Pittsburg, PA
My Biggest Concern With Pittsburgh’s New Special Teams Coordinator
Pittsburgh has a punting problem. For years, decades really, the unit hasn’t been sufficient. New Special Teams Coordinator Danny Crossman’s goal is to come in and fix that while improving or maintaining the other special teams units. History says he may fix other aspects, but not punting.
Below is a chart of the average gross punting yards (how far a punt travels before the return) and NFL rank during all four of Crossman’s stints in the head role: Carolina, Detroit, Buffalo, and Miami. Included in the chart is Pittsburgh’s ranking over the Mike Tomlin era, 2007-2025.
The numbers below with analysis to follow:
| Stint | Gross Punt Avg | Rank |
|---|---|---|
| Carolina (05-09) | 44.2 yards | 7th |
| Detroit (10-12) | 43.3 yards | 26th |
| Buffalo (13-18) | 43.7 yards | 29th |
| Miami (19-24) | 45.3 yards | 26th |
| Pittsburgh (07-25) | 43.6 yards | 32nd |
Crossman’s numbers in Carolina were good. The rest were not. He had bottom-tier finishes in Detroit, Buffalo, and Miami. Perhaps Buffalo can be excused, given its cold-weather climate, naturally unfriendly to punters. Still, Detroit plays indoors (even with road games in Green Bay and Chicago, that’s just a fraction of the season), and Miami is a warm-weather climate. No matter the venue over the past 15 years, the results haven’t been there.
Pittsburgh’s low finish isn’t shocking. Like Buffalo, punting at Acrisure (and Cleveland, Baltimore, and Cincinnati) makes life tough. The city will always have a disadvantage. Still, there’s no reason to accept finishing dead last in the league over nearly 20 years. Pittsburgh’s punting has always been subpar. It’s why the team’s record holder is from the 60s and not the modern day, like nearly every other NFL team. Washington is the only other team in this situation, thanks to Sammy Baugh’s league record that stood for generations.
How much can Crossman be blamed? He’s not the one on the field. But he evaluates and coaches the position. The results reflect him, especially over such a long span of time, and not a cherry-picked, single-season window. There is a consistently disappointing trend. And it’s gotten him fired in Buffalo and Miami.
Cameron Johnston is currently Pittsburgh’s only punter. Another will surely join the team. Whoever wins the job has their work cut out for them. Crossman must turn around his history – and Pittsburgh’s.
Pittsburg, PA
More roads to close in Pittsburgh ahead of the NFL draft. Here’s what drivers need to know.
The NFL draft is just two weeks away from coming to Pittsburgh, and with each passing day, more road closures in the city go into place.
Time is ticking, and work is progressing to make sure the footprint of the draft is good to go, because the city is expected to host hundreds of thousands of people.
However, looking ahead to next week, it may be difficult to get around town because the next round of road closures will go into place.
What roads are closed?
As of Friday morning, Art Rooney Avenue, West General Robinson Street, and Scotland Avenue are closed.
Beginning on Monday, more will be added to the list as part of phase two of the closure plan.
The following roads will close:
- Casino Drive from Sproat Way
- North Shore Drive to Chuck Noll Way
- Reedsdale Street to Tony Dorsett Drive
- Chuck Noll Way and Tony Dorsett Drive
Those closures will be in place until April 21.
If you are planning to drive in that area, there will be clearly marked detour signs to help navigate around the closure and get to your destination.
Will local businesses be closed on the North Shore?
There will be limitations and closures around some local businesses on the North Shore due to the road closures.
“We worked really hard to make sure all of the businesses from the casino to businesses on North Shore Drive and PNC Park are all still readily available,” said Jared Bachar, President & CEO of Visit Pittsburgh.
First, the Kamin Science Center will be on partial operation beginning on Monday when the roads close. Acrisure Stadium itself will have limited availability, and Stage AE will be off-limits completely.
Residents, businesses prepare for NFL draft impact
While there is frustration over closures that will redirect so much traffic, they are necessary. It’s also causing North Side residents to have to adapt.
“I’m going to do my best not to go out of the house,” said Jackie Fields. “I’ve been going the opposite direction and figuring out which way I have to go now.”
For the crews working near the stadium, this is the next step in making sure the entire area is ready for the big event.
“This next phase of road closures helps us get prepared for all of those activities; there’s a lot of build-out of infrastructure, new structures being built, new draft amenities in and around that site,” Bachar said.
Looking beyond phase two, there are six total phases of road closures that’ll happen from now until the draft.
Pittsburg, PA
Pittsburgh Pride ramping up fundraising efforts with less than 60 days to go
With less than 60 days to go until Pittsburgh Pride, the pressure is on to raise crucial funds for the annual event. “It’s a place for everybody to come together, gather, and be with one another without judgment, without worrying about being ‘othered,’” Lyndsey Sickler told Pittsburgh’s Action News 4 Reporter Jordan Cioppa. Organizers said this year will be no different when the Pittsburgh Pride festival and parade return to the streets of the Steel City June 6-7. However, the celebrations will come at a cost. “Just for stages is over $100,000. That’s not including lighting, electric, insurance, security,” said Sickler, who serves on the board for Pittsburgh Pride. “Pride is happening one way or another, but to do it the way we’ve been doing it, we need to make sure that we can pay the insurance, that we can pay the electric, we can pay for the stages, and the artists, and all that stuff, because we pay our artists.”This year’s fundraising goal is $500,000. So far, organizers said they have raised about $150,000 of that. “There have been increased amounts of attacks on the LGBTQ community, and we’re seeing that reflected in Pittsburgh Pride this year and Prides all across the country, with corporate sponsors backing out, trying to diminish the amount of support that they’re giving to pride,” said board member Sam Wasserman. Board members said big names like Sheetz and U.S. Steel supported this year’s event, but past sponsors like Tito’s Handmade Vodka and Walmart have not stepped up. A Walmart spokesperson responded with the following statement:”Our focus remains on creating an environment where our associates and customers feel they belong. We’re supportive of associates who want to support Pride month by volunteering in their communities.”A Tito’s spokesperson told Pittsburgh’s Action News 4 that the company donates to more than 10,000 nonprofit events yearly. “Unfortunately, we are not always able to continue sponsoring the same events in perpetuity, as we try to spread love to as many organizations as possible,” the spokesperson added. Wasserman said they are currently on track to meet half of the fundraising goal if people continue to show support. “If we were at $250,000 as opposed to [$500,000,] we would have to have discussions about, do we only have one performance stage instead of two?” Wasserman said. “Do we have to shrink our footprint on the park in order to be able to accommodate less costs, less bathrooms, less electricity? Things like that. Less security.” While Wasserman said $150,000 isn’t quite enough, he added that it’s a good start. “On the flip side, we’ve seen a lot of Pittsburghers really embrace Mr. Rogers, being a good neighbor, stepping up,” Wasserman said. “We’ve had hundreds of our local small businesses sign up to be vendors already and pay their vendor fees.”Pittsburgh Pride is recruiting vendors, sponsors, donors, and parade participants. Organizers said they are looking to secure state grant money, too.
With less than 60 days to go until Pittsburgh Pride, the pressure is on to raise crucial funds for the annual event.
“It’s a place for everybody to come together, gather, and be with one another without judgment, without worrying about being ‘othered,’” Lyndsey Sickler told Pittsburgh’s Action News 4 Reporter Jordan Cioppa.
Organizers said this year will be no different when the Pittsburgh Pride festival and parade return to the streets of the Steel City June 6-7.
However, the celebrations will come at a cost.
“Just for stages is over $100,000. That’s not including lighting, electric, insurance, security,” said Sickler, who serves on the board for Pittsburgh Pride. “Pride is happening one way or another, but to do it the way we’ve been doing it, we need to make sure that we can pay the insurance, that we can pay the electric, we can pay for the stages, and the artists, and all that stuff, because we pay our artists.”
This year’s fundraising goal is $500,000. So far, organizers said they have raised about $150,000 of that.
“There have been increased amounts of attacks on the LGBTQ community, and we’re seeing that reflected in Pittsburgh Pride this year and Prides all across the country, with corporate sponsors backing out, trying to diminish the amount of support that they’re giving to pride,” said board member Sam Wasserman.
Board members said big names like Sheetz and U.S. Steel supported this year’s event, but past sponsors like Tito’s Handmade Vodka and Walmart have not stepped up.
A Walmart spokesperson responded with the following statement:
“Our focus remains on creating an environment where our associates and customers feel they belong. We’re supportive of associates who want to support Pride month by volunteering in their communities.”
A Tito’s spokesperson told Pittsburgh’s Action News 4 that the company donates to more than 10,000 nonprofit events yearly.
“Unfortunately, we are not always able to continue sponsoring the same events in perpetuity, as we try to spread love to as many organizations as possible,” the spokesperson added.
Wasserman said they are currently on track to meet half of the fundraising goal if people continue to show support.
“If we were at $250,000 as opposed to [$500,000,] we would have to have discussions about, do we only have one performance stage instead of two?” Wasserman said. “Do we have to shrink our footprint on the park in order to be able to accommodate less costs, less bathrooms, less electricity? Things like that. Less security.”
While Wasserman said $150,000 isn’t quite enough, he added that it’s a good start.
“On the flip side, we’ve seen a lot of Pittsburghers really embrace Mr. Rogers, being a good neighbor, stepping up,” Wasserman said. “We’ve had hundreds of our local small businesses sign up to be vendors already and pay their vendor fees.”
Pittsburgh Pride is recruiting vendors, sponsors, donors, and parade participants. Organizers said they are looking to secure state grant money, too.
Pittsburg, PA
Pirates unveil 2026 City Connect uniforms, paying homage to city’s iconic bridges
The Pirates and Nike unveiled the team’s 2026 City Connect uniforms on Thursday morning, and they will make their on-field debut on Friday, April 17, at PNC Park when the Pirates take on the Tampa Bay Rays.
A release from the Pirates described the new uniforms as embracing “the city’s unmistakable black and gold identity, celebrating a unified visual language shared across Pittsburgh’s sports culture.”
The jerseys are an all-black base with gold lettering. The font of the lettering mirrors the design of Pittsburgh’s sister bridges. There will also be two different hats that go with the uniforms: a gold hat with a black brim, and a secondary black hat with a gold brim. Both hats display the Jolly Roger logo with swords in the background.
“We believe this collaboration with Nike captures the same intensity our fans bring to PNC Park,” said Pirates President Travis Williams. “This version of our City Connect jersey is rooted in the colors that connect our city, our people, and our team. They represent the same grit as our hardworking, proud, and determined community. These are confident colors, but not arrogant ones. They reflect a city that expects to compete and expects to win. The design is simple and powerful, while the accents and details are subtle in a way that feels uniquely Pirates and distinctly Pittsburgh.”
The MLB, in collaboration with Nike, created the City Connect series in 2021 to celebrate the bond between team and city, and they made their debut in the 2023 season.
Fans who want to purchase the new City Connect merchandise can do so inside the Pirates Fanatics Clubhouse Store at PNC Park, in the Nike App, and MLBShop.com.
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