Concern for Steelers thin OLB group heading into training camp

Beyond T.J. Watt and Alex Highsmith, the Steelers’ outside linebacker group is worrisome.

“The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result.” – Albert Einstein

As the saying goes, doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result is the definition of insanity. Mike Tomlin even said it himself in his season-ending press conference in January.

Of course, Tomlin referred to keeping the same assistant coaching staff and expecting a better record; so at least he made changes there. But the adage can also pertain to the lack of depth at the outside linebacker position. Looking at the group heading into training camp, it appears Tomlin and company are hoping for a different outcome.

Did they even learn anything from their linebacker mess last season? When Bud Dupree went down, then-rookie Alex Highsmith stepped in. Of course, Dupree is now in Tennessee. So this season, they are a heartbeat or two away from repeating the same scenario. If something were to happen to either T.J. Watt or Highsmith, Cassius Marsh would be your starter. If even temporary, that void would be a concerning situation for the defense. Marsh has not shown he’s capable of doing much of anything in his seven-year career — he’s a low-level backup.

As for Highsmith, it’ll be exciting to see how he continues to develop. He played well in Dupree’s place for five games — he was a tackling machine with 48 (five for loss) — but the sacks just weren’t there. This year, Highsmith won’t be a role player, and expectations as a full-time starter are through the roof. He’ll be expected to step up, do a lot of things and do all of them well.

Thankfully, the Steelers have arguably the best outside guy in the league in Watt. In every dimension of the game, he’s phenomenal. From setting the edge to pursuing the QB, he can do it all.

When Pittsburgh is really good, they easily rack up 20 sacks per season. A minimum of 20 is a standard for their style of defense. With the way Watt grinds them out, he could very well have 15. If Highsmith pitches in five, they’re golden.

Though Highsmith for a full season is an unknown, he has starter talent. We all know what Watt can do. But a team is only as good as the quality of its depth over the course of the season.

What are the Steelers waiting for to improve their on the outside — cut downs? There are a handful of experienced, talented guys out there they can grab right now who are worlds better than backups Marsh, Roche and practice squad guys.

Steelers Wire highlighted five free agent edge rushers last month. Add Alex Okafor, Shaquem Griffin, Brooks Reed to those five. While some don’t fit the stand-up style of play in Pittsburgh, any one would immediately improve the unit’s depth.

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NFL’s most brutal schedule awaits Pittsburgh Steelers in 2021 season

The Pittsburgh Steelers are going from the second-easiest strength of schedule in 2020 to the toughest in 2021.

We don’t need dates of which teams the Pittsburgh Steelers will play when to know that the 2021 season will present its fair share of challenges.

After a season that saw Pittsburgh with the NFL’s second-easiest schedule, the toughest schedule has been handed down for 2021. 10 of the 17 games will be against 2020 playoff teams.

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We all know the Steelers track record of playing down to inferior opponents — perhaps this schedule will yield different results.

Based on 2020 regular-season results, the Steelers’ strength of schedule ranks No. 1 and the Philadelphia Eagles No. 32.

1. Pittsburgh Steelers: .574

2. Baltimore Ravens: .563

3. Chicago Bears: .550

4. Green Bay Packers: .542

5. Minnesota Vikings: .531

T6. Cincinnati Bengals: .529

T6. Detroit Lions: .529

8. Las Vegas Raiders: .526

9. Cleveland Browns: .518

10. Los Angeles Rams: .515

T11. Kansas City Chiefs: .511

T11. Seattle Seahawks: .511

T13. Tennessee Titans: .507

T13. Arizona Cardinals: .507

T15. Washington Football Team: .504

T15. Houston Texans: .504

17. Los Angeles Chargers: .493

18. Jacksonville Jaguars: .491

T19. San Francisco 49ers: .489

T19. New York Jets: .489

T19. New England Patriots: .489

22. New Orleans Saints: .483

T23. Buffalo Bills: .478

T23. Indianapolis Colts: .478

25. New York Giants: .474

26. Carolina Panthers: .472

T27. Denver Broncos: .471

T27. Miami Dolphins: .471

29. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: .465

30. Atlanta Falcons: .454

31. Dallas Cowboys: .452

32. Philadelphia Eagles: .451

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