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Scout's view: Why Kenny Pickett isn't 'the guy' for Steelers
Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Kenny Pickett. Troy Taormina-USA TODAY Sports

Scout's view: Why QB Kenny Pickett isn't 'the guy' for Steelers

Daniel Kelly spent four years in pro scouting with the New York Jets. He is the published author of the book "Whatever It Takes," the story of a fan making it into the NFL.

Much of the blame for Pittsburgh's woes is attributed to offensive coordinator Matt Canada, but there's only so much Canada can do with Kenny Pickett at quarterback. 

I put a fifth-round grade on Pickett, the Steelers' 2022 first-round pick, after evaluating his 2021 film at Pitt against Western Michigan, Georgia Tech and Clemson. Pickett appeared uncomfortable in the pocket — he almost looked spooked. I also didn't like his downfield ball placement. 

Then, 56 days before the draft, concerning intel came out from ESPN: "Pickett's right hand was measured at 8 1/2 inches, which would be the smallest of any quarterback currently in the NFL."

This was alarming given the size of a regulation NFL football is larger than the ones used in college, as wide receiver Ja'Marr Chase said on Bengals.com, "The ball is different because it is bigger." 

Pickett threw seven touchdown passes and nine interceptions during his rookie season. In 2023, he has thrown five touchdown passes and four interceptions in games against San Francisco (Sept. 10), Cleveland (Sept. 18), Las Vegas (Sept. 24), Houston (Oct. 1) and Baltimore (Oct. 8).

It could've been worse. I charted 12 additional disrupted passes in these games (three against the 49ers, Browns and Raiders were sure interceptions dropped by defenders). 

The game film this season revealed three problematic areas in Pickett's performances: 

1. Inconsistent mechanics in the pocket 

Pickett is best throwing from a clean pocket when he can drive the ball into the intermediate-route level (11-19 yards) or launch it deep. However, those ideal throwing conditions don't often exist. Downfield inaccuracy (59.7% completion percentage overall) begins when he throws off his back foot or doesn't set his feet. There are also times he lacks spatial pocket awareness and releases with pass-rushers being too close to him, which clouds his line of vision. 

2. Pre-occupied with the pass rush

The more Pickett "hears footsteps" closing in, the less he maintains his focus on making downfield reads and throws. At times, he bails out and escapes, but more often he easily submits to the will of pass-rushers and folds. Pickett is tied for the ninth-most sacked QB in the league (14 sacks), per StatMuse. 

3. Poor decision-making

Pickett has regular momentary lapses of judgment when he noticeably panics and becomes flustered —  moments he really presses his throws or makes impulsive and bad decisions. 

It's gotten to the point where television announcers openly questioned Pickett's decision-making in the 49ers and Texans games. On "Monday Night Football" against the Browns, commentator and Hall of Fame QB Troy Aikman noted an especially bad interception. 

"Kenny Pickett he comes back and never looks to see where [Grant] Delpit is or what he's doing," Aikman said, "and so he gets a clean break on the ball, and that's what plagued Kenny Pickett last week, it's where he has struggled is from the pocket." 

Bottom line

Pickett is a classic example of a team falling in love with one big season of college production but failing to consider the prospect's full body of work. Interestingly, Pickett's career with the Steelers more resembles the Pickett of 2017-2020 at Pitt, when he threw 39 touchdowns and 25 interceptions, than the Pickett of 2021 who logged 42 touchdown passes against seven interceptions. 

While he does make a "wow" pass every now and then —  see the 41-yard game-winner above to George Pickens against the Ravens —  those kinds of throws don't show up nearly enough on film. Pickett clearly is not the QB to lead the Steelers back to the Super Bowl.

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