Three days after announcing his departure from the Pittsburgh Steelers following 19 seasons, Mike Tomlin faces mixed reactions highlighted by former player criticism over his playoff record and coaching legacy, while analysts push for re-signing quarterback Aaron Rodgers amid 2026 uncertainties.
James Harrison, a former Steelers linebacker, questioned Tomlin's Hall of Fame prospects on his podcast, arguing a true elite coach builds a 'tree' of successors. 'You’re telling me you’re a Hall of Fame coach, and no one has followed you? That can’t be the thing,' Harrison said, despite acknowledging Tomlin's strong regular-season stats and Super Bowl win. Harrison pointed to the team's historic seven straight playoff losses—five by double digits—as a key blemish.
As detailed in initial coverage of the announcement, Tomlin's tenure featured no losing seasons and consistent contention but faltered in the postseason since 2016. Now, focus shifts to the quarterback position. NFL.com's Nick Shook urged re-signing 42-year-old Aaron Rodgers, who had a resurgent 2025 with Pittsburgh under Tomlin. 'If any team desperately needs a 42-year-old future Hall of Famer... it’s Pittsburgh,' Shook wrote, noting Rodgers rediscovered his passion but joined specifically for Tomlin.
The 2026 draft offers slim QB options—Oregon's Dante Moore is returning to school—and free agents like Malik Willis are possibilities, with Mason Rudolph and rookie Will Howard on roster. A Rodgers return could stabilize the transition under Pittsburgh's ongoing coaching search.