- At one point in practice, Tomlin talked to Michigan defensive line coach Lou Esposito. That seems notable. Esposito coached likely first-round pick Kenneth Grant, who fits the Steelers' mold as a guy with upside in both areas. He is not here, but he is a candidate at 21.
Poring over fourth down decision making from the 2024 NFL regular season confirmed there is bifurcation in how head coaches value fourth down analytics. There are decidedly old-school coaches who have no use for such data,
Fan approval of Pittsburgh Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin may have never been lower than it is right now. But Tomlin continues to receive support from Steelers owner Art Rooney II.
The Pittsburgh Steelers didn't have much of a choice at the end of a disappointing regular season in which they lost their final five games and an AFC Wild Card
The NFL playoffs roar on with the divisional championship games on the horizon. I wanted to take a look back at the Pittsburgh Steelers who lost earlier this postseason in the wild card. Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin has been at the helm in Pittsburgh for the past 16 seasons.
The Pittsburgh Steelers are keeping head coach Mike Tomlin, and by the sound of owner Art Rooney II, he's not going anywhere anytime soon.
The Steelers have reportedly turned away interest from the Chicago Bears about a potential trade for Tomlin, per ESPN’s Adam Schefter. Despite another wild-card playoff loss for the Steelers, Tomlin sounds very safe in his Pittsburgh job.
The Philadelphia Eagles are a win away from immortality — which means former Pittsburgh Steelers QB Kenny Pickett is a win away from his first Super Bowl ring.
Steelers president Art Rooney knows the team has problems, but he doesn't consider head coach Mike Tomlin one of them.
Mike Tomlin's job with the Pittsburgh Steelers has always seemed pretty secure. However, after the team lost in their sixth consecutive playoff game this month, there's been a lot of questions surrounding Tomlin's future with the Steelers.
"The standard is the standard" has been the mantra of the Pittsburgh Steelers organization for decades. It used to mean something, but like many fans of the team, a Steelers legend agrees they're now pointless hot air.