Pittsburg, PA
Pittsburgh Steelers preview 2023: Over or Under 9 wins? Chances to claim AFC North title?

It’s NFL team preview time, and today we’re looking at the Pittsburgh Steelers. Each Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday from July 25 through Sept. 8, we will take an in-depth look at each team in the NFL with a 7- to 10-minute video going through impactful additions and departures, last year’s rankings and strength of schedule in 2023.
Bet.NOLA.com analyst Jim Derry will then make a prediction on the team’s record this season and where they will finish in their respective division, along with the over/under win total, as posted by our partners at Caesars Sportsbook.
These stories are a brief summary of the accompanied preview videos – powered by the Dattitude Podcast (which will review each division every Friday until the season begins). The schedule for when each team will run is listed below with a link to each story and video that already has run.
PITTSBURGH STEELERS
Coach: Mike Tomlin (17th season)
2022 record: 9-8, 3rd in AFC North; did not make playoffs.
Last season in a nutshell: One would be hard-pressed to find a team that improved as the season went along more than this one. (Maybe Detroit?) But from 2-6 at the midway point following an embarrassing 35-13 loss across the state in Philadelphia, the Steelers won seven of their last nine games, including their final four.
Will that success transfer to 2023? It very well could, because this team is well-coached and it is young. Rookie Kenny Pickett didn’t start until the fifth game – a lopsided 38-3 loss at Buffalo – and he finished with 2,404 passing yards and only seven touchdowns against nine interceptions.
In his second season, Najee Harris was solid with just over 1,000 yards rushing and seven scores. But it was the young, dynamic receiving corps that could put this team in the mix for a long time to come (just like most of the other Steelers teams the past half-century).
Rookie George Pickens made some insane catches and could be the next Odell Beckham or DeAndre Hopkins, as he went for 801 yards. Diontae Johnson for the second straight campaign was the clear No. 1 target and has more than 2,000 receiving yards in two seasons. They also traded for Allen Robinson, which will make their wide receiving corps one of the best in the NFL.
Tight end Pat Friermuth, who is just 22 years old, already has 123 catches for more than 1,200 yards receiving in two seasons.
In other words, with an adequate offensive line, the Steelers are finding out how to move the ball – even in this tough division. Their defense improved from 24th to 13th, but that’s not where they need to be if they are going to be a contender in the AFC.
So we’ll ask again: Will the limited success from 2022 transfer to 2023 with improvement?
2023 bye week: 6
2023 Draft: 1 (14th overall) T Broderick Jones, Georgia; 2 (32) CB Joey Porter Jr., Penn State; 2 (49) DT Keeanu Benton, Wisconsin; 3 (93) TE Darnell Washington, Georgia; 4 (132) LB Nick Herbig, Wisconsin; 7 (241) CB Cory Trice, Purdue; 7 (251) OL Spencer Anderson, Maryland
Free-agent signings: G Isaac Seumalo (from Philadelphia), 3 years, $24M; LB Cole Holcomb (from Washington), 3 years, $18M; CB Patrick Peterson (from Minnesota), 2 years, $14M; G Nate Herbig (from NY Jets), 2 years, $8M; LB Elandon Roberts (from Miami), 2 years, $7M; S Keanu Neal (from Tampa Bay), 2 years, $4.25M; LB Kwon Alexander (from NY Jets), 1 year, $1.32M; LB Markus Golden (from Arizona), 1 year, $1.32M; S Chandon Sullivan (from Minnesota), 1 year, $1.23M; DT Armon Watts (from Chicago), 1 year, $1.23M; G LeRaven Clark (cut); LB Nick Kwiatkoski (cut); LB Tanner Muse (cut).
What needs to go right: Pickett MUST continue developing, and do it at a fast pace. What might make some Steelers fans nervous is his completion rate, which wasn’t great in college, either.
He finished his rookie season at .630, which was higher than his .624 in five seasons at the University of Pittsburgh, and that included a .672 in his second senior season of 2021. In fact, his draft stock jumped so high in one year because after throwing 39 touchdown passes in 39 college games before 2021, he tossed for 42 scores against just seven picks in that final season.
In other words, we’ll learn a lot this year, and there really aren’t any excuses, considering the talent he has around him, which had been lacking in Pittsburgh for a few seasons.
Nevertheless, we also ask can the defense take the next step. This has always been an area of pride for Tomlin, and dropping from fifth in 2020 to 24th in 2021 had to sting. They’re on the way back and have some key veterans in TJ Watt, Cam Heyward, Minkah Fitzpatrick and signee Patrick Peterson to help lead the way.
Although the schedule starts tough with home games against San Francisco and Cleveland, it is the eighth-easiest overall, unlike last year’s brutal sked. There is only one non-divisional road game against a team that made the playoffs last season, and that’s at Seattle on New Year’s Eve.
An early bye (Week 6) is no fun, but if they can find a way to be 4-2 before hosting Jacksonville, Tennessee and Green Bay in successive weeks in late October and early November, this could be a sneaky good team.
PREVIEW SCHEDULE / LINKS
AFC SOUTH
July 25: Houston Texans
Sept. 2: Pittsburgh Steelers
NFC SOUTH
Sept. 5: Atlanta Falcons
Sept. 6: Carolina Panthers
Sept. 7: Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Sept. 8: New Orleans Saints

Pittsburg, PA
Pittsburgh-area man charged in UTV crash on frozen lake that killed man

A Westmoreland County man was charged in connection with the death of another Westmoreland County man after the two fell through a frozen lake in Maryland while riding a utility terrain vehicle earlier this year.
The Maryland Department of Natural Resources said in a news release on Tuesday that Ricky A. Wise, of Mount Pleasant, is facing a list of charges — including negligent homicide by motor vehicle while under the influence and homicide with a motor vehicle while impaired — after a UTV crash led to the death of David T. Linsenbigler, of Greensburg.
Maryland authorities said the 59-year-old Wise was driving a Polaris RZR XP 1000 with the 58-year-old Linsenbigler on Deep Creek Lake on Feb. 22 when the vehicle fell through the ice beneath the Glendale Bridge. When first responders arrived, they found Wise had escaped the water, but Linsenbigler was trapped in the submerged wreckage.
The Greensburg man was rescued and taken to a hospital in West Virginia, where he died a day later, officials said. The Mount Pleasant man was taken to a local hospital and treated for hypothermia, according to the news release, which added that he was released a day later.
Investigators said, according to the news release, that Wise consumed alcoholic beverages before getting on the UTV on the day of the crash. He allegedly had a blood alcohol concentration above the legal limit in Maryland of 0.08 percent.
Wise was charged by summons and is scheduled to stand trial in Garrett County on Oct. 7, authorities said. If convicted, he faces more than 12 years behind bars and nearly $17,000 in fines.
The news release said only snowmobiles are allowed on Deep Creek Lake.
Pittsburg, PA
Two Steelers mistakes cost them dearly, but Pittsburgh’s issues run much deeper

PITTSBURGH — Aaron Rodgers scampered out of the pocket and looked toward the corner of the end zone, with a go-ahead touchdown and a milestone throw in sight.
The Steelers’ quarterback had already enjoyed a historic moment in the second quarter, when he connected with DK Metcalf for the 508th touchdown pass of his career. In doing so, Rodgers tied Brett Favre for fourth on the all-time list. With a chance to surpass the man he backed up two decades ago, Rodgers let the ball fly in tight end Pat Freiermuth’s direction.
As the ball approached Freiermuth, receiver Calvin Austin III dove to try to make a play. The ball deflected off Austin and was snatched out of the air by Seattle Seahawks defensive back Derion Kendrick.
“I was in the scramble rules,” Austin said. “I was in the wrong spot, just trying to make a play. But I gotta do what I’m coached and not, in the spur of the moment, do something to try to make a play… That’s most definitely on me. That interception wasn’t on (Rodgers) or on Pat (Freiermuth) or anything. If I had just stayed on the front pylon, it probably would have been a touchdown.”
Rodgers said after the game that a touchdown in that situation would have changed the “whole scope of the game,” as it would have given the Steelers’ a seven-point lead in the closing minutes of the third quarter. Instead, the interception became the first of several game-changing moments down the stretch of a 31-17 loss to the Seahawks. Just a few minutes after the interception, an even costlier blunder would doom them.
After the Seahawks took a 3-point lead on a field goal, Seattle kicker Jason Myers delivered a bouncing ball into the landing zone. The football hopped over rookie kicker returner Kaleb Johnson’s shoulder and sat lifelessly in the end zone as Johnson headed toward the sideline. Seattle raced down the field and recovered it for a stunning touchdown. The 10-point deficit was too much for the Steelers to overcome.
“I just made a mistake,” Johnson said after the game. “I’ve just got to get better every day. That’s all I have to say about this. I’ve just got to go in every day and work my hardest even more with a chip on my shoulder.”
Football is a funny game sometimes. In Week 1, the Steelers were in a tight game against the Jets that broke open in Pittsburgh’s favor when running back Kenneth Gainwell forced a fumble on a Jets kick return. In Week 2, the shoe was on the other foot after another pivotal special teams play.
In that way, it would be easy to chalk up the loss to one or two bounces that didn’t go in the Steelers’ direction. Coach Mike Tomlin saw it differently.
“I’ve got a desire for us to be cleaner so you can’t point to singular plays as pivotal points in the game,” Tomlin said. “We’ve got a lot of work to do, that’s just to put it succinctly.”
When you zoom out, Tomlin’s comments put the first two weeks of the season in proper perspective. In both games, similar issues plagued Pittsburgh. In both games, the offensive line struggled to create running lanes and was inconsistent in pass protection. In both games, the defense failed to stop the run and was gashed by chunk plays. The result was different. But when you take away Rodgers’ four-touchdown heroics in Week 1, it largely was the same product.
“It’s Week 2. It’s good for us,” Rodgers said. “Last week, probably there were some people who were feeling pretty good because everyone outside the building is talking about how great we were on offense and 34 points. That’s the league. You can’t ride the highs and ride the lows. You’ve got to refocus every single week and be a professional.”
The Seahawks just recovered a kickoff in the end zone for a touchdown!
SEAvsPIT on FOX/FOX Onehttps://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/0J1gEbqx4r
— NFL (@NFL) September 14, 2025
The Seahawks defense largely kept a lid on the Steelers’ passing game by playing from a two-high safety shell. The way to make a defense pay for playing two safeties deep is to run the ball effectively. Pittsburgh never did. The top three backs — Jaylen Warren, Gainwell and Johnson — carried the ball 20 times for just 69 yards in the game. Even if you add in garbage-time stats, the Steelers managed just 3.4 yards per carry and 72 total rushing yards.
Without a running game to support Rodgers and keep the defense honest, moving the ball was an inconsistent endeavor. Rodgers completed 18 of 33 passes for 203 yards, one touchdowns and two interceptions. He was sacked three times and hit eight times in total. The one-dimensional nature of the offense made things especially challenging on third downs, where Pittsburgh went 5-for-15.
Asked what went wrong on third down, Rodgers said, “Everything.”
“I wasn’t on target,” Rodgers said. “We weren’t getting open effectively enough and they were getting some good pass rush.”
Derion Kendrick gets his interception on Aaron Rodgers!
SEAvsPIT on FOX/FOX Onehttps://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/PQpmb7TajZ
— NFL (@NFL) September 14, 2025
Defensively, it was even more disappointing. A defense full of Pro Bowl talent wasn’t bashful in the preseason about saying they could be the NFL’s best defense. Safety Juan Thornhill said they could be the “best of all-time,” and Tomlin said he felt they could be “historic.” While the defense was opportunistic on Sunday— a Jalen Ramsey interception set up a field goal and a Nick Herbig interception off of a Cameron Heyward deflection set up a touchdown — that unit has come nowhere close to living up to their own lofty expectations through two games.
The two biggest keys coming into Sunday’s game were to shut down running back Kenneth Walker III and to slow receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba. They fell short in both regards. Walker racked up 105 yards and a touchdown on 13 carries — it was the second consecutive game the Steelers allowed a running back to eclipse 100 yards rushing. Meanwhile, Smith-Njigba, the Seahawks’ main receiving threat, caught eight passes for 103 yards.
“I just don’t like people having their way,” inside linebacker Patrick Queen said. “We did that again today, let them have their way. It’s definitely aggravating.”
In many cases, the problems went hand-in-hand. Queen said that the Seahawks took advantage of their man coverage to complete a number of passes in the middle of the field for big gains. In the run game, the Steelers were often gashed by big runs. Overall, the Steelers gave up 18 plays of 10 yards or more, including four plays of 20-plus yards.
“The first note of every single week is smash the run,” outside linebacker T.J. Watt said. “You guys have heard me say for nine years, we’re always trying to smash the run. It’s not a lack of trying. Schematically. Effort. I don’t know. We’ll have to look at the film, but we have to be better.
“We need to look in the mirror, we need to turn over every stone that we possibly can, because this can’t continue to happen or else you’re going to continue to see what we saw today.”
That may be the truest statement of the day. Even after GM Omar Khan’s noisy offseason, repeated investments in the offensive line and a ton of money committed to the defense, the Steelers are a team that will be in tight games decided by a handful of plays. Until the Steelers eradicate the warts, the same shortcomings will continue to shape the outcome of games.
(Top photo: Barry Reeger / Imagn Images)
Pittsburg, PA
Game #149: Pittsburgh Pirates vs. Washington Nationals

Location: Nationals Park, Washington, D.C.
Broadcast: KDKA AM/FM, Sportsnet
The Pittsburgh Pirates are facing off against the NL East rival Washington Nationals in a three-game series in the nation’s capital.
Please remember our Game Day thread guidelines.
BD community, this is your thread for today’s game against the Nats. Enjoy!
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