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Golson expects to live up to promise

By Jim Wexell for The 4 min read
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PITTSBURGH — Senquez Golson feels good.

During the rare times that he plays.

Not that heĢƵ completely off the Steelers’ radar, but he is — at second-team nickel, or No. 6 if you’re counting individual cornerbacks — lower on the depth chart than perhaps at any point in his playing career since his first week at Ole Miss.

Even that year, Golson went on to play all 12 games with four starts.

Golson would take that in a minute this year, and then get on his knees and thank God in the next, because right now heĢƵ buried and pretty much forgotten. Not that he didn’t see it coming.

GM Kevin Colbert said in February, after Golson concluded his second consecutive season on Injured Reserve, that the Steelers weren’t going to depend on their 2015 second-round draft pick this year. As Colbert put it, “any time a defensive back … gets a foot injury, you’re a little concerned. Does he go from a 4.4 to a 4.45, or a 4.5? We won’t know that until we see him out there, so I’m a little more apprehensive.”

After three OTA practices, Golson said heĢƵ feeling “pretty much 100 percent ready to go” following his recovery from a Lisfranc injury — suffered the first week of last yearĢƵ training camp — that wiped out his 2016 season. His 2015 season was wiped out by a shoulder injury suffered in the spring.

Does he still consider himself a rookie? Or a third-year veteran?

“I don’t even know,” Golson said with a laugh. “I’m just blessed to be here and happy to be back out here.”

Golson does feel blessed. ThatĢƵ why heĢƵ not worrying about the extraeneous details a group of reporters seemed most interested in the other day.

For the record, heĢƵ up 12 pounds to 188, doesn’t feel heĢƵ lost any quickness or agility, is No. 6 behind the starting three from last year, free agent Coty Sensabaugh and third-year newcomer and street free agent Greg Ducre, and is working second in the slot behind 32-year-old Will Gay.

But that only means Golson could skyrocket into the starting nickel lineup at any time, as long as he stays healthy.

To that end, fingers are crossed.

“I don’t really get into the whole ‘I’m forgotten’ thing,” Golson said. “I’m just all about producing, playing.”

Does anyone on the staff talk to him about the future? Is he thick in their plans?

“I don’t think we have too much conversation,” he said. “In my mind, if I produce, I play.”

And thereĢƵ time.

Golson was an outside zone corner at Ole Miss, where he intercepted 10 passes as a senior and 16 over four years. Injuries derailed his career, even though there was hope he could return in the middle of last season.

The Steelers had kept a roster spot open for him, but the plan was scuttled Oct. 8 when the Steelers had a numbers crunch and couldn’t afford the roster luxury. They put him on IR. He said he couldn’t have played later anyway.

“Me and the screws just disagreed,” he explained. “I got the (two) screws taken out. No metal in me now.”

Late last season, Golson began running. It lasted for three weeks as the screws pinched every time he cut. They were taken out the day after the Super Bowl and Golson said he “felt instant relief.”

He did experience some discomfort a few weeks ago but said heĢƵ full speed now.

“There was general soreness,” he said of his early workouts. “But at this point I’m ready to go.”

Does he understand his place deep down on the depth chart?

“Yeah. ItĢƵ the reality,” he said. “Just like if any other guy missed two years, thatĢƵ the reality of it. I just gotta do what I gotta do.”

Can an outside zone corner become an inside slot with the increased man-to-man coverage duties that both Mike Tomlin and Carnell Lake are expecting this season?

“ThatĢƵ definitely the plan,” Golson said. “But it won’t make a difference to me where I line up. I can play inside or out, zone or man.”

And, finally, can he fulfill the high hopes the Steelers once had in him as their second-round pick?

“Yeah,” Golson said. “Healthy, I’m still the same guy they drafted. ThatĢƵ just what I think.”

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