The former Steelers' quarterback believes head coach Mike Tomlin is calling the shots in Pittsburgh, making his ouster all but impossible.
Pittsburgh Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin says he has “no response” to questions over his job security following the team’s disappointing exit from the NFL playoffs on Saturday.
After Saturday's wild-card loss to the Baltimore Ravens marked the Pittsburgh Steelers' sixth straight playoff loss, coach Mike Tomlin has been the center of a conversation around what the team needs to do to improve in the future.
Mike Tomlin had a blunt and direct response to any team considering calling the Steelers to inquire about a possible trade involving Pittsburgh's longtime head coach. Tomlin, whos
Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin's possibility to be traded has come up as a potential course of action for the organization.
Unable to reverse the negative momentum of a late-season fade, the Pittsburgh Steelers disappeared from the playoffs with a humbling loss to their fiercest rival.
The Steelers are not. And they only have one quarterback under contract for 2025 after signing former Miami Dolphin Skylar Thompson on Tuesday. Russell Wilson, Justin Fields and Kyle Allen — all of whom played during the 2024 season — are all scheduled to become free agents when the new league year begins in March.
After starting all 71 Pittsburgh games since the Steelers selected him from Alabama at No. 24 in the 2021 NFL Draft, Harris has reached the end of his rookie contract. He will become an unrestricted free agent able to sign with any NFL team on March 12 unless Pittsburgh signs him to a contract extension before then.
The offseason has officially started for the Pittsburgh Steelers after a brutal loss to the Baltimore Ravens during the Wild Card Round of the 2024 NFL Playoffs.
The Pittsburgh Steelers once again packed their bags after a one-and-done in the playoffs with a 28-14 loss to the Baltimore Ravens on Saturday night. Following
It was a sequence that perfectly captured the Pittsburgh Steelers’ desultory first-round playoff loss to the Baltimore Ravens on Saturday night, and also the desultory, mediocre reality that has surrounded the Steelers for a decade now.