
The Pittsburgh Steelers spent the opening stretch of free agency doing the one thing that usually tells you a franchise is serious: they filled obvious holes with players who fit a clear identity, then kept stacking depth like a team that expects to be playing meaningful football late.
The only part that remains unresolved is the one everyone is staring at anyway: quarterback.
Pittsburgh’s offseason has been built around a simple premise. Mike McCarthy is now the head coach, and the roster is being shaped to play tough smash mouth football whether Aaron Rodgers returns or not.
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The headline offensive move was the arrival of wide receiver Michael Pittman Jr., acquired in a trade with the Indianapolis Colts. The deal was a late-round pick swap, and it immediately gave Pittsburgh a big bodied complement to DK Metcalf. Pittman has already leaned into the fit angle in his first days with the organization.
“I feel like Pittsburgh is like my style of football, like just really that tough smash mouth, gritty. And I think that I just fit in perfectly here,” Pittman said.
Pittsburgh doubled down on that identity in the backfield by signing Rico Dowdle to a two year, $12.25 million deal. The Steelers needed a replacement after Kenneth Gainwell left in free agency, and Dowdle arrives as a more physical, downhill runner than the player he replaces. Dowdle also comes with familiarity in McCarthy’s scheme from their time together in Dallas, and he steps into a room that includes Jaylen Warren and 2025 third round pick Kaleb Johnson.
On defense, the Steelers put real resources into the secondary. Cornerback Jamel Dean agreed to a three year, $36.75 million deal. He is coming off a 2025 season with three interceptions in 14 starts, including a 55 yard pick six against the New York Jets. Pittsburgh also resigned Asante Samuel Jr. on a one year, $4 million deal.
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Then came another move that shows how Pittsburgh is thinking about the middle of the field. The Steelers signed safety Jaquan Brisker to a one year, $5.5 million deal. Brisker started all 17 games last season and recorded one interception. Pittsburgh also added Darnell Savage, part of the broader effort to thicken the secondary depth chart.
Up front, Pittsburgh added Sebastian Joseph Day on a two year, $11 million deal that includes $6 million this year. The team’s view of him is position flexibility and insurance: he has experience at defensive end and nose tackle, and he gives the Steelers more options behind Cameron Heyward and on the interior rotation.
Put it together and you get the theme: Pittsburgh is building a roster that wants to win at the line of scrimmage, run the ball, and make life annoying for quarterbacks in a conference that already treats “annoying” like a job requirement.
The Rodgers factor is the final variable. The Steelers have been tied to Rodgers again this offseason, and the roster upgrades read like a pitch deck: here are your receivers, here is your run game help, and here is a defense that does not need you to score 35 every week. But even if Rodgers does not return, Pittsburgh has still raised its floor by adding a legitimate receiving tandem, a new early-down runner, and secondary pieces that address a real need.
That is what makes the Steelers’ March feel different. A lot of teams won free agency on social media. Pittsburgh built a roster that looks like it is designed to survive December.
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