PITTSBURGH — At the gas station. Out at dinner. In the airport.It seems everywhere Patrick Graham goes, the new Pittsburgh Steelers defensive coordinator hears what the city of Pittsburgh wants to see when Renegade is blaring and the Terrible Towels are twirling.“The benefit of being here with the Steelers is that there’s a clear standard in terms of what the people of the city and the Rooney family expect,” Graham said. “I know we made mention to the Steel Curtain. There’s no need for me as a coordinator to come up with any gimmicks for what we’ve got to do, like ‘Let’s win this one for that.’ I don’t have to make up any BS about that. Just having time to be around the town and meeting the people, it’s clear.”A Yinzer grandmother approaching Graham when he’s at dinner and telling him about great Steel Curtain defenses is a pretty funny image. In a sports-obsessed region where the mood of the city is tied directly to the weekend’s result, and the identity of the people mirrors the personality of the football team, it’s also easy to recognize he’s not exaggerating.“It’s fun to be in a town where the people are passionate about football,” Graham said. “Here I am, a kid from Waterbury, Connecticut. I wasn’t a good football player. Got lucky, became a coach and have a knack for being able to coach this game. Then you’re with one of the more storied franchises in American sports. It’s a privilege. It’s an honor. And you know people take it seriously here. I love that.”As Graham starts his first season as the Steelers’ defensive coordinator, he has made it known since his first meetings that he hopes to live up to the standards set by generations past.“(Graham) has been really clear, he wants it to be the Steel Curtain,” third-year inside linebacker Payton Wilson said. “But we have to earn that right. That’s not just something that comes with being a part of the Steelers”