Vindicator Logo

Colon settling into guard role

Saturday, October 27, 2012

Associated Press

PITTSBURGH

Willie Colon emerged from Sunday’s win in Cincinnati down more than one of his signature dreadlocks. At least he was unofficially awarded a takedown for a post-whistle body slam of Bengals linebacker Vontaze Burfict.

It was Colon’s kind of game, the perfect coming-out party for the Steelers offensive lineman continuing to settle in to his new position at guard.

“He had controlled violence last week,” said Pittsburgh quarterback Ben Roethlisberger.

Colon, for his part, laughs off the “violence” descriptor.

“Controlled chaos,” Colon corrects. “That’s my type of play.”

The bleed-the-clock, straight-ahead running in the fourth quarter. The abundance of pulls to open up holes. The intensity of playing the first divisional game of the season under the lights.

Colon was arguably the Steelers’ best lineman in the 24-17 win over the Bengals, and there’s little arguing it was his best game of the season. After spending his first six NFL seasons as a tackle, Colon is increasingly showing an aptitude for playing on the inside for the Steelers (3-3).

“I’m starting to get more comfortable each and every week,” Colon said before practice Thursday.

“I can’t come up there and say, ‘Yeah, I’m a guard now.’ I was a guard when they put me in the lineup, and now it’s just a matter of me growing and becoming better. Each and every week I try to do it. I try to get smarter, I try to really own the position. And I think I’m getting better.”

With two starting linemen (center Maurkice Pouncey and right tackle Marcus Gilbert) and the top two running backs on the depth chart (Rashard Mendenhall and Isaac Redman) out due to injury Sunday, Pittsburgh had its finest rushing performance of the season.

No coincidence it was Colon prominent in leading the way. The 6-foot-3, 315-pounder was often out in front of Jonathan Dwyer, pulling to his right side to seal off holes.

Those were the kind of visions coach Mike Tomlin and his offensive staff had in the offseason when they decided to move Colon to the inside. The Hofstra graduate excels in aggressive, run-blocking situations.

His “nasty” — a term several teammates affectionately use to describe Colon — mentality also is a better fit at guard, where huge defensive tackles sometimes do some not-so-kind things.

Colon had “not too many, but too many for me” dreadlocks pulled out by an unidentified Bengals lineman Sunday. “I have a feeling who did it,” Colon said with a sly smile, adding that it left him angry and in a better mindset to do his work.

Colon said the hair-pulling happened during the same drive as his after-the-play pancake of Burfict that had Colon appearing to try to bury the linebacker into the Paul Brown Stadium artificial turf.

Controlled violence, remember?

“Willie, he’s one guy you don’t want to mess with when he’s locked in,” Pouncey said. “The energy he brings, the leadership role that he plays is awesome.”