— Tribune-ReviewSports (@TribSports) October 8, 2017
Dupree has 141⁄2 sacks in 38 games since he was a first-round pick in 2015. He has been an every-down player over the past 11⁄2 seasons when healthy, but to mixed reviews. Pro Football Focus, for example, rated Dupree 98th among 106 NFL edge rushers in 2017. So exercising the fifth-year option on Dupree was no slam dunk. Two years prior, for example, the Steelers declined the fifth-year option on 2013 first-round pick Jarvis Jones, who played the same position. Under the NFL/NFLPA collective bargaining agreement, first-round picks sign four-year contracts with a fifth-year team option (guaranteed only for injury) at a significant raise to be exercised by the spring before the player's fourth season. Even Dupree expressed apprehension that the Steelers would commit to him for a fifth season after he had been OK-but-not-great over his first three seasons. "It's definitely on my mind," Dupree said in January, the day after the AFC divisional round loss to Jacksonville. That's what made the Steelers' April 23 decision such a relief to Dupree, who had not been available to the media until Tuesday. "Definitely, it was good to know they see on film what I can do, and they know me personally and how hard I work," said Dupree, who will make almost $1.7 million in 2018 on the final season of his rookie contract. "It's great to know that they believe in me." Just 25 years old, Dupree suddenly has become the most tenured NFL player among the Steelers' outside linebackers. Including the inside linebackers, only Vince Williams has a longer tenure with the Steelers among the 13 linebackers on the camp roster. "I'm not a rookie anymore," Dupree said. "I know I have to be somebody guys can look up to." During 11-on-11 drills while the first-team defense was on the field Tuesday, Dupree was on the right side instead of the left side he has rushed from most of his career. He said that is not necessarily a sign of things to come, though. "It's just, we are going to be playing both sides, so we've just got to get used to work on both sides and now is the perfect time right now to go on the side you (aren't typically) on and just fine-tune your skills," he said. "When training camp comes around, season comes around, you know at some point you will be asked to move around. "(But) in the games, I probably still will be left. It's just a matter of being able to play left and right instead of being stagnant running the same thing." Chris Adamski is a Tribune-Review staff writer. Reach him at cadamski@tribweb.com or via Twitter @C_AdamskiTrib.Copyright ©2025— Trib Total Media, LLC (TribLIVE.com)