Respect for Revis remains high with Steelers
PITTSBURGH — Despite what one of the best nicknames in sports suggests, no man is an island. Not even Darrelle Revis.
The Aliquippa great is 31 years old these days, a young man in almost any other profession but his chosen one: NFL cornerback for the New York Jets, a most unforgiving position in the most unforgiving media market in the world.
For a decade, Revis has dazzled on the field with his otherworldly ball skills and ability to frustrate the leagueĢƵ finest receivers at the line of scrimmage. HeĢƵ been the last of a dying breed, a shutdown corner in the truest sense: A defensive back who follows the opponents’ top receiver everywhere on the field, daring quarterbacks to throw his way while effectively taking away one side of the field. ItĢƵ a position that demands near-perfection at the risk of embarrassment.
Among the Steelers’ cornerbacks, Revis’ game film is legend. Artie Burns, the 25th overall pick in this yearĢƵ draft, says he grew up studying Revis’ technique and tendencies.
“His press coverage, how good he is at covering receivers and shadowing them and being aggressive on them at the top of his routes and then coming down on run support,” Burns said of what stood out.
Will Gay, the Steelers’ veteran cornerback and his New York counterpart, are kindred spirits of sorts. Both entered the league in 2007 — Revis the 14th overall draft pick and Gay the 170th — way back when defensive backs still had a fighting chance against increasingly complicated schemes and rules that didn’t favor offenses so heavily.
“I might be biased, but we have the hardest position other than quarterback on the field, and for somebody to master it for a long time, is crazy,” Gay said. “It makes him unique. I think we’ve been in the league 10 years so far, and heĢƵ got seven Pro Bowls. You’re on top of the world like that and the top of the position, especially at what we do. That makes him unique and special.”
These days, however, Revis Island has been taking on water, drowning in criticism over the Jets’ 1-3 record which threatens to get even worse after todayĢƵ game against the Steelers and their high-powered offense. Revis, who suffered a “mild” hamstring injury last week, hasn’t practiced this week and is a game-time decision.
Along with Ryan Fitzpatrick and his 10 interceptions, Revis has been hammered by the media.
A screaming headline in one of the Big AppleĢƵ tabloids called Revis this week “the most overpaid underachiever in the NFL right now.”
Ouch.
After winning a Super Bowl with New England two years ago and re-signing with the Jets for five years and $70.1 million ($39 million guaranteed), Revis’ second run on Broadway hasn’t gone exactly according to script.
After recording five interceptions in 2015 and just missing out on the playoffs with a 10-6 record, he has no interceptions, no passes defensed and opponents are completing 81 percent of passes thrown his way this year, according to Pro Football Focus. Somewhat understandably, Revis was burned badly by CincinnatiĢƵ A.J. Green for 180 yards in Week 1. Less understandably, he was scorched by BuffaloĢƵ Marquise Goodwin for an 84-yard touchdown on the Bills’ third play from scrimmage five days later in a nationally-televised Thursday night game.
”That was just good football plays by the other guys,” said Jets coach Todd Bowles. “For the most part, heĢƵ been normal. HeĢƵ a little nicked up now, but we’ll get him back to normal.”
Gay only nods his head when he hears the criticism thatĢƵ been lobbed Revis’ way of late.
“Man, thereĢƵ always excuses that people are going to make up any time you play,” Gay said. “You can slip and they’ll be like ‘you’re getting too old.’ We play the hardest position and you get critiqued when you’re doing good or doing bad.
“I know me, probably the same for him, he can care less what people are saying as long as heĢƵ still doing his job and making plays and doing the necessary things for his team to win. ThatĢƵ all that matters.”
The game has fundamentally changed since ’07 and Revis has had to adapt along with it. This season Revis has been both matched up one-on-one and played just the left side. If he plays today and if heĢƵ matched up against Steelers All-Pro receiver Antonio Brown, he’ll almost certainly require safety help over the top.
He may have lost a step, age catches up with everyone eventually, but Revis says he thinks the game better now than in 2009 or ’10 at his dizzying height, when he led the Jets to consecutive appearances in the AFC championship game.
“Every year, just getting smarter and smarter at the position and just film study, the preparation on a week-to-week basis of going against the best receivers in the league,” Revis told Pittsburgh reporters this week. “ItĢƵ definitely a lot of work put into it, but at the same time it helps you be a student of the game. It makes you smarter and more savvy out there on the field.”
Five years after he hangs up his cleats for good, a spot in Canton surely awaits Revis. The question is when that might be. Listening to Revis, it doesn’t sound like it’ll be anytime soon. He is, after all, a student of the game and a game he still loves.
Revis, arguably the best cornerback since Deion Sanders, doesn’t rule out making the switch to safety, a move many a defensive back has made in order to extend their careers.
“ThatĢƵ always in consideration,” Revis said. “A lot of the greats have done it in the past — the Charles Woodsons, the Rod Woodsons. Yes, itĢƵ definitely something I’m sure thatĢƵ presented to (the Jets), as well as itĢƵ probably been presented to me as well as down the line here. ItĢƵ something if I can still be effective in helping the team win but also playing a game I love is the key.”
Revis might be an island but doesn’t live in a bubble. Obviously, heĢƵ well aware of the criticism that comes in New York with his play and his hefty contract, which runs through 2019 when he’ll be 34.
A lot can change between now and then. Revis doesn’t pretend to know what may happen.
“I can’t predict my future,” Revis said. “Only thing I can do is control the day by day and the week by week.”