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Pittsburgh Steelers (official thread)

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Steelers' fans might feel insecure if Rooneys sell control of team

Somewhere, Art Rooney Sr. must have a tear in his eye.

As several of The Chief's sons play Rooney Roulette with the Pittsburgh Steelers, the team's late legend must be heartbroken.

After all, the Rooney family - first Art, then his sons - has had controlling interest of the Steelers since Art Sr. founded the team in July 1933.

The Steelers' patriarch endured four decades of lousy and mediocre teams before the Black and Gold won its first Super Bowl title. Before the Steelers started their 1970s dynasty, Rooney, with the ever-present cigar nestled in the side of his mouth, had been known as the lovable loser of the NFL. He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1964, a decade before his first title.

Continued......
 
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espn.com

Team sale would trigger review of public stadium funding

ESPN.com news services
Updated: July 16, 2008, 10:11 AM ET

PITTSBURGH -- Allegheny County Controller Mark Flaherty says the Pittsburgh Steelers may have to reimburse taxpayers for public money used to build Heinz Field if the team is sold.
The new stadium opened in 2001 with the Steelers contributing about $76.5 million and state and county taxpayers paying $281 million.
Flaherty says he sent a letter to the team's owners saying a new stadium funding agreement must be struck if the team is sold.
Steelers chairman Dan Rooney is haggling with his four brothers over ownership of the team. Each brother owns 16 percent of the team and another family owns the rest. The other brothers are said to want more money than Dan Rooney is willing to pay for their shares, leading both sides to look for investors who might buy part of the team.

Continued......
 
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Scout $

Polamalu, Kemoeatu and Casey Hampton have been placed on the PUP list. Hampton finished only 5 of 8 one hundred yard runs and Tomlin won't allow him to practice until he shows he's in good enough shape. I like it.
 
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Likely to be the last year in the 'burgh for a lot of current players. 14 of them are in the final year of their contract:

Steelers facing contract issues - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review

A total of 14 players, including starters such as linebacker James Farrior and offensive tackle Marvel Smith, are entering the final year of their contracts.

the list of players up for contract renewal includes cornerback Bryant McFadden and backup quarterback Charlie Batch, who also are entering the final year of their deals.

Tackle Willie Colon, safety Anthony Smith and receiver Willie Reid are entering their third seasons - and in the final year of their contracts - and could be retained as restricted free agents in 2009.

Guard Chris Kemoeatu, tackles Max Starks and Trai Essex and wide receiver Nate Washington will be unrestricted free agents after next season. And linebacker Arnold Harrison, cornerback Anthony Madison and defensive back Grant Mason are working on one-year contracts.

In addition, defensive end Brett Keisel, nose tackle Casey Hampton, running back Willie Parker, linebacker James Harrison and cornerback Deshea Townsend will have one year remaining on their deals entering 2009.
 
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The Sports Network - National Football League

Latrobe, PA (Sports Network) - Pittsburgh continued to revamp its return teams on Thursday, signing former Pro Bowl kick returner Eddie Drummond to a one- year contract.

Earlier in the offseason, the Steelers inked running back Mewelde Moore to help handle punt return duties after a season that saw Allen Rossum and a host of others botch catches and fail to create good field position.

Drummond has returned 250 kicks for 5,811 yards and two touchdowns in his six NFL seasons. The Penn State product returned 41 kicks for 1,092 yards and both career scores during his 2004 Pro Bowl campaign with the Detroit Lions.
 
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Leftwich the pick on the QB option

After opening their preseason with a victory against the Philadelphia Eagles, the Steelers returned to training camp in Latrobe with a new quarterback, a new punter and a new nose tackle. Well, at least, a nose tackle who hasn't been on the practice field the past two weeks.

The day began with two new quarterbacks in camp -- veterans Byron Leftwich and Daunte Culpepper, each of whom passed physicals in the morning in Pittsburgh and came to Saint Vincent College afterward to work out individually for the coaching staff.

After much deliberation, the day ended with Steelers coach Mike Tomlin receiving a call on his cell phone on the practice field, telling him that Leftwich, 28, had agreed to a one-year, $645,000 contract that included a $40,000 signing bonus.

"He's been a franchise quarterback for a playoff caliber team," Tomlin said. "We're fortunate to add a guy like him."

Leftwich, a five-year starter for the Jacksonville Jaguars who spent last season with the Atlanta Falcons, will be on the practice field today. Tomlin said he even hopes he can learn enough of the offense to play in Thursday night's preseason game against the Buffalo Bills in Toronto.

"We have some familiarity there," Tomlin said, noting that quarterback coach Ken Anderson was Leftwich's position coach for three seasons with the Jaguars. "He had a great workout. He has a strong arm, he's very lean and he's a smart guy, a been-there, done-that guy. Hopefully we'll have him up to snuff and have him participate as soon as Thursday night."

The move to sign Leftwich, the seventh overall pick in the 2003 NFL draft, was necessitated when Charlie Batch, 33, broke his right collarbone on a busted play against the Eagles. Batch will have surgery today to repair the damage and insert a plate in his clavicle. He is expected to be out six weeks.

If Batch did not have surgery, the recovery period would have been 10 to 12 weeks and he likely would have been placed on the injured reserve list.

"That would have been the option," Batch said. "And I didn't want to do that, not at all."

Because he is a quarterback who relies on a throwing motion, Batch said a plate will be inserted to ensure his collarbone would remain the same length and would not "shorten" from scar-tissue buildup that occurs during a non-surgical recovery period. He noted that Minnesota Vikings running back Adrian Peterson did not have surgery when he broke his collarbone in college because he does not rely on his clavicle for a throwing motion.

"This is the best way to go about it and the fastest way," Batch said.

To make room on the roster for Leftwich and punter Mitch Berger, who was signed to compete with Paul Ernster, the Steelers released wide receiver Gerran Walker and linebacker Anthony Trucks, two first-year free agents.

They did not have to clear room for the return of nose tackle Casey Hampton -- only on the sidelines. He was taken off the physically unable to perform list and practiced for the first time since he reported to training camp 40 pounds overweight.

The Steelers decided to bring in Leftwich and Culpepper for workouts so the coaches had options on which quarterback they wanted to sign.

The choice was always Leftwich, but the process dragged through most of the day because he and his agent, Tom Condon, wanted some type of assurance of what will happen when Batch returns. The Steelers were prepared to sign Culpepper, a former Pro Bowl quarterback and the seventh overall pick in the 1999 draft by the Minnesota Vikings, if they couldn't come to an agreement with Leftwich.

As a vested veteran, Leftwich would have to be paid for the entire season if he is on the 53-man roster for the Sept. 7 season opener against the Houston Texans.

"We're just going to go out and let their play talk," Tomlin said. "We'll evaluate based on what we see. Hopefully he goes out and plays well, and then those are good problems to have."
 
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The weight is over: Hampton returns to practice

Casey Hampton is listed at 325 pounds on the Steelers' roster. And in what would be as surprising as a heat wave in August, Hampton said that number may be a bit dated.
"I ain't been 325 in a long time," Hampton said.

Still, the veteran nose tackle is at a weight that is satisfactory to Steelers coach Mike Tomlin, who took Hampton off the physically unable to perform (PUP) list on Sunday.

Hampton, who practiced yesterday afternoon for the first time since the Steelers started training camp, said he and Tomlin basically agree to disagree on what is the best way for the four-time Pro Bowler to get ready for the regular season.

Tomlin had put Hampton on the PUP list because he showed up for camp out of shape and failed the conditioning test that preceded the start of preseason practice. Hampton said he has always worked his way into shape during training camp.
If Tomlin was trying to light a fire under his ample backside, Hampton said, it wasn't necessary.

"I don't need nobody to push me to help me any kind of way because I strive to be the best, no matter what," Hampton said. "If that was his motive, that was his motive. I'm a grown man. I don't need no other grown man to motivate me.

"It's a new coach, and he goes about things in a different way, and I can't do things the way I want to do them. I've got to do them the way he wants me to do them. I've got to be professional about it and just get it done."

Tomlin said he is pleased with the professionalism Hampton showed while working his way into the kind of shape that is acceptable to the Steelers.

Neither he nor Hampton said how much the latter weighs.

"He's down a significant amount of weight," Tomlin said, adding that Hampton will do extra conditioning work after practices. "He is ready to go.

"The whole emphasis is to make sure he's the most dominant nose tackle in football. We're on the (same) planet."

That doesn't necessarily mean the two see eye to eye when it comes to how Hampton gets ready for a season.

"(Former coach Bill) Cowher went about it a different way than (Tomlin)," Hampton said. "Anybody that's been around me for a long period of time and played with me knows how I am. I think me and coach Tomlin are going through a learning process, just learning each other."

Hampton said he is not upset or angry with how Tomlin handled his situation. He has taken a good-natured approach to all of the running and conditioning exercises the Steelers made him do during the first two weeks of camp.

Yesterday, Hampton smiled and waved to the fans who chanted "Casey!" as he did some running following practice. He reiterated that he will be ready to play at his usual high level when the regular season begins.

"Y'all are the ones that made it a big deal, a circus atmosphere," he said to a group of reporters. "Y'all doing your job by making it a big deal and having a Hamp weigh-in every week and how much I lost. That's crazy. I'm going to do my thing."
 
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Steelers Notebook: Hampton no longer PUP, back in pads

Steelers Notebook: Hampton no longer PUP, back in pads
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
By Ed Bouchette, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Peter Diana/Post-Gazette

Some termed Casey Hampton's two-week absence from training camp practice a "punishment."

Hampton had another word to describe it.

"I definitely think it benefited me," said Hampton, who turns 31 next month. "I don't see it as a negative. I'm not a big fan of the preseason and all that banging and stuff anyway for older guys."

The big nose tackle came off the physically unable to perform list Sunday after spending the first two weeks getting into shape. He went on the list July 27 when head coach Mike Tomlin would not permit Hampton to finish the run test because his coach said he was overweight and out of shape.

Hampton did plenty of running and riding a stationary bike the past two weeks and did not miss the pounding of the pads on the practice field.

"We know how to play football, being an older guy and being in the same system for this long period of time," Hampton said. "It saved me a little bit, but it's time to go, it's time to get out there and go to work with my teammates and I'm ready."

He said there were no hard feelings for the action Tomlin took, and he expects to play Thursday against Buffalo in Toronto.

"Coach made a decision and he's the coach. I'm here to help this team win; I'm willing to do that any way I can, and whatever's asked of me, I'll do it."

Said Tomlin: "As of right now, it looks like he's knocking the rust off pretty quickly. We anticipate him participating on Thursday unless he has a setback."

Versatility helps Essex

Trai Essex has been almost overlooked in his first three seasons since the Steelers drafted him in the third round in 2005 from Northwestern.

He wants to make No. 4 special.

"I just came into this year with a different focus," said Essex. "This is my year. I have a one-year contract so I have to prove to the coaches I can handle whatever they give me."

He will become an unrestricted free agent after the season if he does not sign a new contract.

Essex has started five games at left or right tackle because of injuries, including last year's playoff against Jacksonville. However, he played in just three games last season as he slipped to the No. 4 tackle on the team.

This year could be different. He's playing guard and tackle now, and that could prompt the coaches to make him one of the two or three backup linemen on game days.

"You can't dress a backup at every position because of all the numbers," Essex said of the roster limit of 45 for games. "Having a guy who can play more than one position helps out a lot, so it helps me.

"It's not money. I want to play. This is my fourth year. I've been a spot guy for three years. I just want to play."

Polamalu still watching

Troy Polamalu went to practice yesterday and followed the same routine. He ran a little, watched a lot and iced down his hamstring.

The Pro Bowl strong safety remains on the PUP list because of the pulled hamstring that prevented him from running all-out in the first conditioning test of training camp. It appears he will miss the second preseason game Thursday night.

Tomlin, asked if Polamalu was getting any closer to practicing, said, "I assume he is, but when that will occur I don't know at this point."

Bid possibly waylaid

Rookie safety Ryan Mundy, who played at Woodland Hills High School and West Virginia, put in a good bid to make the 53-man roster until he was waylaid by a high ankle sprain Friday night.

He could miss the next three preseason games, which means the coaching staff must determine if he showed enough in the first two weeks of training camp to earn a spot on the roster.

"I would think so, but you never know in this business," Mundy said.

He claimed his injury came on a cheap shot by Philadelphia guard Max Jean-Gilles. "It was definitely after the play. I made the tackle, I'm getting up and my knee was still bent and the guy just came in and hit me. ... Most definitely a cheap shot. The play was well over."

Injury update

Quarterback Charlie Batch had surgery yesterday to repair his broken right collarbone. ... Defensive lineman Kyle Clement has a sprained knee and is out indefinitely. ... Linebacker Mike Humpal missed practice with a stinger. ... Cornerback Deshea Townsend was held out with a minor groin injury but he should return today. ... Linebacker James Harrison was held out of the afternoon practice because he had some swelling after he was kicked in the shin in the morning drills. ... Tomlin said punter Daniel Sepulveda's surgery to repair his anterior cruciate ligament went well. "It's less about the surgery and more about the rehabilitation at this point."
 
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Steelers QB Leftwich knows his role

Can new Steelers backup quarterback Byron Leftwich still make big plays with his big arm?
Coach Mike Tomlin probably hopes he never has to find out.

That would mean starting quarterback Ben Roethlisberger, the Steelers' $102-million man, would be unable to play because of injury or poor performance.

Based on Leftwich's comments Monday, following his first practice with the Steelers, he wants to become the reliable veteran backup that Charlie Batch was before he suffered a broken collarbone in last Friday's preseason game against Philadelphia.

"You've got no chance when you've got (No.) 7 here. Only a fool would come here and believe that (in) Week 1, he's going to be the starter," said Leftwich, the seventh overall draft pick in 2003 who passed for 9,042 yards, 51 touchdowns and 36 interceptions and was 24-20 as a starter in Jacksonville. "Ben's a (heck) of a quarterback, and I understand that."
Leftwich and Roethlisberger know each other from their days in the Mid-American Conference, where they starred at Marshall and Miami, respectively. Roethlisberger was the 11th player taken in the draft a year after Leftwich was selected.

"It's different because you're not the guy. We all know who the guy is here. My job is to prepare myself every day just in case I'm needed," said Leftwich, who beat out Daunte Culpepper in the tryout for the backup job.

A starter since early in his rookie season, Leftwich changed his outlook since being released by Jacksonville last September and then again in February following a short stint with Atlanta. He worked out for Tennessee in July but wasn't offered a contract.

"The older you get in this league, the more you realize that's all that really matters -- doing what you can to win football games," Leftwich said.

Leftwich comes highly recommended. Steelers quarterbacks coach Ken Anderson held the same position during Leftwich's rookie season in Jacksonville.

"He's started in the league. He's won games in the league. We're happy to have him here to kind of bail us out," Anderson said.

Jacksonville vice president of player personnel James Harris scouted Leftwich and played a major role in Leftwich's high selection in the draft. Harris said injuries have been Leftwich's biggest obstacle.

"You saw him in college in so many situations where he had to bring his team back, make difficult throws and perform under adversity. He was a pocket passer, and at the time, a lot of the pocket passers were winning Super Bowls," Harris said yesterday.

The winning quarterbacks in the four Super Bowls prior to the 2003 draft were all pocket passers -- Kurt Warner, Trent Dilfer, Tom Brady and Brad Johnson. However, when Leftwich suffered a broken ankle in 2005 and had surgery a year later, it made him even more vulnerable in the pocket. He was eventually released in favor of David Garrard.

"It's no secret that injuries have been his bugaboo," Anderson said.

Leftwich, who hopes to re-make himself with the Steelers, is expected to see action Thursday night against the Buffalo Bills in Toronto.

Tomlin said Leftwich's first day of practice was a good start.

"I was impressed simply by the fact that he's a quick study," Tomlin said. "He was able to step in the huddle, spew the verbiage out, get people lined up and deliver the ball.

"We anticipate him participating on Thursday unless he has a setback."
 
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Polamalu's return could be Tuesday

Polamalu's return could be Tuesday
Sunday, August 17, 2008
By Ed Bouchette, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

dianasteelers0806b_330.jpg

Peter Diana / Post-GazetteThe much-criticized Steelers' first-team defense receives a boost with the likely return of playmaker Troy Polamalu to practice Tuesday.The Steelers will close shop at Saint Vincent College today, and injured safety Troy Polamalu will return home without pulling on the pads to practice with his teammates in training camp.

His status, however, should change in a few days. He is expected to come off the physically unable to perform list and start practicing Tuesday, maybe play a little Saturday night in Minnesota.

"Troy had a nice day running today," coach Mike Tomlin said after practice yesterday. "We'll run him again tomorrow. Hopefully ... we'll get him out there to practice on Tuesday."

No one will be happier if that occurs than defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau, who welcomed the return of another Pro Bowler, nose tackle Casey Hampton, last week.

"We just got Casey back last week and we're hoping we can get Troy back pretty soon," LeBeau said. "Sooner's always better than later."


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Next
? Game: Steelers at Minnesota Vikings in preseason game No. 3.

? When: 8 p.m. Saturday.

? TV: KDKA.

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Polamalu reported to training camp with a hamstring injury, and Tomlin placed him on the PUP. His stay away from the practice field lingered this long for two reasons: He re-injured his hamstring by pushing too hard to get back, and the coach is being extra cautious with his four-time Pro Bowl strong safety.

"The thing was, they wanted him to kind of rest it and he wanted to be back so bad he pushed it a little too hard in rehab," said free safety Ryan Clark. "So he'll be all right."

LeBeau, Clark and the rest of the defense hope so because a healthy Polamalu makes a big difference.

"He's pretty much the catalyst of what we do," said Clark. "The reason we are able to do the things we do so well is his ability to disguise and be athletic enough to get where he has to be.

"I think also from a psyche standpoint and preparation standpoint for offenses, he's a guy you have to prepare for. There are probably only a few guys in the league on defense you have to scheme for, and I think Troy's one of those guys, and that helps us out a lot."

Linebacker James Harrison, the team's MVP last season, voiced his concern about the way the defense has played through two preseason games. Offenses scored three times on four possessions against the Steelers' first-team defense, including two touchdowns on two drives Thursday night by Buffalo.

Perhaps Polamalu's presence would have made a difference.

"He means a lot, especially from a secondary standpoint," cornerback Bryant McFadden said. "When you play opposing offenses, they really have to account for him and take note where he is at all times. He does so many positive things out there for the secondary and the defense, just the chemistry he brings to the table. He makes so many plays from a coverage standpoint, blitzing and turnovers."

But, as McFadden put it, would you rather have Polamalu playing the first two preseason games and risk him having hamstring problems in the regular season? Or have a healthy Polamalu for 16 regular-season games?

Polamalu played through injuries that included rib, knee and stomach in 2007 and had an off season, for him, although he still was selected for the Pro Bowl. He returned to train in California with Marv Marinovich this spring for the first time in two years and felt he was in tip-top shape until the hamstring injury developed the week before training camp.

"Everybody knows a hamstring is a nagging thing," Clark said. "Maybe a guy like me with a hamstring, I could do it. But with the way Troy plays, so explosive, so many quick movements within the box and constantly fighting off blockers and stuff like that, he needs to be at full health."

LeBeau said Polamalu gives the Steelers a tremendous advantage before the snap of the ball. Quarterbacks are taught to read the safeties, but that's almost impossible against Polamalu because he's so quick he can line up on one side of the field and get to the other by the time of the snap.

"Sometimes, he'll scare you because you'll feel like where he is he can't get to where he's supposed to be," Clark said. "But he always does."

That style of play requires plenty of communication between Polamalu and Clark. Trouble is, Polamalu doesn't talk much.

"We have a weird relationship," Clark said. "If you'd have told me we'd be such good friends by this point, I wouldn't have believed it because he barely spoke to me the first few weeks I was here.

"But he's cool. He doesn't have to tell me what he's doing. He knows that whatever he does, I'll figure out what it is and I'll do the opposite to make sure the defense fits."

Mental telepathy?

"It just happens from us playing together," Clark said. "Sometimes, Troy will point, and you have to know what the point means. Sometime, he'll give you a signal behind his back, and you have to know what that means. Sometimes, he won't do anything, and you have to figure that out, too."

It's why LeBeau hopes to have Polamalu back on the field soon.

"It's just the timing and the integrating," LeBeau said.

"Every year, you have a different mix. We have different guys in that huddle than we had last year, and each guy has to get a feel for how each guy fits, and that's always something that's better to have practice at. More is better."

Within a few days, more in the form of Polamalu should take the practice field
.
 
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