Tomlin confident despite injuries

Pittsburgh Steelers' head coach Mike Tomlin on the sidelines during the first half of an NFL preseason football game against the Carolina Panthers in Charlotte, N.C., Thursday, Sept., 1, 2016. The Panthers won 18-6. (AP)

PITTSBURGH (AP) – Mike Tomlin has confidence in the Pittsburgh Steelers secondary. And the linebackers. And the defensive line. And tight end. And everywhere else his team will begin the 2016 season in Washington on Monday with guys atop the depth chart who weren’t the guys Tomlin had in mind when training camp began six weeks ago.

Ladarius Green, signed to replace the retired Heath Miller, is on the physically unable to perform list with lingering health issues. Outside linebacker Bud Dupree is on injured reserve with abdominal concerns. Cornerback Senquez Golson’s second season is starting a lot like his first: on the sideline as he deals with a shoulder problem. Nose tackle Daniel McCullers is banged up and rookie Javon Hargrave – who is right there in the mix – tweaked a knee in practice on Monday.

Oh, and running back Le’Veon Bell is out until Week 4 while serving a suspension for violating the NFL’s substance abuse policy. At least he’ll play this year. Talented if mercurial wide receiver Martavis Bryant will sit the entire year while serving a drug suspension of his own.

For a team with Super Bowl aspirations, things could be better. Not that Tomlin wants to talk about it. It’s September after all. Things change. Players heal. For now he’s simply ready to get started. Of course he’s optimistic about the defensive backfield even with the last-minute trade with Cleveland over the weekend that brought in underachieving former first-round pick Justin Gilbert.

“We can sit around in these types of settings and scare ourselves with that, or we can sit around in these types of settings and talk about how great the unit is,” Tomlin said. “The reality is the tape is going to be their walking, talking, breathing resume.”

The resume littered with positive bold-faced bullet points last year when Pittsburgh finished 30th against the pass. While it didn’t stop the Steelers from going 11-7 and pushing Denver to the limit in the playoffs, they understood upgrades needed to be made, which is why they took cornerback Artie Burns in the first round and safety Sean Davis in the second.

Pittsburgh will also lean on veteran outside linebacker Arthur Moats, thrust into a starting role while Dupree waits to see if his abdominal injury needs surgery.

Things are clearer at tight end, where Jesse James finds himself the starter until further notice while Green works his way back.

Consider the other options at quarterback Ben Roethlisberger’s disposal Tomlin doesn’t think James needs to be Miller 2.0. At least, not yet.

“I know it’s something written and talked about because of the retirement of Heath Miller, and because of the unavailability of Green,” Tomlin said. “But we’re comfortable with where we are and with what they’re capable of contributing to us.”