
1. Pittsburgh Steelers
As coach Bill Cowher emerged from
the St. Vincent College cafeteria one July
afternoon at the Steelers' training camp in Latrobe, Pa., a
group of fans asked him to pose for a photograph. Cowher
obliged, jutting his prominent jaw forward until the camera
clicked. Moments later the smile was gone from Cowher's
face. He had read
one too many predictions of his
team's demise as a
result of the off-season departure of
defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau (to the Bengals)just as he
had two years
earlier when LeBeau's predecessor, Dom Capers, left to become
coach of the
Panthers.
"I'm going to tell you something," Cowher growled
at a reporter. "This defense will continue to be
strong,
because there's one person who was
responsible for it when Dick LeBeau was here, and it's the same
person who oversaw it when Dom Capers was
here. There's one guy who has been here all along, and you're
looking at
him."
Point taken. Cowher, a coach
generally trumpeted more for his motivational skills than
for his strategic prowess, knows enough about the zone
blitz to keep it in place. The real question is, Do the
Steelers have the players to continue executing that
defense effectively? Pittsburgh lost four starters from the
NFL's second-ranked defense, including All-Pro
linebacker Chad Brown, cornerbacks Rod Woodson and Willie
Williams and
defensive end Ray Seals. Nickelback Deon
Figures is also
gone.
With the loss of those players and with
their only elite pass rusher, linebacker
Greg Lloyd, coming off major knee surgery, the Steelers
would seem to be vulnerable
to repeated aerial assaults, particularly in
a division with so many dangerous
quarterbacks. But this team is used to starting the season shorthanded.
In '95 Cowher survived Woodson's knee injury in the opener
by eventually moving Pro Bowl strong safety Carnell Lake to
cornerback, and Pittsburgh went to the Super Bowl. Last
year, after sack
specialist Kevin Greene signed with Carolina and Lloyd was
lost in the opener, Cowher switched Brown from the inside
to Lloyd's outside position. Brown responded with 13 sacks,
and the Steelers repeated as division
champs.
Cowher and director of football operations Tom Donahoe
routinely produce unheralded yet adept sack artists the way
Sean (Puffy) Combs produces hip-hop hits. The projected hit
parade includes outside linebacker Jason Gildon, who became
a starter last
year; inside linebacker Earl Holmes, who moves up to the first
team this year; and defensive end Mike Vrabel, a
third-round draft pick from Ohio State. "First you've
got to stop the run," says Lloyd. "If you can
make an offense
one-dimensional, then you
can tee
off."
Woodson, who signed with the 49ers after the Steelers
deemed his salary demands excessive, was a multidimensional
player whose blitzing skills and knack for the big play
will be hard to replace. But Pittsburgh believed that all
three of the
departed
corners were on the decline. The new starters are speedy
veteran Donnell Woolford, signed away from the Bears as a
free agent, and first-round draft pick Chad Scott, a
6'1", 203-pounder from Maryland. J.B. Brown, a Dolphins
castoff, will be the nickelback. "Woolford's a good
pickup," says Lake, a close friend of Woodson's who
was upset by the team's failure to re-sign him. "I
underestimated him. He's a better athlete
than I
suspected."
The Steelers are stable at safety with
Lake and free safety Darren Perry. "There's
no question we're on the spot," Perry says.
"The secondary is the place where everybody has to be
on the same page. That takes
time."
Also on the spot is defensive coordinator Jim Haslett, who
has only four years of NFL coaching experience. An
assistant with the Saints the last two years, Haslett spent
the off-season boning up on the zone blitz. LeBeau wasn't
around to teach him, but
no matter. Cowher obviously isn't
worried.
Michael Silver
SCHEDULE
SKINNY
Bill Cowher's teams tend to survive a rough start and peak
at the end of the season. The Steelers will again need to
save their best for last, with four of their last five
games on the road and their only home date in that span a
showdown against the
Broncos on Dec. 7. Six days later Pittsburgh travels to New
England. If the Steelers are where Cowher wants them to be,
the final five games will decide home field advantage for
the AFC
playoffs.
STRENGTH OF
SCHEDULE
NFL rank: 3
Opponents' 1996 winning
percentage: .531 Games against playoff
teams: 7
Next team
|