it in a college all-star game. Perhaps the Hula bowl.

Besides he doesn't always play in a 3-4 line, if the coaching staff has brains they use 4 man lines on 3rd and long...

Oliver beating college guards and centers in a below average football conference, most of whom who won't even make an NFL camp to me is not impressive. His season best? 5.5 sacks, or 1.5 sacks more than Watt got in one game last week. If Oliver has 15 or more sacks, then we wonder what type of pass rusher he can be in the NFL.

To put into context, our very own Javon Hargrave had 16 sacks one season vs weaker competition too. He's very limited in the NFL as a pass rusher.

You are locked into that bet. You might as well prepare yinz anus now in advance.
 
You don't see well. I have two full seasons of data, plus two games this year. And let's not pretend that Houston plays in a tough conference. They don't. Many guys in the SEC, Big Ten, or ACC have far more sacks as an interior defensive lineman. I am saying point blank, he's small for a nose tackle, and not a sack man at all.

I put in a few other facts in the above post. You can read them. Whether you comprehend them or not, I can't say.

Are you going to lie and say you watched two games ? Because reading data isn't watching a game numbnuts.
 
You don't see well. I have two full seasons of data, plus two games this year. And let's not pretend that Houston plays in a tough conference. They don't. Many guys in the SEC, Big Ten, or ACC have far more sacks as an interior defensive lineman. I am saying point blank, he's small for a nose tackle, and not a sack man at all.

I put in a few other facts in the above post. You can read them. Whether you comprehend them or not, I can't say.

and you have never seen him play

HE has two sacks against Baker Mayfield and Lamar Jackson, and the Cougars have a good record against Power 5 schools.

The American conference doesn't have the top end schools like Alabama, but the bulk of the conference is good enough to be competitive in any conference. Give UH the cash that the Power 5 schools get and they could compete at the highest level.

Please find me a nose guard with more sacks or more tackles for loss in the last two seasons.

There is a reason he is the ONLY player EVER to win the Outland Trophy as a sophomore

Again, watch the kid play and you will see how disruptive he is. If he had gone to one of the top schools that recruited him, he would be just as disruptive. The kid is very quick, has great feet and never quits on a play. He chases the ball carrier side line to side line and more than once has caught a QB or RB down the field and knocked the ball loose from behind.
 
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Are you going to lie and say you watched two games ? Because reading data isn't watching a game numbnuts.

no he is saying Oliver has played two seasons and 2 games this season and he has formed his opinion based only on stats.....
 
Coach, I love your post, and thanks for the draft opinion, I know it took time.

Though with Oliver, you can't **** on him when he's setting a new standard for what it means to be an interior linemen in college football. You should realize, it doesn't matter where they play, great players can come from any team in any place. Jarvis was an SEC player with wicked stats, and he sucked balls in the NFL, so you should know that college locations doesn't equate to NFL success.
 
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