Jonnu Smith vs. Juan Thornhill fight video from Steelers practice surfaces

Mike Moraitis

Jonnu Smith vs. Juan Thornhill fight video from Steelers practice surfaces image

Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

The Pittsburgh Steelers had quite the chippy practice on Thursday afternoon, with several fights breaking out over the course of the day.

Two of the most notable ones were between tight end Jonnu Smith and safety Juan Thornhill, and wide receiver DK Metcalf and safety Chuck Clark.

The fight between Metcalf and Clark saw punches thrown, according to Brian Batko of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, but we couldn't find any video.

We did find some video of the scuffle between Smith and Thornhill, which came after Smith beat the veteran safety for a reception before throwing the ball at Thornhill.

You can see Thornhill immediately charge Smith after that, and the two got tangled up and Smith ripped Thornhill's helmet off.

Here's the video of the Smith vs. Thornhill fight, courtesy of Steelers Update on X.

Both Smith and Thornhill are in their first seasons with the Steelers. Thornhill was acquired via free agency, while Smith came over in the trade with the Miami Dolphins, which also brought cornerback Jalen Ramsey.

Speaking of Ramsey, he also got into it with a teammate, wide receiver Roc Taylor, who was sticking up for his teammate, fellow wideout Calvin Austin.

"Jalen Ramsey and Calvin Austin went against each other in a rematch of a one-on-one release drill," Pryor wrote. "Ramsey forced Austin out to win the rep and immediately started chirping.

"WR Roc Taylor took exception to Ramsey’s trash talk and the two ended up toe-to-toe. Wilson de-escalated."

Training camp fights certainly aren't unusual, but the hope is that they don't keep happening. We'll see if things cool down the next time the Steelers are on the practice field.

Mike Moraitis

Mike Moraitis is a freelance writer who covers the NFL for the Sporting News. Over his nearly two decades covering sports, Mike has also worked for Bleacher Report, USA TODAY and FanSided. He hates writing in the third person.