Assistant Head Coach/Special Teams Coordinator Jerry Rosburg
Coach, what makes ![]()
[Allen] was put on the practice squad and then the week of the first game you guys brought him back up. What went into that decision early on? It turned out to be a pretty good one. (Jason Butt) “I really wasn’t involved in the discussion on how it all happened, but the skills that he brings to the table are valuable. He has enough size and speed to play like a linebacker on special teams. He was a linebacker as a younger player, ‘back in the day,’ as they say. He has toughness. As you all know, he was a fullback in college. So, those are skills that are really valuable on special teams – a guy with enough speed and athletic ability and toughness and tackling skills to play in a variety of phases. We have seen that happen this year for him.”
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Is wind and weather a big concern in that stadium? (Garrett Downing) “Wind and weather are a big concern in every stadium. That particular stadium is a concern because of the grass surface. As you all know, they had a rain storm this past weekend at their Monday night game. We have to go and see how it is and adjust from there.”
Because of the grass surface, as you mentioned, how conducive is that for punting for Sam [Koch]? Will he be more aggressive in trying to land it inside the 20 instead of the 10 maybe? (Ed Lee) “The football is shaped in such a fashion that it’s kind of hard to predict how it’s going to bounce every time. I don’t know if the surface itself is going to affect how the ball is going to ricochet off the ground and pooch punts. Sam [has been] training for a long time, [focusing on] his pooch punts and trying to get the ball inside the 10. You hit it and you hope for the best. It’s honestly how it happens. Sam has lot of skill, and we hope that it comes to our favor.”
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Offensive Coordinator Cam Cameron
Last year against Pittsburgh, ![]()
Talking about the passing in last week’s game and the confidence building … To have a game where so many things clicked so well, I would think that would be critical heading into a game like this. (Pete Gilbert) “I think confidence is always good, but we have a confident group anyway. Sometimes, if we don’t execute the way that we’re capable, it really doesn’t affect our confidence. Things happens, we deal with them, we move on. We have guys that are proven players that are confident and build each other up. You always want to play well, especially play well at home. We’ve said it all year long: ‘Now, let’s go play well on the road.’”
Is there any truth to there being a measuring-stick game and going up against a really tough defense to see where you are at this point? (Garrett Downing) “I think you always like being tested, to be honest with you. Our guys like a test. Every week is a test in itself, but now you go against a great defense. It’s a division game. It’s got all the markings of why you do what you do as players and coaches in this business. These are the games that you prepare for. These are the ones that get you through the hard work in the offseason, pointing towards these division games and the big ones in this division. So, I think you just factor all those things in.”
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What can you share with Kelechi Osemele about going up against LaMarr Woodley? (Ed Lee) “The film speaks for itself. For a young player, he is a really intense studier – very detailed in his note-taking. [He is] very mature, and I think [you] just study the tape, understand what he likes to do, when he likes this move, the different moves, what he can do in the running game. Obviously, he has other guys to worry about other than just Woodley, because [James] Harrison will show up there as well. Harrison got us last year on a sack coming from that side. He has to be ready for both guys, and then obviously, he has some other challenges in the running game.”
Despite Troy Polamalu not being there most the year and James Harrison being dinged up a lot, what is Pittsburgh doing well defensively? What are they relying on? (Pete Gilbert) “They’re doing all the things they’ve always done well. They do a great job in disguising what they’re doing. They give you that grey area, two-shell look, and then they are able to get pressure with four. They have some nice scheme things they do with their fifth rusher and sometimes their sixth. Like a lot of good offenses or defenses, you build a foundation, you build it with fundamentals, so that if you do have injuries to a guy or two or three, you don’t fall off the face of the earth. And that’s what they’ve done.”
Defensive Coordinator Dean Pees
What kind of impact will this have on the secondary now without Jimmy [Smith]? (Ed Lee) “Every time you lose somebody it has a little bit of an impact. We have to get the next guy ready and just get ready to go.”
How do you make up for Jimmy’s [Smith] absence then? Obviously, going with Corey [Graham] and Chykie [Brown], how did they play, and how much confidence do you have in those guys? (Ed Lee) “I have a lot of confidence in them. I thought they played OK. I’m not going to sit here and tell you … You guys watched the game and watched film. There were some plays they made and some plays they didn’t make. I think both of them are improving every day. We have to do a good job of putting them in the right spot and not asking them to do things that they really can’t do. We have to do a good job as a coaching staff of scheming it up and putting them in the right spot.”
How much does this put the pressure on your job to acclimate ![]()
At the beginning of every year you say, ‘You can never have enough corners.’ Now losing two of the top three, is that kind of coming to fruition? (Garrett Downing) “I’d say that pretty much says it all right there. It’s true. Every place I’ve ever been, you can’t have too many of them. You don’t expect all of this to happen, but hey, it’s football; it’s professional football. Some years you go through unscathed, and some years and you go through and it’s not. You have to make do with what you have. The other thing is it is a little bit – on both sides here – if a guy is on our football team, he is a professional football player. He’s a professional football player for a reason. That means he has to prepare; he has to play in this league. He has to be ready to play at any given time, and the other thing is he has to be good enough or he wouldn’t be on the team. So whenever you even have a backup come in, the guy is a doggone good football player or he wouldn’t be here. That’s what backups’ jobs are. On the same token – you have the same thing – everybody’s talking about [Byron] Leftwich. I’ve played against this guy – college and pros. The guy is a good quarterback. He isn’t a backup. The guy was a starter in the league for a lot of years and I think took Jacksonville to the playoffs, if I’m not mistaken. And he’s been in this system for a while, and he practices against their defense every day. So, I would say that in and of itself, if you practice against their defense every day, [that] probably makes you a pretty good quarterback. I’m not buying the kind of stuff like, ‘Well, is it going to be a difference?’ Byron Leftwich is a good quarterback.”
But he doesn’t do some of the things that Ben [Roethlisberger] can do like extend plays with his feet and play guys opposite. Does that affect the way you prepare and attack? How much does that affect what you are doing? (Pete Gilbert) “[It] depends on the situation that you get him in. When he is handing the ball off to [Rashard] Mendenhall or to [Isaac] Redman, it doesn’t matter whether it’s No. 7 or No. 4 handing it off; it’s still a power play. So, that’s not going to change that part of the game. It’s not going to change. They’re not going to come in and say, ‘OK, this week we are going to have all new passing routes for Leftwich.’ No, they’re not. They are going to run the exact same offense. The thing that Ben did that really all of the quarterbacks, including [Tom] Brady – including a lot guys – is he extends plays, because he is a good scrambler. Maybe Byron doesn’t do that, but then Byron may have another … Byron has a pretty strong arm now and can throw the ball down the field a long, long way. Whenever you take something away, you give something. I just think that they aren’t going to change drastically. They aren’t going to change what they do. How they do it in certain situations may change, but they aren’t going to change their offense.”
Bryon [Leftwich] has that long wind-up motion. How much does that change your pass rush? (Ed Lee) “I don’t know. I know that everyone makes that comment about it, but I’ve seen the guy be all of successful. They may change certain ways that they do things to kind of aid that a little bit, but I don’t think it changes. That is what he is. It’s like anything else. Everybody has idiosyncrasies in how they play – whether they are a defensive player or an offensive player or something – and you try to take advantage of that if you can. But to try to take advantage of that sometimes, it can hurt you in someplace else. It is what it is. We just have to do a good job of recognizing him and breaking on the ball and good vision on the ball.”
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Could he be active, do you think? (Ed Lee) “I don’t really know at this point in time. I don’t know.”
What is your impression of Heath Miller? (Ed Lee) “Good tight end. Here’s the thing about him: In a lot of situations, the guy makes critical catches and critical plays in critical situations – whether it be in the red area [or elsewhere]. Last week watching the Kansas City game, they were kind of struggling. This is with Ben [Roethlisberger] in there early in the game. They were struggling, they were struggling, they were struggling, and all of a sudden they run this little play-action pop pass to Heath Miller, and he makes a nice catch, gains about 25 yards, and here they go. The guy is a go-to-type guy. He’s still a real good blocking tight end. He’s very effective in the pass routes – catches the ball. He has one catch on film that we still don’t know how he caught it – against, I can’t even remember who it was against now – but it was a heck of a play. The guy is still a very, very talented tight end. [He is] still one of the best in the league.”
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Even though guys like Ed [Reed] and Haloti [Ngata], they worked through some health issues, and in Ed’s case maybe a little bit of age … Is it that they’re contributing in other ways, kind of like teaching the younger guys? (Joe Platania) “Absolutely, they have always been that. They have always been great leaders on and off the field. Haloti was really big last week. Even though he didn’t play – and our idea, even though he dressed – our idea was to not play him unless we really had to. He was contributing in the meetings all week. Those guys – both of them – are tremendous on and off the field.”
Do you feel like your sub package was generating a lot more pressure to your liking this past week? (Jason Butt) “It was better. We can do a lot better, but we got something out of it.”
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Pernell [McPhee] returned to practice yesterday. How much would he aid you guys to have him back on the field? (Ed Lee) “We can’t wait to have him back. When that’s going to happen, that’s up to the trainers and John [Harbaugh] and higher powers than me. We don’t want any of those guys out, but we would love to get him back.”




