The first of a
position-by-position series in advance of the start of free agency on March 13.
QUARTERBACKS (4)
Joshua Dobbs, Brogan Roback, Ben Roethlisberger, Mason Rudolph
(Free Agent Scorecard: none)
(Free Agent Scorecard: none)
A LAST LOOK AT
2018
For the fourth time in a career that began in 2004, Ben Roethlisberger started
every game of the regular season, and with the exception of one play in
Baltimore and 19 in Oakland while waiting for a pain-killing injection to take
effect he played every meaningful snap for the team. He finished up the regular
season as the NFL leader in attempts (675), completions (452), and passing
yards (5,129), which allowed him to become one of only seven quarterbacks in
NFL history to pass for 5,000 yards in a regular season.
Second-year pro Joshua Dobbs put together the best preseason
of any of the quarterbacks on the roster at the time and his performance earned
him the No. 2 job behind Roethlisberger in place of veteran Landry Jones.
During his preseason run to a roster spot, Dobbs completed 67.4 percent for 434
yards, with four touchdowns, two interceptions, and a rating of 111.9. Dobbs
also was third on the team in rushing with 64 yards on 10 carries, with another
touchdown on the ground.
Because the Steelers had a veteran backup in Jones and had
just used a fourth-round pick on Dobbs in 2017, it seemed unlikely the team
would draft a quarterback in 2018, but when the Steelers got a third-round pick
from Oakland for Martavis Bryant and Mason Rudolph still was on the board in
that third round, the team pulled the trigger and added a player General
Manager Kevin Colbert subsequently would say had as high a grade as the
quarterbacks who ended up being picked in the first round. Rudolph was inactive
for every regular season game, but his passer rating for the preseason was a
respectable 90.6.
ONE STAT THAT
STANDS OUT
After Roethlisberger finished the 2018 season with a league best 5,129 passing
yards, it marked the second time he finished a regular season atop the NFL in
that statistic. In 2014, Roethlisberger led the league with 4,952 passing
yards.
A LOOK AHEAD TO
2019
On two separate occasions in 2019 already, Steelers President Art Rooney II has
made it clear the team’s plan is to extend Ben Roethlisberger’s contract this
offseason, and because that move also figures to result in a salary cap savings
for the team it would be beneficial to get negotiations wrapped up by the start
of free agency on March 13.
Big Ben has one more year left on his current contract. The
Steelers have already reached out to Big Ben’s camp about extending his
contract. It’s been reported that by many media outlets that Rooney wants to
get this done and done quick. The Steelers still fill that Roethlisberger still
has some good years remaining. The Steelers fill that Roethlisberger is in the
prime of his career. Now that quarterbacks around the league are playing into
their 40s, the Steelers are not sure why Ben can’t play for several more years,
so the Steelers are looking forward to having Roethlisberger around for a few
more years.
When it comes to Roethlisberger’s on-field performance in
2018, the one issue to be addressed is turning the ball over. His 16
interceptions were the most in the league, and he also lost two fumbles to
finish the season with 18 turnovers. While his 2018 interception percentage of
2.4 was the second-lowest of his career in any season in which he started all
16 games (in 2014 when he led the league with 4,952 passing yards his
interception percentage was 1.5), 18 turnovers still is a lot. If the way to
reduce Roethlisberger’s interception total is by cutting back on his attempts
and utilizing the running game more often, so be it, but on a Steelers team
where taking the ball away has been a constant struggle of late, cutting back
on turnovers by any means necessary is a must.
It could be argued that the 2018 offseason was the most
critical time of Dobbs’ professional life because it required him to unseat a
proven veteran backup to win a spot on the roster, but this 2019 offseason is
an important one for him as well. If Rudolph is to turn out as advertised, it
would be reasonable to expect a significant level of improvement from him,
maybe even to the extent that he makes a run at replacing Dobbs as Roethlisberger’s
backup.
During the offseason program, at training camp, and then
during the preseason, as Roethlisberger eases his 37-year-old arm into a 16th
NFL season, the competition between Dobbs and Rudolph should prove interesting
enough to captivate fans and media alike. And how that competition turns out
could end up defining the future for each of those young players.
Already the team has signed a fourth quarterback – Brogan
Roback – who is known to all who watched last season’s episodes of “Hard
Knocks” on HBO, and while he came across well on the show and even had his
moments on the field, it wouldn’t seem likely that he could unseat either Dobbs
or Rudolph. Then again it was assumed Dobbs had little chance to unseat Landry
Jones last summer, but if Roback beats out one of the two young quarterbacks
the team drafted over the previous couple of years, that would make a strong
case that those picks should’ve been used on other players/positions.
Based on the Steelers’ commitment to Roethlisberger and his
interest in continuing his playing career, plus the recent draft capital
invested in Dobbs and Rudolph, plus the signing of Roback who has shown himself
to be a competent No. 4 for the offseason’s 90-man roster, there seems to be
little chance the team would have any interest in this position, either during
free agency or through the three days of the 2019 NFL Draft.
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