Steelers defense look to fix communication issues
LATROBE — Sean Davis barked out calls as the new free safety in the Steelers’ first practice of training camp Thursday.
ThatĢƵ just one fix to an overall defensive problem of communication issues that dogged the Steelers last season, particularly after Ryan Shazier went down with an injury.
Shazier won’t return this season, but the hope is that a semblance of group intelligence will.
Just how does a team practice to improve its communication?
“By just rolling the ball out and doing just that,” said Mike Tomlin. “Not taking anything for granted, general fundamental communication things that happen pre-snap, things that happen post-play, the quick reviews of route concepts or gap responsibility in the run game. All really good defenses do a good job of that, whether itĢƵ in pre-play or in the review fashion post-play.”
The Steelers were a mess defensively after Shazier went down, and it wasn’t just the secondary, where former strong safety Davis has been moved to the more leadership-oriented free safety spot and Morgan Burnett was signed to play strong safety.
The Steelers are also working free agent Jon Bostic in at linebacker. On Thursday he rotated in the base with Tyler Matakevich and replaced him on most snaps in the nickel alignment next to Vince Williams.
No, the problems were in both the pass game and the run game, where the Steelers had their worst yield per carry since 1954.
“RyanĢƵ our signal-caller,” said defensive tackle Cam Heyward. “So everybody has to be a little bit more communicative now. No one can replace the instincts he has, but that means we have to be more sound as a defense. We can’t take as many risks. Ryan could be a riskier player because heĢƵ so fast and plays off of instincts.”
Heyward said too much was taken for granted with Shazier running the defense, since “we never planned for him not to be there.” Heyward said that a full offseason of work and the acquisition of Burnett and Bostic, as well as first-round draft pick Terrell Edmunds, a linebacker-like strong safety, should help.
“I’ve seen it done before,” Heyward said. “I’ve been on a team where there were all veterans and I was a young guy, and I saw what those guys did, the work they put in. WhoĢƵ to say we can’t?”
Joe Haden, a quarterback type at cornerback, will help improve the issues, too, since heĢƵ in his first training camp with the Steelers after being signed late last August.
“We want to over-communicate,” Haden said. “We want to make sure both of us (cornerbacks) are on the same page with Sean, with Morgan, with E-man. So I think what we need to do is just make sure that we always communicate and make sure we’re always on the same page, and with that we should be good.”
Haden pointed to the playoff loss to Jacksonville for the primary examples of last yearĢƵ problems.
“There were a couple times that people were just running free,” he said. “Switches that we weren’t switching on, stuff like that. We have the ability, we have the players, but we’ve just got to be on the same page and make sure everyoneĢƵ covering their man.
“There were a couple under routes when the tight end was coming out, and then on the big post at the end with Artie, we had the safety cut it. That means that I’ve got to go high as a single-high safety, so I felt I could’ve been there to help Artie on that play. Just certain little things that we weren’t doing and we kind of shot ourself.”
The additions will help. Putting in the work without Shazier as a safety net will help, too. The move of Davis to free safety will provide better range in center field, but Tomlin cautioned against expecting too much out of the move.
“The safety position in the National Football League today is really kind of interchangeable,” he said. “Your perceptions of free and strong in the traditional sense aren’t necessarily what itĢƵ been. You’ve got to be able to do it all in todayĢƵ NFL at the safety position: cover, play half-field, play single-high. ItĢƵ not that drastic of a transition to be honest with you.”
But the new free safety will have to communicate — or as Haden said — over-communicate.