fish also rarely jump when side pressure is applied. I find that with steelhead if they jump alot they get tend to also get away most of the time
if you get fish whether it be salmon or steelhead that run too far downstream hold your rod tip just above or even below the waters surface and angled 90degrees to the other bank or even upstream, this for some reason causes the fish to swim back up stream
works great for hot fish so you can get them back under control. I used this on a steely last year that went for a screaming run heading its way directly out of the run, it turned right as it was entering the shallows and swam calmly back up to me as i just slowly reeled in line
the more you fish steel the more you will realize what baits/lures/plastics make them react certain ways. I rarely lose fish when im fishing roe/wool/jensen eggs... because they just pull it down, when im fishing worms/flies/blades/lures... they tend to smash it and usually go airborne or screaming in the opposite direction due to the "swinging" nature you present those types of gear. This is just my personal experiences and every fish is different of course, I have yet to land a fish on a blade even though i have hooked many