Steelers in the Pro Bowl
Alan Faneca
Ben Roethlisberger
Willie Parker
Troy Polamalu
James Harrison
There
are three parts to Pro Bowl voting; the fans players and coaches all
account for one third of the election process. I'm not sure how
Polamalu made the Pro Bowl, he's missed several games to injury this
year. Roethlisberger is clearly the third best QB in the AFC, possibly
in the NFL, and in time could rise to the Brady-Favre-Manning level,
especially if the Rooney's shell out some cash for a few linemen who
can block, and another wide receiver who can catch. Harrison is making
good on the teams decision to let Joey Porter walk. He's been somewhat
quiet lately, but then again so has the defense as a whole.
I'm
somewhat amazed Faneca made the team, as the O-line has been porous at
best this season. It's clear many players make the team based on
reputation, but to give Faneca the benefit of the doubt, I'll conclude
he's probably had to cover for Mahan a lot this season. While it's hard
to tell on TV who is missing their assignments, generally a lineman is
told to take the inside-most rusher on passing plays, so if Mahan is
beat to Faneca's side, Faneca is supposed to take the guy to his right
who just blew threw Mahan. The Steelers generally run to the left side,
behind Faneca and Willie Parker does lead the league in rushing.
Obviously,
a good line has to work well together, profound football insight I
know, but just as stark, is the realization that this Steeler's line is
not greater than the sum of its parts and should be dismantled and
reassembled this off-season.
I'm not sure about the intricacies
of the Steelers run blocking schemes, but I do know Mahan is terrible,
and should be cut after this season. The blame I place on the coaches
goes back to the off-season, when Mahan, a guy who played for Tomlin in
Tampa Bay, was signed instead of either a good center, or a wide
receiver. I know Tomlin's not the GM, but he obviously thought Mahan
was the guy to replace Hartings and he clearly is not. One could argue
Faneca has been the beneficiary of playing next to all-pro centers for
his entire career.