Ex-Steelers DC Keith Butler speaks out on Stephon Tuitt

Even those inside the Steelers organization — or were anyway — don’t know what the dadgum heck is going on with DE Stephon Tuitt. 

Even those inside the Pittsburgh Steelers organization — or were just a few days ago — don’t appear to know what the dadgum heck is going on with defensive end Stephon Tuitt.

Tuitt’s absence has been one of the great mysteries of the 2021 Steelers season (along with what happened to the supposed innovative Matt Canada offense). And despite the Steelers media’s repeated inquiries during head coach Mike Tomlin’s press conferences, the answer was always the same: “I hadn’t given it any thought.”

Tuitt had a breakout 2020 campaign in which he had a career-high 11 sacks and 25 quarterback hits. Tuitt spent the 2021 season on injured reserve and hasn’t been seen since he made a brief appearance at practice in October.

A guest of 93.7 The Fan PM Team, former Steelers defensive coordinator Keith Butler shed a little bit more light on the situation but nothing revealing.

“I really don’t know,” Butler said regarding a return for Tuitt. “That’s going to be up to Mr. [Art] Rooney. I have no idea. I don’t know where he is set mentally. That’s something very private that and we didn’t know a whole lot about it. We just took it for granted that what happened to him and his family was very hard on him, and he struggled with it. I hope he comes back for the team. I don’t know if he will. We’ll see what happens.”

Tuitt is entering the final year of his contract, and the Pittsburgh Steelers are on the hook for nearly $14 million.

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Keith Butler retiring as defensive coordinator for the Steelers

Keith Butler announced his retirement as the defensive coordinator of the Pittsburgh Steelers. Who could be next?

With their season over, the Pittsburgh Steelers are starting to announce some moves on the coaching staff. The first domino to fall is that of defensive coordinator Keith Butler, who has decided to retire after a life in the National Football League as both a player and a coach.

Tom Pelissero reported the news on Twitter Saturday afternoon:

Butler spent his entire NFL playing career with the Seattle Seahawks, after the organization drafted him in the second round of the 1978 NFL draft. He amassed 813 tackes for Seattle during his ten-year career,

Three years after his career ended, Butler returned to his alma mater and started his coaching career. He spent eight seasons as a defensive assistant for Memphis, before moving to Arkansas State where he spent one season as a defensive coordinator.

The NFL would be next, and he would spent his entire coaching career in the league in the AFC North. Butler started as a linebackers coach with the Cleveland Browns, before joining the Steelers as their linebackers coach in 2003. He served in that role until 2014, when he was promoted to defensive coordinator in the wake of Dick LeBeau’s retirement.

During his time in Pittsburgh, Butler was part of two Super Bowl-winning teams.

Now speculation will begin over his replacement. If the Steelers look to promote from within, Teryl Austin might be the choice. Austin is currently a senior defensive assistant with the Steelers as well as their secondary coach, and has experience as a defensive coordinator with both the Detroit Lions and the Cincinnati Bengals.

Another name to watch? Wink Martindale. After parting ways with the Baltimore Ravens, Martindale could be an intriguing option for the Steelers.

REPORT: Steelers extend contract of DC Keith Butler

According to a report from Gerry Dulac of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, the Steelers will give Butler a one-year contract.

As suspected last week, the Pittsburgh Steelers are bringing defensive coordinator Keith Butler back. The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette’s Gerry Dulac tweeted that Butler has been given a one-year contract.

Here are the defensive rankings since Butler took over the position from Dick LeBeau in 2015:

Points Yards
2020 3rd 3rd
2019 5th 5th
2018 16th 6th
2017 7th 5th
2016 10th 12th
2015 11th 21st

While Butler is defensive coordinator by title, there have been multiple reports that head coach Mike Tomlin calls the plays.

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The NFL’s best defensive play-callers

Great players make great defenses happen, but great coaching is just as important. Here are the NFL’s best defensive minds in 2020.

When you look at the NFL’s best defenses in 2020 — the ones that are able to stay consistently efficient-to-dominant in a league that sets up success in the passing game above all — there are mandatory characteristics that transcend coordinator and scheme. Especially in an era in which sub-packages and hybrid defenders are the norm as opposed to the outlier, modern defenses must have these three things:

  1. Front multiplicity and gap confusion. Great defenses rarely show the same fronts twice in a row from play to play. You may see a base front on one play, and then, some sort of wicked NASCAR or amoeba front on the next. Then, variants of those concepts as drives continue. Those different looks challenge offensive protection calls, especially when offenses are running packages with three or more receivers on 65% of their plays. Then, when you create gap confusion with different line stunts and multi-level blitzes, you wind up with some very uncomfortable quarterbacks and fractured passing games. How many defensive linemen have their hands down, and how many are standing up? Where are they attacking based on where they start?
  2. Muddied looks at the linebacker level. When your defense has one or more moneybacks or monsterbacks — players who can affect offenses everywhere from the line of scrimmage to the deep third — you have an extreme tactical advantage you can use in all kinds of different ways. Move beyond the traditional stay-at-home linebacker, as modern defenses have, and you are able to present clear pre-snap looks to a quarterback and his receivers, and then go about doing radically different things after the snap. Throw linebacker pressure from the A-gaps and then drop into coverage from there, and even Russell Wilson will lose his place.
  3. Coverage switches in the secondary. It is the job of every modern defensive coordinator and secondary coach to plant schematic and spacing inabilities in the mind of the opposing quarterback. This is done in the secondary through the refusal to run coverage based on what is shown pre-snap. What might look like a Cover-0 jailbreak blitz pre-snap turns into 2-Man. What might look like a man defense indicator based on reaction to offensive motion becomes zone. That single-high safety look you see before you take the ball from the center is actually Cover-2 or Quarters, and as the quarterback, you now have to re-focus — especially if you’re running heavy play-action, you turn your back to the defense at your second step, and you turn back around at your fourth or fifth step to see something entirely different than what you expected.

You’ll see different iterations of these concepts among the NFL’s best defensive play-callers in 2020, but you won’t see the absence of any of them. Here, with all that said, are the league’s best defensive minds this season, and the staple ideas that make those defenses great.

Scouting the Steelers’ offense and defense for Week 8

The battle for supremacy in the AFC North heats up in Week 8 when the 6-0 Pittsburgh Steelers take on the 5-1 Baltimore Ravens. The Ravens are coming off a bye following their Week 6 win over the Philadelphia Eagles. The Steelers retained their …

The battle for supremacy in the AFC North heats up in Week 8 when the 6-0 Pittsburgh Steelers take on the 5-1 Baltimore Ravens. The Ravens are coming off a bye following their Week 6 win over the Philadelphia Eagles. The Steelers retained their perfect start to the season with a closely fought victory over the Tennessee Titans, and currently own the No. 1 seed in the AFC.

The Ravens will look a little different this week, with new acquisition Yannick Ngakoue in line for his debut and Ronnie Stanley slightly weighed down in his wallet after signing a long-term extension on Friday. These two teams are no strangers to each other, however, with John Harbaugh and Mike Tomlin two of the longest-tenured coaches in the NFL. This one should be another hard-fought battle in the legacy of arguably the biggest rivalry in sports.

Let’s take a closer look at what the Ravens can expect to see from the Steelers this week.

Deshaun Watson says Texans must pick up the blitz versus the Steelers

Houston Texans quarterback Deshaun Watson says the offense has to do a great job identifying and picking up the Pittsburgh Steelers’ blitz in Week 3.

For the second straight week, the Houston Texans will face a defense that relies heavily on the blitz.

One part of the game plan that carries over for quarterback Deshaun Watson from last week is doing a better job identifying the blitz.

“They do pressure a lot and they try to get five in the rush,” Watson said. “They do a great job of doing what they do. They’re very, very disciplined. It’s been very successful for them for years. If I was them, I would be the same way. I wouldn’t change it. I would do what I do because that’s what we’re good at.”

Steelers defensive coordinator Keith Butler was the linebackers coach from 2003-14 and has been an excellent caretaker of Dick LeBeau’s defense. Through the first two games, Pittsburgh has blitzed 58 times, the most in the NFL. Of course, it has come with its positive results as the Steelers are second in the NFL with 10 sacks and have the most quarterback pressures with 40.

“We’ve got to make sure that we pick up the blitz and the pressures and the different things that they try to disguise and see,” said Watson. “For me, really just finding the open guy. If it’s the running back. If it’s the tight end, the receivers. I’ve got to be patient and find the open guy and see. There’s going to be a lot of contested balls. The DBs do a good job of being on our receivers, so we’ve just got to go out there and make plays and be on the same page.”

The Texans will need to be on the same page in Week 3 as they seek to avoid an 0-3 start for the second time in three seasons. Even with the expanded playoff format, venturing that far into a season with that many losses, all of them in the conference, could be a quick way to end the season by Jan 3.

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An immediate advantage Steelers have over opponents this season

Experience wins (almost) every time and should provide the Steelers with leverage in 2020.

The Pittsburgh Steelers are in an ideal situation. Not only has there not been much player turnover, but their head coach and coordinators have been with the club for a combined 43 years.

  • Mike Tomlin (head coach) — 2007-current
  • Randy Fichtner (WRs/QBs, offense) — 2007-current
  • Keith Butler (linebackers, defense) – 2003-current

In a year where there were no minicamps or OTAs and training camp transitioned into the regular season without as much as one preseason game, having an experienced coaching staff is critical.

Three of the Steelers upcoming opponents welcomed new head coaches this season: Kevin Stefanski, Cleveland Browns; Mike McCarthy, Dallas Cowboys; and Joe Judge, New York Giants.

Stefanski and Judge have never coached an NFL game in their lives. McCarthy, however, was head coach of the Green Bay Packers for 12 seasons until he was fired in December 2018.

Typically, the NFL awards teams with a new head coach an additional minicamp, allowing extra time to install their systems and get to know players. That didn’t happen this year.

The Browns have hired a new head coach every 1.75 seasons since returning to Cleveland in 1999 (12 times), and the owners, unknowingly, couldn’t have picked a worse year to revamp. Stefanski and his staff were forced to develop the Browns Way 12.0 virtually.

The Bengals have second-year head coach Zac Taylor and rookie quarterback Joe Burrow. Because the pandemic delayed in-person player/coach unions, Taylor only just met his new quarterback face-to-face in July.

The Bengals, Browns, Cowboys and Giants could surprise us all and actually have their house in order come game time.

We’re about to see just how extensive the advantage of team loyalty is and if it translates to winning games. But I’m betting that experience wins out.

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Which Steelers coordinator is under more pressure in 2020?

The Steelers coordinators have all the roster talent they need to win.

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The Pittsburgh Steelers roster is loaded. There’s no other way to say it. Pittsburgh has as much talent on both sides of the football as any team in the NFL. There are many NFL coordinators who would love to have the players offensive coordinator Randy Fichtner and defensive coordinator Keith Butler has to work with.

So after two missed playoff opportunities in the last two seasons, which coordinator heads into 2020 with more pressure on them?

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For us, it’s all about Fichtner. He got a pass last season when Ben Roethlisberger got hurt but the truth is when Big Ben went down, Fichtner just threw his hand up and surrendered. This isn’t what you want from your OC. Assuming there are no more catastrophic injuries this season,

Butler on the other hand got things on track last season. And with minimal losses on the defensive roster, should be in a position to have another strong season out of this group.

Cast your vote and tell us which coordinator is under more pressure to produce this season.

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K.J. Wright moves into 3rd place on Seahawks all-time tackles list

Seattle Seahawks linebacker K.J. Wright is now third in franchise history in tackles, behind teammate Bobby Wagner and Eugene Robinson.

The Seattle Seahawks earned a hard-fought 37-30 win over the Minnesota Vikings on Monday Night Football – giving them a 10-2 record and a spot atop the standings in the hyper-competitive NFC West.

One of the many standouts on Seattle’s defense Monday was linebacker K.J. Wright, who recorded nine combined tackles and one pass defended.

With those nine tackles, Wright officially moved into third place on Seattle’s all-time tackles list, passing longtime Seahawks linebacker Keith Butler.

Wright also eclipsed 100 tackles on the season, the fifth time in his career that he has passed that mark.

In fact, assuming Wright stays healthy for the team’s final four games, he has a great chance to break his career-high of 130 combined tackles, set back in 2014.

Wright’s performance this year has flown a little under the radar, but considering he only played in five games last year after dealing with a myriad of injuries, it’s impressive he has rebounded so well at age 30.

Wright is now behind longtime teammate Bobby Wagner and former safety Eugene Robinson on Seattle’s all-time tackling list. Wagner hopes Wright will join him in the top-two at some point – but he’s content with him sticking right there.

“It would be really cool if when it’s all said and done it’s Bobby and K.J. right next to each other,” Wagner said in October after he took over as Seattle’s top tackler.

“Obviously, Bobby on top though.”

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