The Pittsburgh Steelers could have gold in the form of rookie quarterback Drew Allar, but they know they have to do some digging to uncover that treasure.
This is why, according to Brooke Pryor of ESPN, head coach Mike McCarthy and the entire offensive staff are starting from scratch with Allar and his footwork.
“Allar moved through that [footwork] drill and many others Saturday morning at half speed as the coaching staff essentially uninstalled his old hardware and began rebuilding his fundamentals
from the ground up,” Pryor writes.
McCarthy himself noted that improving Allar’s footwork will help him play faster and get out of troubling situations.
“It gives you the ability to play faster,” McCarthy said via Pryor. “[It] gives you the ability to transition in and out of the challenges that occur throughout quarterback play. We’re teaching him different than the way he’s played before. He hasn’t spent a lot of time under center. He’s a run-and-shoot guy in high school. He’s played from nine yards deep. So there’s just a lot of newness to him, but it’s just like anything. When you see the response from Friday’s practice, talk about it Saturday morning and then for him to go out there and do it today, that’s encouraging.”
As has been note on multiple occasions, and will certainly continue to be pointed out, Allar has the physical tools NFL teams want in a quarterback. It will come down to the job McCarthy and his staff do to rebuild his mechanics that will decide what his true ceiling is at the NFL level.
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