NFL:Tomlin blends qualities of predecessors

Published 12:00 am Tuesday, January 20, 2009

By Alan Robinson
Associated PressPITTSBURGH ó Only a few minutes after the Pittsburgh Steelers won the AFC championship game, coach Mike Tomlin pondered the question he knows will be asked a lot going into the Super Bowl.
What will it be like coaching against the man you beat out for the Steelers’ job, Arizona’s Ken Whisenhunt?
Tomlin sidestepped the query as skillfully as Troy Polamalu dodged Ravens defenders on his interception return that sealed the Steelers’ 23-14 victory Sunday night, sending them to the Super Bowl for the second time in four seasons.
“I am just enjoying the moment right now ó you won’t let me, though,” Tomlin said with a hint of a smile. “I will have more thoughts on that later.”
Imagine that: Mike Tomlin asking for time. He certainly hasn’t needed much in a coaching career that began with him serving as an assistant to current West Virginia coach Bill Stewart at VMI in 1995 ó the same year Bill Cowher took the Steelers to the Super Bowl ó and has rapidly ascended since.
Now that Pittsburgh is headed to its seventh Super Bowl, each of the Steelers’ three coaches in the last 40 years has taken them there.
Chuck Noll first got there in his sixth season in 1974, Cowher in his fourth. Tomlin needed only two years after unexpectedly being hired for one of the best-known coaching jobs in American pro sports, yet those who know him aren’t surprised in the least it happened so soon.
If the Steelers win, Tomlin ó at age 36 ó would be the youngest Super Bowl-winning coach. Still, Tomlin is as much an old-school coach like Noll as he is a contemporary coach like Cowher, who was also in his mid-30s when Pittsburgh hired him in 1992.
“He’s doing a great job,” Steelers owner Dan Rooney said. “He did everything perfect since he’s been here.”
Tomlin demands his players be on time for everything ó an 8 p.m. meeting means 7:58 p.m. He allows coordinators Bruce Arians and Dick LeBeau the freedom to coach without meddling, yet has his hand in everything the Steelers do.
He laughs and jokes with his players, as Cowher did, but he can show as stern a face as Noll ever did. Tomlin’s mentor was former Colts coach Tony Dungy, who became the NFL’s youngest coordinator at age 28 ó in Pittsburgh, under Noll.
“Last year Coach Tomlin came in and really set the laws down,” receiver Hines Ward said. “A lot of the guys were set in coach Cowher’s ways. He was very strict on his rules. Now, he has a year under his belt to let guys know that this is his team and this is how he wants things run around here. He understands what players need to be pushed, what players need to take time off to be fresh.”
Tomlin’s two-season record is 24-11, compared to Cowher’s 20-14 and Noll’s 6-22, though neither of them inherited a team that was one year removed from the Super Bowl.
“Coach Tomlin, as a new guy coming in, brings a lot of energy and excitement,” QB Ben Roethlisberger said. “It’s really been fun.”