The Pittsburgh Steelers have made it loud and clear they will not move on from head coach Mike Tomlin. It is not surprising, as Tomlin just signed a new extension to remain with the team through 2027 that is worth up $50 million across that span. However, could Tomlin choose to leave himself?
"Certainly, there's change that comes with this time of the year." Those were Mike Tomlin's words in his last press conference of the season after the Steelers year ended with another one-and-done playoff exit.
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.
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Mike Tomlin and the Pittsburgh Steelers were eliminated by the Baltimore Ravens, marking the ninth season that the Steelers failed to win a play-off game.
Former Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger is excited for his former head coach, Mike Tomlin to possibly coach the Cowboys.
Russell Wilson, who started 11 games for the Steelers this season, finished 14th in the NFL in passer rating, 26th in QBR and 15th in adjusted net yards per attempt. Justin Fields, who started the first six games, ended up 19th, 27th and 25th in those three statistics.
Pittsburgh Steelers secondary coach Grady Brown interviewed with the Atlanta Falcons for their vacant defensive coordinator spot.
But it sounds like the Pittsburgh Steelers plan to do neither in their endless quest to rise out of mediocrity in the NFL. According to Steelers beat writer Ray Fittipaldo, he doesn’t get the sense the Steelers plan to move on from defensive coordinator Teryl Austin or offensive line coach Pat Meyer.
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.