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Bradley assessing, molding Steelers secondary

By Jim Wexell for The 8 min read
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Associated Press

Defensive backs coach Tom Bradley grabs the ball from cornerback Brian Allen (29) before a drill during training camp at Saint Vincent College in Latrobe.

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Associated Press

Tom Bradley

LATROBE — Tom Bradley spent 37 years coaching college football at Penn State, West Virginia and UCLA, and now heĢƵ in his first year coaching the NFL. HeĢƵ developed his skills as a teacher, fundamentalist, communicator and, as Mike Tomlin said, BradleyĢƵ bringing the cutting-edge college football knowledge to the team. HereĢƵ a Q&A with Bradley in which he discusses the talent with the Steelers.

TOM BRADLEY, Defensive Backs coach, Pittsburgh Steelers

Q: Do you have a No. 1 cornerback?

TB: Don’t treat them any different. We go with match-ups sometimes based on different size factors and different things, but yeah we don’t look at them that way. ThatĢƵ why we play them left and right. We don’t flip them to certain people.

Q: Ike Taylor has been that guy in the past.

TB: Sure. And we can do that. ThatĢƵ just a game-plan thing. If we wanted to do that, we could do it.

Q: Artie Burns is into his third year, former No. 1 pick, people grumbling about the one that beat him last playoff loss. Is Artie under the gun to make a big jump this season?

TB: I think he wants to make that big jump. You watch him play out here, much more confident, much more physical. He wants to do better. HeĢƵ coming into his third year. ItĢƵ his third go-around. I think you’ll see a lot better play out of Artie this year.

Q: And Joe Haden. HeĢƵ old. Got cut by the Browns. Joe can’t do this or that, but he didn’t look so old when he broke up that deep ball the other day to Antonio Brown, did he?

TB: JoeĢƵ a professional. JoeĢƵ about everything in his profession. He wants to learn, heĢƵ working, heĢƵ talking technique. ItĢƵ his ninth year or so in the league.

Q: Those Florida kids are already into their ninth season?

TB: HeĢƵ in his ninth season and heĢƵ still looking for better ways to play. HeĢƵ constantly asking questions, still working his craft. Just on the side yesterday after practice he talked about it, and heĢƵ talking with everybody about it. Everybody has good ideas. Coach Tomlin has a saying, ‘I don’t care where the good ideas come from because it doesn’t matter.’ But heĢƵ constantly trying to learn to get better and goes about his business in a very professional manner. You watch him in meetings, very attentive to every detail, over on the side understanding the importance of mental reps, trying to get whatĢƵ going on. At this point in your career, the one thing you want to do is be as smart as you possibly can be. They say youth is a disease that can be cured. And it happens. Now they get to that point where he can continue to understand that mentally we can get better and better by looking at all the little things.

Q: He wasn’t here last year. Being in this camp will mean a lot for Joe, won’t it?

TB: It is a big deal. I think itĢƵ his comfort level with his teammates, his players, with the communication, how people say things. I think my challenge in the spring was the way I used my terminology to get them to know what I’m saying, and I’ve got to get what they’re saying because sometimes we talk, not different languages, but the terms are different, so we’re all on the same page. ItĢƵ been a good give and take. Couple times I’ve said some things and they say, ‘Coach, what do you mean?’ And I got it. ThereĢƵ always going to be that verbiage thing we have to work through together.”

”ItĢƵ not a problem, itĢƵ just certain routes, what I call them and what they call them and getting on the same page.

Q: Terrell Edmunds made a great interception the other day, and it looked like he made a quantum jump in one day.

TB: That happens, his first day of camp, new setting, the drills, where heĢƵ going. You’ll still see that a lot. You’ll still see him getting better and better as he gets accustomed to not only his teammates but Saint Vincent College. ‘OK, we’re doing this next. This is how the practice works.’ He knows how Coach Tomlin is going to work things through practice. He’ll keep getting better and better. ItĢƵ his first time seeing things, the changes, the speedĢƵ a little different up here. The accuracy of the quarterbacks is a little different up here. HeĢƵ understanding as you ascend from college to the pros, in college you maybe could give up a 10-incher, five-incher. Now itĢƵ two inches. These quarterbacks, you think you’ve got them covered, and a guy like Ben will put it right on the ear and itĢƵ the only place you can’t get it. In college, you don’t see that every week. You see it sometimes but not as often as you see it with the quarterbacks and the throws. In this league they’re throwing to open. In college, a lot of times, they’re waiting to get open. Things are happening faster. It’ll slow down. We’re putting more in every day. The mind gets going. He has to transcend all of this information in his mind, get it right, and then play fast.

Q: You’re new and Sean Davis is your new free safety. HeĢƵ your guy out there. Is there a bond as you both come in new?

TB: No question. We talk about that a lot, him and I, of being that guy, and a lot of times we could in our scheme roll him down and let him go back to his comfort zone. We’re not letting him do that. I’m trying to let him make sure heĢƵ a free safety for right now. We can move Sean. He has the ability to make a lot of plays inside the box. He understands that. I’m making him play in that third and get used to it.

Q: Mike HiltonĢƵ obviously the nickel back. Do you have a dime back yet?

TB: (Chuckles) Everybody keeps bringing up the dime-backer. We’ll get to that eventually once we settle down our secondary and find out the guys we’re going to keep and then we’ll maneuver into that. But itĢƵ just one of those guys going in and playing the linebacker position. ItĢƵ been going on for years. We are very fortunate that we have the body types who can do that. We have guys who are bigger, so if itĢƵ a neutral third-down play, we have guys, littler guys, for third-and-8s. We can do a lot of different things on that end. The one thing that will start to happen, we’re moving guys to different positions and they’re learning things, so that gives us the versatility if things do come up. ItĢƵ not just teaching the corners this and the safeties that. ItĢƵ a group effort. Communication and the words, they mean something. As we get going, we’re making them work with different people and communicate with different people. Everybody sees that in their work, no matter what profession they’re in. It takes time to communicate properly to the new guy. It works out.

Q: Haha, sometimes, as you get to know new people better, you can tell them ‘OK, you’ve talked enough.’

TB: Well, you want to hear the chatter, you want the communication skills, you want to hear the verbiage out there. So Coach TomlinĢƵ on them; I’m on them. Football things, we’re trying to get them to constantly be talking. Good defenses talk. They always talk. Some guys talk all the time, which is fine, but I like to hear it. Chatter is good. It keeps people on their toes.

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