Coaches talk about Steelers’ defense
PITTSBURGH — Keith Butler wanted so badly to curse.
It was written all over the face of the Steelers’ defensive coordinator when he was asked if the playoff loss to Jacksonville has any bearing on how heĢƵ viewing his unit this spring.
Butler, though, showed restraint.
“Yeah,” he answered. “We’ve got to stop the freakin’ run. ThatĢƵ as simple as you can get.”
The Jaguars ended the Steelers’ worst statistical season against the run in 63 years with a 45-42 playoff win in which they rushed 35 times for 164 yards.
“You look at the whole last year, we missed a ton of tackles,” Butler said. “Number one, we’ve got to tackle. We’re going to work on tackling in training camp, try to improve it as much we can, and if we are able to tackle better, all that stuff is going to be cut down.”
Butler and his lieutenants then spent the rest of a rare interview period of Steelers assistant coaches Thursday discussing how they not only have been working on tackling — even in this pad-less spring — but how they’ll work on tackling when the team reports back to training camp on July 25.
But, as offensive coordinator Randy Fichtner told reporters during TuesdayĢƵ interview session with Steelers offensive coaches, itĢƵ all about talent and matchups in the NFL. So, with the defensive coaches guaranteeing a return to the fundamentals, letĢƵ take a deeper dive into the key personnel issue facing each of the following assistants:
KEITH BUTLER
“All right. What is it now?” Butler asked as a group of reporters gathered around him.
Those reporters had watched returning starter Vince Williams team with returning backup Tyler Matakevich to start at the all-important inside linebacker positions all spring. Butler was asked about that position first.
“Everybody looks good in shorts,” Butler started. “Kind of hard to say ‘we want this guy, we want that guy.’ I want to see somebody hit before I make a decision, and thatĢƵ not going to happen until we get to preseason. Maybe it will happen in training camp.”
Butler mentioned only one name.
“BosticĢƵ been doing a good job for us,” he said of free-agent acquisition Jon Bostic. “There are some details heĢƵ got to get a handle on a little bit and I think he’ll be pretty good for us.”
Bostic, 27, is coming off his best season as a pro. The former second-round draft pick was asked about those details.
“FootballĢƵ football,” said Bostic. “Picking things up has never been a problem for me. I pick things up really fast. At the end of the day, I ran it at some point in my life. We just have to figure out the terminology. We call it red here and green elsewhere. ItĢƵ just picking up terminology. But I feel like I’ve got all that stuff down. Now itĢƵ just learning the guys around me.”
Bostic went on to discuss the winning atmosphere heĢƵ found in his new locker room and among his new teammates, and would’ve gone on discussing TEAM had he not been interrupted with a question about earning a starting job at one of the inside linebacker spots.
“Oh, I know what I bring to the table. I really do,” Bostic said. “And, I think at the end of the day, when it turns out, I think I’m going to surprise a lot of people.”
JOEY PORTER
The two No. 1 draft picks under PorterĢƵ charge have flipped sides this season, with second-year man T.J. Watt flopping to left outside linebacker and fourth-year man Bud Dupree moving to the quarterbackĢƵ blind side.
“With Bud,” Porter explained, “we just thought it was a good opportunity for him to get a chance to rush from the other side. I feel like he had a lot of good rushes from the left side but the quarterback would see him and he would miss more opportunities. So putting him on the blind side and giving him an opportunity to have a good rush without the quarterback seeing him, and see how that works out. So far, so good.”
Porter said of Watt that “T.J. was a left-side rusher from the beginning, so he actually loves the left side, so hopefully that works out for him also.”
Behind the starters are Anthony Chickillo and Keion Adams, along with an undrafted rookie — Ola Adeniyi — who was blowing as much up Wednesday as is possible without pads. More on the pass-rusher out of Toledo to come.
TOM BRADLEY
The long-time Penn State defensive assistant discussed at length how he was going to improve the tackling in the secondary, as well as the communication required for all of the man defense they’ve been playing.
But, again, the talent is what matters, and BradleyĢƵ been handed a group thatĢƵ as deep as any the Steelers have had since their last championship. The cherry on top, the Steelers hope, is their most recent first-round pick, Terrell Edmunds.
“We were sitting and talking,” Bradley said of Edmunds, “I said, ‘HowĢƵ it going?’ And he said itĢƵ starting to slow down a little bit. Because his head spins. We put a lot of stuff in during the camp. It isn’t like college where itĢƵ a couple today, a couple tomorrow. ThereĢƵ a lot being thrown at them early. Now, the older guys have a basis so itĢƵ not a big deal for them. But he has no basis. Every callĢƵ new. Every defense, the wording of itĢƵ new. In his mind heĢƵ got to correlate it with things he knows. But now itĢƵ starting to fall into place.”
Edmunds is doing it with the help of savvy veterans Morgan Burnett and Joe Haden. The 29-year-olds were drafted by other teams in 2010, but have joined the Steelers within the last 10 months and already are team leaders.
“Joe and Morgan have been great with keeping everybody on the same page,” Bradley said. “They say ‘Coach when you say that, what do you mean?’ I tell them and they say, ‘OK this is what we got.’ And everybody works it through. ThatĢƵ great to have those guys.
“ItĢƵ interesting, since they’re true pros, to watch them every day. I don’t think a day goes by MorganĢƵ not taking notes. HeĢƵ a very conscientious guy. They’re both proĢƵ pros. They’re in there early, they’re working hard. Fundamentally they don’t have all the answers, so they’re trying to get better, too.”
One disappointment for Bradley has been a nagging hamstring injury thatĢƵ kept fifth-round safety Marcus Allen out of team drills all spring.
“We haven’t had him since the second day of rookie (camp), so heĢƵ missed a lot of work here,” Bradley said. “HeĢƵ in the meetings, but there isn’t anything quite like the experience of actually being able to do it, so itĢƵ a setback to him right now.”
JERRY OLSAVSKY
The inside linebackers coach is enjoying the spring turned in by Matakevich, who, of the two starters, has shown the most range in coverage. Olsavsky said the third-year man has turned it up this week in particular.
“Maybe it was the first day of minicamp,” said Olsavsky. “Maybe because he was playing against Ben (Roethlisberger). I don’t know what it was, but I’m glad he had it.”
The top three ILBs are known, and last yearĢƵ No. 4, L.J. Fort, enjoyed a spectacular Wednesday alongside Bostic on the second team. Undrafted rookie Matthew Thomas continues to receive attention from the coaching staff, which began almost immediately after he was given jersey No. 46.
“Matthew Thomas is a very good player,” Olsavsky said. “Comes with a lot of athletic ability. We were happy to sign him and we’ll see where he goes. You can’t have enough good football players on your team. From what I see now, heĢƵ really athletic and he doesn’t mind running into other people. ThatĢƵ right up my alley.”
Thomas is a 6-3, 232-pounder who ran a 4.44 40 at his pro day with a vertical jump of 41.5 inches. He was a five-star recruit who struggled with suspensions and injuries at Florida State, but led the team in tackles the last two seasons.
Olsavsky was asked why the staff chose to give Thomas so much attention this spring.
“Guys show up. It doesn’t take you long to see a guy,” Olsavsky said. “People in Pittsburgh always come up to me, even when I wasn’t coaching, and they’re like ‘Man that didn’t look good, but YOU know what you’re talking about.’ And I would say, ‘No, you know what you’re talking about. You’ve watched football your whole life. You may not know what itĢƵ called or why they’re doing that bad thing, but you know it ain’t good.’ ThatĢƵ why they boo. Why? Because they know what good football looks like, and if you know what the good stuff looks like you know what the bad stuff looks like. So, we see a lot of good stuff and you just keep putting him out there.”

