
OMAR JACOBS PRESS
CONFERENCES
OMAR JACOBS
Quarterback
Bowling Green State
University Falcons
5th Round – 164th Overall
How do you fit in here?
I'm excited to part of the tradition in Pittsburgh. It feels
good to be with Ben Roethlisberger and the MAC quarterback strength still left.
As far as the offensive, they stretch the ball down the field and do a lot of
things with Ben Roethlisberger. I think they can do the same with me.
How does your size affect your playing ability?
I think getting bigger with the league. I think the guys are
getting bigger and taller. I think the ability to take hits from those guys and
stay in the pocket and not getting injured. I think being a bigger guy you can
take those poundings.
How would you explain being picked up this low in the draft
after once being projected as a first round?
I was a little surprise, but just knowing the nature of the
draft, it's something that happens. A lot of guys think they are going to go
high and it doesn't happen in the draft. I'm just happy to be a part of the
Pittsburgh Steelers.
Why did you come out early?
Just looking at the strength of the quarterbacks coming out.
When I came out I looked at all of the guys coming out and the class wasn't that
strong with the depth of the guys coming out. Jay Cutler and you have Matt
Leinart and Vince Young, but coming from my junior year it was just me and Matt
Leinart, the top two quarterbacks in the nation. Knowing that, coming out that
made the decision. I also looked at my offense [at Bowling Green], I lost
two of my top receivers into the draft and two of my running backs, a center,
and a right tackle, and a lot of defensive players. I had to look at that
situation too and my family situation. It was a big part. It was not an easy
decision to come out.
What do you mean by your family situation?
Just looking at my family and how they feel about it. It wasn't
a big thing, it was just how they felt about the whole situation.
What was your injury?
I had a third-degree separation of my left shoulder.
When did it occur?
I think in the middle of the season, I think the 6th or 7th
game.
Did it affect how you played?
I missed two and a half games.
How do you account for your accuracy and throwing so few
interceptions?
Just being smart, manning the game well, and not forcing
anything that isn't there.
Has the success of MAC quarterbacks in the NFL raised the value
that conferences quarterbacks?
I call those guys the fore-fathers. Those guys paved the way for
us and prepared a way for the MAC quarterbacks coming out now, with Ben
Roethlisberger and Byron Leftwich, even Charlie Frye and Chad Pennington, those
guys helped the MAC as an overall conference. They raised the eyes and looks at
those conferences, by doing so well in the NFL helped guys like me
out.
Did you visit the Steelers?
No, I only took one visit with the Miami Dolphins.
Have you spoken to coaches on the phone?
Yeah, I spoke to the coaches when they drafted me. That's the
only time I have talked to the coaches.
How do you see your opportunity here and the possibility of not
playing for some time?
I'm prepared to learn. Just to be a guy and just to come in and
compete. I'm going to compete, I'm a competitor, and I'm going to compete for
the job. Ben [Roethlisberger] is a great quarterback. If I have to sit for a
while, and if my time comes it will come. I think I have to be patient to some
degree and I want to be patient in Pittsburgh.
Do you know Ben at all?
I met him game-wise, but I haven't actually talked to
him.
Did you play against him?
I didn't play against him, Josh Harris was the quarterback at
the time when we played Miami of Ohio. He's been doing the same thing in college
as he is doing in the NFL.
Have people tried to change your throwing motion?
Not really change it, maybe just change the fundamentals to make
me more accurate. Like maybe raising it up a little bit, but I've been so
accurate and productive that they really tried to change it that
much.
Coach Mark Whipple RE: OMAR
JACOBS
Quarterback
Bowling Green State University Falcons
5th Round – 164th Overall
Omar Jacobs is a really, really talented
young man. He had a tremendous sophomore year at Bowling Green and then had some
injuries. I watched the Wisconsin game and was really impressed with him when it
was on regular TV. He had some injuries and came back. He's a guy that has size
at 6-4. Of all the quarterbacks left I thought he was the one guy that had a
chance to really be a good player for us. We're excited about him. Talking to
him on the, he's ecstatic. I think it's a real good fit for us. The only problem
is in my meeting room we'll have more MAC [Conference] updates than anywhere in
the country. It will be interesting between Ben [Roethlisberger], Charlie
[Batch] and Omar.
What are his injuries?
He had a foot that didn't keep him out.
Then he had a shoulder. Really it wasn't anything. You could see how he changed
throwing the ball at the end of the year. You go back to his sophomore year he
threw 41 touchdowns and four interceptions. He was healthy against Wisconsin and
I watched him throw some balls in the middle and he threw the deep ball pretty
well. I didn't really see him in the last part of the year. In the middle you
could see where he wasn't really that healthy. I don't remember exactly what
[his injury was]. When I met him at the combine he has real big hands and is a
physical presence which I think is really important in our league. He's not
quite as big as Ben but Ben will come back and say, 'I couldn't see [an open
receiver].' I think the height factor is something I can't coach and he's got
that.
He worked out of the shotgun. Will he have
to learn to take snaps under center?
Ben worked out of the shotgun and most of
these guys now do. I think I'm better at this situation than I was a few years
ago, learning from Ben and some of those things. More importantly I'm not going
to teach him the footwork or throwing mechanics, I'm going to teach him the
offense so then he can get some confidence. Then we can work on some of those
other things after practice, mechanics that might help him.
Will you change his throwing
motion?
No. You just ask, 'Does he throw a tight
spiral?' I think in Pittsburgh, New England and the northeast that says
something. He did. He threw a tight spiral. The ball should be easy for the
receiver to catch. I'm not going to change that. He's 6-4 and he's a little low.
I didn't see him get a whole lot of balls batted down on the tapes that I
watched.
Can you describe his release?
I think everybody throws a little bit
different. In our league you have to throw it [from different spots] just to get
around some guys. He's not going to throw it over top when Max Starks is your
tackle. It's a different way. The one thing is that he's getting the ball out
there. I thought that where he threw the ball was on time and in a place where
the receivers can make a play. A lot of guys may throw it a little behind, but
the ball was there where [the receivers] could make something happen. Until you
work with him it's more about learning up and getting in and out of the huddle.
We've been through that with the wrist bands. I'm not concerned about it.
Physically, I think he was one of the best guys out there.
How is his mental toughness?
When I met with I wasn't going to give him
a playbook. They're so nervous at the combine. Some guys do that and it's not my
style. I wanted to see what he was like as a person. He handled that atmosphere
in Indianapolis really well. I'll find out [his mental toughness] two weeks from
now in mini-camp.
Is he mobile?
He's more of a pocket guy. He can get out.
I don't remember what his 40 time was exactly. He's got a real good feel for the
pocket. He's not a statue but he's a guy that can get out of the pocket but the
thing I like was that he was looking down field. He was saying that, 'I'm a
passer. I'm looking to make plays.' You're not going to have to say, 'get out of
the pocket and look downfield.' That's what he's doing naturally.
Will teams still question MAC quarterbacks'
abilities?
Just look at the success that they've had.
[Chad] Pennington was in the playoffs. Look at Ben's success and Byron
[Leftwich] has done well in Jacksonville. Charlie [Frye] started up in Cleveland
and had some success. In my room it's not a problem. There are guys that come in
from all over. There was a slight on DI-AA, then you had [Steve] McNair and Kurt
Warner had a pretty good career.
Is the MAC producing quality
players?
Being in the NFL now the concern is that
there aren't many guys under center. High schools are going to the spread
offense and we're not seeing a guy who can drop back five, seven steps and is
comfortable. That's just the way that football is going. Those questions are
going to come up more. It's not about the MAC it's about guys being in the
shotgun all the time. That's just going to keep coming.
Is the NFL going in that
direction?
I don't think so. Physically you can't.
These guys are so much faster. I see Ben on Mondays and say, 'It doesn't look
like you've been hit too much.' [He replies] 'What are you talking about?' He's
a big guy but every time you throw the ball, you may release the ball but you're
getting banged, you're getting hit and these aren't little guys. I think that's
the one thing that Ben did such a good job with last year. At the end of the
year he's bating his time and not trying to get out of the pocket, where the
protection is. I think that's what Omar naturally does. It's about health as
well. We found out about that last year but in this league you can't worry about
that, you have to make the next play.
Did you look at Bruce
Gradkowski?
We looked at them all. The size fact came
in with Omar and he went out early. I really felt like that was a big thing at
Ben. Give this kid another year back in that system. He did early in his
sophomore year. There's good players coming out of that conference in the
quarterback position with statistics and winning games. With Bruce he is a
competitor and a great kid. It was kind of more the size and that extra year. We
aren't looking for him to come in and start obviously. That's just how I felt.
Do you need to get Omar ready in case of an
injury?
I tell those guys in [the meeting room],
'We're all in this together. When you stink, I stink.' Coaches lose and players
win. That's really what it comes down to. Ben didn't the attention he got two
years ago. We have good people here who can help one another. Go back to where
Ben was, what an asset Tommy [Maddox] was for me and Ben. That's the same thing
that Omar's going to find. I think that's why we have so much success is the
players and the staff in this organization. When you're a Steeler you know you
can turn around and get help.
Are you set at quarterback with Ben,
Charlie, Omar and Rod Rutherford?
Yeah. We have Shane Boyd in Europe right
now.
Are you done for the day?
I don't know. I guess. When I walk out of
here I should be but you never say never in this business.
Will Rutherford be ready for training
camp?
I talked to Rod the last couple days. He'll
be ready for training camp. Where he's at in OTAs I'm not sure. [Coach Cowher]
will answer that. I just try to be positive with him on the phone.
Are you hit more in the pocket or
scrambling?
You'll probably have to break that down by
percentage. What Dick LeBeau and every defensive players says is, 'If you have a
chance to hit the quarterback, I don't care where he is, just hit him.'
Does a mobile quarterback have to adapt to
become a pure passer?
We always like to stereotype everybody,
especially on draft day. We're looking for the Tom Brady and John Elway
comparisons but what two guys are the same? So I think you do a good job
coaching in what they do well and match them up that way. Some of the play calls
will be a little bit different with each guy, because they have their favorite
plays. That's up to each coaching staff.
Do you prefer that a guy not
run?
Yeah, we'd like to get our 20 throws and
get the win. That's what the bottom line is. I like when he's on the sideline in
the fourth quarter next to me. That's always the best time. It's just about
matches up with who's healthy, who's playing that day and what the other people
are doing in the game plan. That changes week to week.
Do you think Omar made a mistake by leaving
early?
He's a Pittsburgh Steeler now. I wouldn't
say he's made a mistake. That's water over the damn. That's the past. I don't
ever worry about that. My thought process right now is when is he coming in and
talking to him on the phone and make sure he's comfortable and has enough
support. I didn't realize that as much two years ago but I'm a better coach
because of what I went through with Ben. Ben's going to be an asset to Omar.
That's the one thing you'll find out in this organization is that you're pulling
for one another and you're going to compete. I need to get him ready to compete
for that first OTA.