Eli Heidenreich enters Steelers camp with more going for him than the usual late-round flyer.
The Pittsburgh seventh-round pick is already a familiar name around town thanks to his days at Mt. Lebanon High School, but the local angle only tells part of the story. At 22, Heidenreich has a real path to sticking around, even if the more likely short-term outcome is a spot on the practice squad rather than an immediate place on the 53-man roster.
What gives him a chance is the kind of versatility teams always chase and rarely find in a rookie who comes this late in the draft. Heidenreich can work out of the backfield and line up as a receiver, which makes him a legitimate option for the bottom of the roster as Mike McCarthy’s offense takes shape.
Heidenreich may not be on a Christian McCaffrey track, despite what some have suggested, but there is a more realistic NFL blueprint worth watching. Former Cincinnati Bengals and New England Patriots running back Rex Burkhead fits that mold better. Like Heidenreich, Burkhead was a highly productive college player, with Nebraska serving as the center of his offense the way Navy did for Heidenreich over the past two seasons.
Burkhead’s NFL career showed how that kind of versatility can pay off. He ran for at least 250 yards in five different seasons, including a career-high 427 yards in 2021. He also carved out a role as a dependable receiving back, finishing seven seasons with more than 150 receiving yards and reaching 200 yards three times.
That’s the lane Heidenreich needs to find. The best-case version is a player who can threaten defenses in multiple ways, just as he did at Navy.
But the concern is clear: his running ability may be the part of his game that translates most naturally to the NFL. Because of his size and shorter reach, his ceiling as a pure receiver looks limited.
As a pass-catching back, though, he can still get the ball in space and make things happen.
Pittsburgh is not going to build an offense around him the way Navy did. He would need a much bigger share of the rushing and receiving work to recreate that kind of production, and he has not earned that kind of role yet. He could easily disappear into the background as a rookie, but the Steelers are hoping his long-term value grows from there.
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There is still plenty for Allar to absorb, but the early signs are encouraging for a team that is always looking for stability behind center. He also sounds eager to learn from Aaron Rodgers, a veteran whose own background in a similar system could make the pairing especially useful as Allar tries to get up to speed and carve out his place in the Steelers quarterback room. [Read more 🡒]
