Pittsburgh Steelers fans have spent years waiting for the offense to finally feel settled. Between shaky quarterback play, cautious game plans and nonstop turnover, there hasn’t been much reason for patience to come easy. So when Mike McCarthy steps into the picture, trust is going to have to be earned fast.
Jon Gruden thinks McCarthy is built for that kind of challenge.
Gruden’s confidence comes from their shared time at Pitt, back when neither coach had made his name in the NFL. What he remembers most is a young assistant who put in long hours and never acted above the dirty work that comes with coaching.
“Mike McCarthy, he was my GA ... I was a receiver coach, and I have video of our receivers in drills blocking, and they were using McCarthy as the guy to hold the dummy,” Gruden said on Not Just Football With Cam Heyward.
“McCarthy would put his helmet on. He had the Pitt helmet on.
He's holding the dummy at about 250, and the guys are stalking him. He's getting after him.
It's the greatest video ever.”
It’s a funny image, but it says plenty about the coach Pittsburgh is getting. McCarthy wasn’t standing off to the side. He was in the middle of it, taking the hits and doing the unglamorous work with everybody else.
That kind of approach matters in Pittsburgh, where the Steelers need a coach who can build accountability, connect with players and give the offense an identity - something it lacked under Mike Tomlin. McCarthy has never been the loudest or flashiest voice in the room, but Gruden’s memory paints him as someone who earned respect by grinding alongside the staff and players.
The Pitt days were no cakewalk, either. Gruden said head coach Paul Hackett liked working late, while offensive coordinator Bill Meyers got started early. The assistants were stuck in between, and Gruden said they were working 20 hours a day.
That background helps explain why McCarthy has the reputation of being so detail-oriented on offense. Now the job is to turn that into something that fits Aaron Rodgers, gets the ball to Pittsburgh’s best playmakers and takes some of the burden off the defense.
For Gruden, the path to trust is pretty simple: better play from Rodgers, smarter game plans and an offense that looks ready every Sunday. His stories from Pitt suggest McCarthy understands exactly how much work that will take.
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