Gay believing in Steeler DBs
PITTSBURGH — Pittsburgh Steelers’ cornerback William Gay feels winning will cure the woes of a secondary that gave up plenty of big plays last season.
Gay is now the longest-tenured cornerback on the team following Ike Taylor’s offseason retirement and he doesn’t want to see last season’s issues continue to plague a defense that carries aspirations of finishing at the top.
“I think that’s pretty much the bottom line, is winning more,” Gay said. “Winning more equals good praises. If you lose, people can find stuff to talk about.”
Gay didn’t give anybody much to criticize last season. He enjoyed a career year and served as a steady presence in the secondary when injury and inefficiency struck.
Gay began the season as a nickelback but shifted to starter when Taylor went down with a broken forearm in Week 3 and became the team’s top cornerback after Cortez Allen struggled and was eventually benched. Gay returned three interceptions for touchdowns, one of the few highlights for a unit that finished 25th in the league in picks. Gay would certainly like to see that ranking improve, but he realizes there’s no magic formula to getting his hands on the football.
“The football gods have a mysterious way of how the ball bounces and how the games are played,” Gay said. “All we can do is control what we can control and just play football.”
The same can be said for welcoming three new rookies to the fold, including cornerbacks Senquez Golson, a second-round pick, fourth-rounder Doran Grant and seventh-round safety Gerod Holliman.
Gay understands there’s a learning curve and mistakes will be made even though the three will be counted on to heavily revamp a secondary that is without the retired Taylor and safety Troy Polamalu, in addition to cornerback Brice McCain, who left via free agency.
“The sky is the limit for everybody,” Gay said. “The story is going to tell itself after the 2015 season. That’s our mentality around here. We don’t have any predictions. The only prediction is that we want to win the Super Bowl.”
The Steelers won the AFC North last fall for the first time since 2010, but were eliminated by rival Baltimore in the wild-card round. It wasn’t a Super Bowl appearance for the younger players on the team, but it’s something to build on.
“A lot of guys got their first taste of the playoffs,” Gay said. “Once you get a first taste of that, you’re excited about getting to the next year and getting started.”
That’s why Gay - part of the 2008 team that won the franchise’s sixth title - continues to put in the work, leading by example for the rookies who are just entering the fold.
