New padded robots operated by remote control are being used by the Pittsburgh Steelers in off-season workouts with more available to NFL teams next year if experimental tests work out.
The mobile virtual player (MVP) — dummies on wheels that can weave, change direction, speed up and stop — are being used as far more than simulated tackling surrogates by Steelers coach Mike Tomlin, who has them testing receivers and rushers in training sessions.
“It’s an awesome piece of football technology,” Tomlin said in a posting on the club’s Web site. “I am always interested in ways to utilize technology in terms of teaching football. We are excited to get a close look at it.”
Photo: AP
The MVP was developed and first used at Dartmouth College and is quickly helping the Steelers hone their skills without man-on-man drills. Now it is man-on-machine.
“The applications we are quickly finding are endless,” Tomlin said. “It never gets tired. It runs at an appropriate football speed. All of the position groups are getting an opportunity to use it. It’s funny. You just put it on the field and watch the guys and they show you the applications. It has been fun watching that.”
The version remains in the test phase after Tomlin was attracted to it a year ago, opening dialogue with Dartmouth through Danny Rooney, a Steelers’ staff member who played football at Dartmouth.
“Players are generally open, particularly this time of year, to new things,” Tomlin said. “We always try to challenge them with some new tool that will help them grow and develop, and they are always looking for new tools to help them grow and develop. I think they are excited. I imagine it’s a great tool from a tackling tech standpoint. In today’s NFL, with player safety the focus that it is, I think it’s going to provide opportunities to improve in that area without the man-to-man combat associated with that teaching.”
Defensive end Stephon Tuitt was quoted on the Steelers’ Web site as saying it is a “pretty neat contraption.”
“Being able to chase it opens our mind and opens us a little bit,” he said. “It’s faster than we think, faster than it looks. You realize it’s fast when you have to catch up to it. You have to keep running. It’s a good visual effect of how a running back or receiver catches the ball on the sidelines to give us a pursuit and open us up and give us an angle to the ball.”
Additional reporting by staff writer
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