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Damoun Patterson: Man on a Mission

By Jim Wexell for The 6 min read
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LATROBE — It came begrudgingly, but Mike Tomlin did admit that wide receiver Damoun Patterson “made some plays” in the Steelers’ preseason opener.

Just don’t tell Tomlin that Patterson has had a good camp.

“YOU said good camp,” Tomlin repeated in correcting his post-game questioner.

It inferred that Tomlin did not say that, would not say that, WILL not say that.

After all, Patterson is a rookie.

But if thereĢƵ one rookie who won’t get a big head, itĢƵ Patterson. HeĢƵ gone through way too much to ever worry about coachly semantics. Just consider his odyssey:

n Born in Apopka, Florida, near Orlando, Patterson, one of nine children, spent much of his childhood seeking shelter.

“We went from hotel to hotel, moving every year,” said Patterson. “I never stayed in the same school district. I was either staying with family, staying with my mom. Then my junior year I stayed with family a little bit. When it was time to graduate I stayed with friends until I graduated high school.”

He was homeless. After two years at Edgewater High, Patterson graduated from Wekiva High. But recruiters weren’t banging on his door.

n Utah State showed interest, but Patterson didn’t have the grades and enrolled in a prep school in New Mexico.

New Mexico?

“One of my high school teammates found out about it and told me,” Patterson said. “I didn’t have no other options, so I decided to go there.”

n Patterson remained in touch with the receivers coach at Utah State and sent film from prep school. He was told he could walk on in 2014.

Patterson started three games, caught two passes, made six tackles on special teams, but at the end of the season was asked to attend a junior college to get his academics in order.

n Back to Florida, Patterson survived by his wits, sometimes living in his car, until he heard from one of his prep-school teammates that Highland Junior College in Kansas had a scholarship available. So he was off to the northeast tip of Kansas, bordering Nebraska, and caught 25 passes for 437 yards, an average of 17.5 yards per catch.

n Youngstown State, possibly through coach Bo PeliniĢƵ network in Nebraska, heard of Patterson and the receiver finally was awarded a scholarship. At long last, someone really wanted Damoun Patterson.

“I loved it,” he said of Youngstown, Ohio. “I loved playing for Bo Pelini. ItĢƵ similar to this area. Not too much difference. And I came right down the road, 45 minutes away from Pittsburgh.”

At YSU, Patterson didn’t catch as many balls as his current camp production might indicate. In two seasons at YSU, he caught 52 passes for 1,039 yards (20.0 ypc) and six touchdowns.

Did Pelini run the triple option or something?

“Nah,” Patterson said. “We just fed our running back the pill a whole lot.”

Patterson also in those two seasons made 17 special teams tackles, an important skill for someone trying to make an NFL team as a fifth or sixth reciever.

“I love special teams,” he said. “Gunner and kickoff, I love it man. I love going down there. You get to show more speed and you don’t have to worry about a ball or adjusting to a ball.”

Still, it didn’t add up to a “W” for Patterson, who wasn’t drafted, nor was he signed until the draft was two weeks old. That, he said, may have been due to the media reporting he had signed with the Atlanta Falcons immediately after the draft.

But the deal had never been consummated. It was yet another shattered dream for an athlete who in second grade wrote an essay about one day playing for the Falcons, his favorite team.

“My grandma still has it,” Patterson said of the essay. “I was going to put it out if it did go through, but things didn’t work out.”

Patterson still refused to quit. His agent arranged for him to attend the Steelers’ rookie mini-camp on a tryout basis. And, he made it. Patterson was wanted once again.

“I don’t know how to give up,” he said. “I just keep going.”

Patterson spent the rest of the spring working with the Steelers, but didn’t stand out until the pads came on here at Saint Vincent College. Timed at 4.50 at his pro day, Patterson has routinely looked faster in getting behind the Steelers’ secondary.

“Man, don’t believe it,” he said of the 40 time listed under his name at NFLDraftScout.com. “I’m way faster than that. That was at pro day. When I was doing my pro day training I got down in the 4.3s. … I’m not sure how accurate any of those numbers are.”

The site also lists the 6-½, 192-pounder as having a vertical jump of 32½ inches. But, Patterson appeared to clear that number easily with an eye-popping backflip after his eye-popping touchdown catch in last ThursdayĢƵ preseason win.

Patterson snared a 29-yard laser from Joshua Dobbs for the score with 18 seconds left in the first half after beating Rasul Douglas on a post to the end zone. The backflip was unplanned.

“He made a heck of a catch,” said Dobbs. “HeĢƵ been doing that all camp, so I have a lot of trust in him. Before the game, this was his first game, so I was just telling him to take it one play at a time, and I’m coming to you so be ready when the ball is thrown. And he definitely was. He made a great play in the back of the end zone.”

Dobbs provided the following report on the 23-year-old from Apopka:

“Good consistency. ThatĢƵ what heĢƵ been doing throughout camp. He consistently runs by guys. HeĢƵ quick in and out of his breaks. Makes the contested catch. ThatĢƵ what heĢƵ able to take to the field. It was cool to see that, especially from a quarterback, to grow that chemistry and that connection from OTAs, to see him take it on to the field once game day came. Hopefully, he’ll continue to grow throughout the preseason.”

Patterson has passed every test, but the next will be playing against an NFL defense that knows heĢƵ coming, that No. 83 isn’t just PittsburghĢƵ camp fodder.

ThatĢƵ how his signing appeared to be intended, but with two small kids and a third on the way, Patterson has good reason to make it in professional football.

“I talk about my kids all the time. ThatĢƵ a big thing for me,” he said. “ItĢƵ a whole lotta want-to in there. ItĢƵ a reason why.”

ItĢƵ the reason behind an odyssey thatĢƵ included enough setbacks to make most mortals call it quits.

“I’m on a mission,” he said. “I’m a man on a mission, so I didn’t really think too much about those setbacks. They were just reasons for me to grow.”

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