Longtime Pittsburgh Steelers defensive lineman and crew captain Cameron Heyward just lately campaigned for the membership to pay star pass-rusher T.J. Watt.
Not lengthy after Heyward supplied his feedback, the Steelers gave Watt a three-year, $123M deal that included $108M assured.
Throughout the newest version of the “Not Simply Soccer with Cam Heyward” podcast, the 36-year-old reacted to the Steelers locking Watt down earlier than the crew’s first apply of coaching camp.
“I feel it is undoubtedly a weight off our shoulders that we do not have to proceed to maintain speaking concerning the T.J. saga,” Heyward acknowledged, as shared by Josh Carney of Steelers Depot. “And it isn’t even T.J. induced. It is simply, media loves to speak about [Watt]. I like my dude, and we need to see him get his cash, however what number of extra questions can anyone reply about it?”
Watt definitely generated his justifiable share of headlines relating to his unsettled state of affairs, going again to when he instructed through a social-media put up in April that he was giving a “peace out” message to Pittsburgh followers. He later skipped obligatory minicamp practices when he may’ve relegated himself to particular person drills as a part of a June “hold-in.”
Watt doubtless feels that his ways helped him grow to be the brand new highest-paid non-quarterback in NFL historical past. Whether or not or not that’s the case, Heyward appears happy that everyone concerned can put conversations about Watt’s standing with the Steelers to mattress for the foreseeable future.
“I feel I used to be below the idea that it could get executed, that cooler heads would prevail,” Heyward added. “I do know everyone made an enormous deal about him throwing up the peace signal within the image he posted, and everyone went right into a whirlwind to, lastly, now we get an image of him simply screaming at a camera and we’re all good. So I feel everyone’s blissful now.”
As soon as the Steelers signed 41-year-old Aaron Rodgers to be their beginning quarterback in June, it turned a matter of when and never if Pittsburgh would give Watt hundreds of thousands of causes to need to stay with what’s been his solely NFL house since he entered the league through the 2017 draft.
A cheerful Watt will now look to assist Rodgers finish his profession “the right way” after the long run Corridor of Famer endured two tough years as a member of the New York Jets.