Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Former Pitt star key for Bills

Dane Jackson fills in for CB White

- By John Wawrow

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — Dane Jackson pays little heed to questions of what challenges he faces in preparing to replace Tre’Davious White in the Buffalo Bills secondary.

The second-year cornerback need only point to his left arm, where the initials D, D,D, R are tattooed in honor of four late childhood friends. The former Pitt star does it to show the emotional pain he’s overcome in having gained this opportunit­y, knowing he could have wound up like them had Jackson chosen a different path, and how important it is to not let them down.

For Jackson to fail on Monday night, when the Bills (7-4) host the New England Patriots (8-4) with first place in the AFC East on the line, would also personally represent him failing De’Von and Diondre Dozier, Domanek Cabbagesta­lk and Ricky Giles, who were among his football backers growing up in the former Greenway housing projects in Pittsburgh’s West End.

The Dozier brothers and Cabbagesta­lk were shot and killed, and Giles died in a car crash while being chased by police over a four-year period spanning Jackson’s senior year in high school to his junior year at Pitt.

“I faced a lot of adversity, so this is nothing different. You have to be strong-minded and deal with anything that comes your way,” he said.

“I lost four of my closest friends back to back to back to back. At some point, some people may want to give up,” he added. “But that just made me push harder, and made me want to see myself succeed more.”

The fire Jackson steps into is replacing White, Buffalo’s top defensive player who will miss the remainder of the season after tearing a ligament in his left knee during a 31-6 win at New Orleans on Thanksgivi­ng. White is a five-year starter and a key fixture in a Bills secondary which ranks second in the league, behind New England, with 16 intercepti­ons.

Jackson is a 2020 seventhrou­nd draft pick, who has played just 128 of Buffalo’s 705 defensive snaps this year, and will make his third career start after filling in for Josh Norman and Levi Wallace last season.

As much as coordinato­r Leslie Frazier can’t quantify how big White’s loss represents, he’s confident in Jackson.

“Things don’t get too big for him,” Frazier said. “We saw it in his rookie year when he had to step in and play in some tough situations at times, and even the game on Thursday night. He has real good poise and a good feel for the game.”

Jackson made a splash in his starting debut last year by intercepti­ng Sam Darnold at the Buffalo 36 in the final minute of the second quarter.

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