DB’s Steelers Friday Night Lights Takeaways

DB’s Steelers Friday Night Lights Takeaways
Steelers Now Steelers Now

Per usual, the Pittsburgh Steelers Friday Night Lights practice was electric, with fireworks buzzing throughout another padded session. We saw a hotly contested backs-on-backers session and the league’s highest-paid defense living up to their billing by definitively winning the night overall. With the first preseason game now a week away, we’re getting close to seeing this group square off against someone else other than their teammates. But first, here are a couple notable observations worth sharing from Latrobe Memorial Stadium.

Big Play Slay

The Steelers offseason has been so eventful to the point that it feels like the signing of Darius Slay, a six-time Pro Bowler, has been merely a footnote. Maybe it’s his age that has fans holding their breath in an effort to temper down some of the expectations after the Patrick Peterson experiment a few seasons ago. With that being said, the 34-year-old was excellent on Friday night and has stacked a couple of quality days together now. He broke up two passes in seven shots, undercutting a whip route intended for Metcalf and then playing through the hands of Pat Freiermuth near the back pylon to deny another touchdown.

We all know that one-on-ones between receivers and cornerbacks are hardly a fair fight, but he had one of the best reps that I saw in the drill, clamping down on a curl route from Wilson from a press coverage alignment. Slay’s vibrant personality is showing up on and off the field. One of the first plays of the team period was in his direction with the offense leaving him unblocked, but the veteran set the tone with an aggressive form tackle to bring the running back to the turf. Of course, Jalen Ramsey is the physical freak known for his physicality, but Slay’s far from soft and a reliable tackler himself. After the 1s headed to the sideline, his teammates were elated over the stick, giving him kudos for setting the tone in the drill.

DK Metcalf’s Deployment

Earlier this offseason, offensive coordinator Arthur Smith quipped that the Steelers didn’t acquire Aaron Rodgers and DK Metcalf to run the wishbone. The connection between the two is in the early stages of development, but they’re working diligently to get on the same page. The first play of seven shots featured Metcalf isolated on the backside, tasked with running a whip route to the front pylon. Beyond what could perhaps evolve into a more expansive route tree, he was moved around the formation a good bit, aligning at the foot of stacks and even as the #3 in empty formations. Once the team period began, he was the first read on a couple of consecutive quick game throws underneath.

Rodgers’ best throw of the night was an uncorked hole shot down the left sideline that unfortunately hit the receiver’s hands before falling incomplete. It’s still a work in progress. Whether by design or out of necessity (likely both), Metcalf looks like he’s in line for the...