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Steelers Mock Draft: Welcome Next Pair of Offensive Stars

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Steelers Mock Draft: Welcome Next Pair of Offensive Stars


PITTSBURGH — The Pittsburgh Steelers are a beacon of consistency and have been for decades. Winning as many or more games as they lose is as guaranteed as the Alleghany and Monongahela meeting at the Point. However, that level of success isn’t cutting it anymore. The Steelers need to make some improvements.

Prior to free agency, the Steelers are on pace to field the highest-paid defense in the league for the fourth consecutive season. Therefore, this mock draft focuses on what the Steelers likely will do — target offense in the draft.

The last time the Steelers drafted more than four offensive players in a single draft was when they used six of their nine picks in 2012, on that side of the ball. To make this mock draft as realistic as possible, I’ll use history as a guide and not use too many picks on offensive players. As a sidenote, there will be no draft-day trades in this mock draft.

With history out of the way, the 2025 (mock) NFL Draft has commenced.

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Golden spent his first two collegiate seasons at Houston where he recorded 76 total receptions for 988 yards and 13 touchdowns. He set a freshman record with seven touchdowns in 2022.

Then, Golden transferred to Texas for his junior year. The six-foot-tall, 195 lb wideout caught 58 passes for 987 yards and nine touchdowns including a trio of two-touchdown outings.

In the SEC Championship, a 22-19 overtime loss for Georgia, Golden recorded eight receptions for 162 yards. In the College Football Playoff Quarterfinals against Arizona State, Golden caught seven passes for 149 yards and a touchdown.

The Houston, TX native is a big game player. But that’s the cherry on top of a litany of tools Golden possesses. His 4.38-second 40-yard dash time highlights his obvious track speed. In high school, Golden recorded a 10.93-second 100-meter dash.

Golden is excellent at creating separation as his speed makes it easy to sell any vertical route and he can change speeds easily. When the ball goes his way, which wasn’t incredibly often at Texas, Golden makes circus catches he can turn into explosive plays after the catch.

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Golden isn’t the biggest receiver leaving a window open for opposing defensive backs to get physical with him. In tandem, Golden isn’t the best blocker, but that surely isn’t what he’s built to do.

The Steelers cover two bases by drafting Golden. In the event the Steelers don’t keep wide receiver, George Pickens, Golden could fill Pickens’s role as a number-one receiver who can go deep, with an added route-running ability. If the Steelers keep Pickens, which is almost certain for the 2025 season, Golden would prevent opposing defenses from sending safety help to Pickens’ side of the field every play.

Johnson is coming off by far the most productive season of his college career. In his third season with the Hawkeyes, Johnson rushed for 1,537 yards and 21 touchdowns, a school record, on 240 carries. On top of that, Johnson caught 22 passes for 188 yards and two touchdowns on the season. His 23 total touchdowns is an Iowa single-season record.

Standing at six-foot-tall and listed at 225 lbs., Johnson is the definition of a work-horse running back. He turned heads as soon as he stepped on the field for Iowa, breaking the Hawkeyes’ freshman record with 779 rushing yards in 2022.

Johnson has the ability to stay patient, make quick cuts, use his excellent vision to work with his blocks, and finish the run all the way to the ground. Johnson is also the type of back that gets better as the game goes on, wearing the opposing team down but maintaining his explosiveness.

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If the Steelers can get Johnson in the second round, they’ll get the fourth running back off the board at worst, and the second running back off the board at best.

Johnson has shown promise in the receiving game, but he rarely ran full routes at Iowa. He also isn’t the most adept at pass-blocking, but that is certainly a skill he could develop at the next level given his size and frame.

Johnson doesn’t possess the home-run-hitting speed that would thrust him into a no-doubt first-round pick, but that doesn’t downplay his ability. Before the 2025 combine, Johnson has a recorded 4.50-second 40-yard dash.

Former Steelers first-round pick Najee Harris is currently a free agent and his future with the team is uncertain. Although Harris has rushed for more than 1,000 yards in each of his first four seasons, the Steelers running game hasn’t been great compared to the rest of the league. Johnson brings a similar ability to carry a major load and break tackles as Harris does, but with more explosiveness than Harris has showcased.

Pierce is the type of offensive lineman the Steelers need. Standing at six-foot-eight and listed at 345 lbs., Pierce has got the build to be an elite offensive tackle. Unsurprisingly, his height is in the 89th percentile of all offensive tackles at the combine and his weight in the 97th percentile.

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Pierce is a mauler (so he’ll fit right in with Pittsburgh). He started his collegiate career as a walk-on recruit at Rutgers. Entering the NFL Draft as a redshirt senior, Pierce started four years and played on both sides of the line. The Trenton, NJ native played 1,473 snaps at right tackle and 1,696 snaps at left tackle over his time at Rutgers.

PFF gave Pierce a 83.5 run blocking grade and a 79.5 pass blocking grade over this last season. The numbers check out as Rutgers quarterback Athan Kaliakmanis only took 21 sacks on the season and Rutgers running back Kyle Monangai totaled 1,279 yards. The Scarlet Knights finished the 2024 season with a 7-5 record.

Pierce’s performance and experience earned him an invite to the East-West Shrine Bowl. He was named Second Team All-Big Ten last season and was Honorable Mention All-Big Ten in 2023.

Pierce’s frame alone makes rushing the quarterback difficult, as opposing edge rushers have a much bigger wall to get around. In watching his film, Pierce often shutters opposing defensive lineman with a single punch. He’s invulnerable to a power rush considering his anchor.

In the run game, Pierce is able to take out one or more defenders on a play, often taking them to the ground. However, he isn’t very light on his feet.

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If the Steelers continue to run a zone run scheme, Pierce likely isn’t the perfect fit. But the Steelers started to implement some gap and power runs into their game last season. That adaptation would give Pierce space to shine as he can create huge holes for his running back.

Standing at six-foot-tall and listed at 205 lbs., Sanker is coming off a season where he earned four ACC Defensive Back of the Week honors he achieved by making game-sealing plays every other week.

Sanker had a career season in 2023 but opted to return for his senior year. In his junior year, Sanker recoded 107 total tackles, 11 passes defensed, and three forced fumbles. It was enough for Sanker to earn a First-Team All-ACC selection.

In this last season, Sanker recorded 98 tackles, two sacks, two fumble recoveries, an interception, and four passes defensed.

Sanker was a remarkable and productive dual-threat quarterback in high school at a small school in Charlottesville, VA. His transformation into one of the top defensive backs in the ACC projects well for further development.

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Sanker is not a do-it-all player, but most Day 3 picks aren’t. His decisiveness and explosiveness in the run game jumps out. When Sanker has the opportunity to rush the quarterback or make a play on an opposing ball-carrier, he makes the most of it. Sanker seems to understand opposing protection plans and how to disguise coverages to meddle with those plans.

Sanker’s aggressiveness can sometimes backfire. When facing play-action or RPOs, Sanker can sometimes creep too close to the line of scrimmage, giving spaces for opposing offenses to exploit. Vertical threats can sometimes out run him as well.

Sanker would fit great as an underneath safety. Considering the Steelers have a pair of quality safeties in Minkah Fitzpatrick and DeShon Elliot, Sanker doesn’t need to play deep, which fits his strengths great.

The Steelers use another pick to bolster their offensive line. Standing at six-foot-six and weighing in at 310 lbs. prior to the NFL Combine, Colby brings three years of starting experience to the next level.

The Cedar Rapids, IA native came to the Hawkeyes as a four-star recruit and immediately found his place. He started 11 games his first season and earned Freshman All-American honors from FWAA and Maxwell Football Club.

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The next season, Colby’s time was split between both right tackle and left guard. Despite moving around the line, Colby still earned third-team All-Big Ten honors.

Colby’s time at Iowa overlaps with the Steelers’ second-round pick in this mock draft, Johnson. Colby brings an ability to double-team and climb to the second level with his speed and agility.

In pass protection, Colby has good hand placement and ability to anchor once the opposing defender engages. However, Colby does show some balance problems which defenders at the next level could take advantage of.

Shough is one of the oldest players in this NFL Draft class. At 25 years old, Shough started his college career at Oregon backing up Justin Herbert. Shough earned the starting job in 2020 and led Oregon to a Pac-12 Championship,

Shough eventually transferred to Texas Tech but injuries plagued three consecutive seasons. This past year, Shough found a home at Louisville and had a career year.

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The Chandler, AZ native passed for 3,195 yards, 23 touchdowns, and six interceptions of 62.7% completion percentage. Shough’s 266.3 passing yards per game is second all-time in Louisville history.

Standing at six-foot-five, Shough is a prototypical NFL quarterback. He’s got the ability to hit any throw with lots of arm talent, especially deep balls. He’s not much of a rushing threat — he will show flashes on crucial downs — but is certainly mobile around the pocket and can throw on the move. Shough also makes safe decisions as his 23:6 touchdown to interception ratio suggests.

Shough’s amount of experience in three different systems at the college level can somewhat offset the downside of his age. He has such a big arm he sometimes forgets to keep his lower body in check and can miss throws, especially when the pocket is collapsing.

In this mock draft, the Steelers aren’t selecting a quarterback on days one or two. Therefore, taking a flyer on an older guy with athletic tools means bringing in a guy that can compete for a job — the backup or starter.

Frazier fits the mold of a class fan-favorite Steelers defender. As a 0-star recruit in the 2019 class, Frazier started his career at JUCO. He was a JUCO All-American and first-team all-conference at Coffeyville Community College.

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His performance was enough to get him as the No. 3 overall JUCO recruit in the nation by Rivals.

He selected UTSA to be his home at the Division I level but didn’t earn much play time in his first two seasons. Last season as a redshirt junior, Frazier earned honorable mention All-American by CBS Sports. He started 10 games and broke UTSA’s single-season record with six interceptions.

Frazier’s standout season earned him an invitation to the East-West Shrine Bowl

Standing at six-foot-three and listed at a185 lbs., Frazier possess long arms and the speed to carry speedy receivers down field. His production on the ball and his hands help prove he’s able to track the ball deep down the field. As an added bonus, Frazier is a solid tackler when surrounded by others and can assist in defending the run.

Frazier isn’t the most physical tackler, especially if he’s in a one-on-one situation. But frankly, a seventh round corner can’t have everything and the ability to cover receivers seems more valuable than run support from a corner.

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Kicking in Acrisure Stadium is hard, but the Steelers roster the best kicker in the NFL, Chris Boswell, who earned First-Team All-Pro Honors.

This draft pick has no comment on Boswell’s production, consistency and future. Boswell could kick for several more seasons. But Sauls has the unique experience of five years kicking in Acrisure Stadium — invaluable experience that is hard for other kicker prospects to replicate.

Sauls was selected to the PFF 27-member All-American squad and was a Lou Groza Collegiate Place-Kicker Award Semifinalist. He matched the longest field goal in Pitt history with a 58-yarder against California and hit two 57-yarders. Sauls’ field goal percentage of 87.5% ranked 18th nationally and fourth in the ACC. He set a Pitt record by making six field goals of 50-plus yards.

Sauls, a redshirt senior, is an NFL-starting caliber kicker, but he likely isn’t taking Boswell’s job. In the event of injury an unforeseen falloff from Boswell.

Standing at five-foot-ten and weighing in at 185 lbs., Sauls comes to the Steelers as a multi-sport athlete and former soccer star. If he can hang around the organization long enough, he could be the kicker of the Steelers far future.

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Kozora: Pittsburgh Steelers 2026 Mock Draft (Final Version)

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Kozora: Pittsburgh Steelers 2026 Mock Draft (Final Version)


For the final time of the 2026 NFL Draft cycle, my Pittsburgh Steelers mock draft. My last predictions of what the team will do this Thursday, Friday, and Saturday.

A couple of things up front. Like my past mocks, I’m not predicting trades. It’s doubtful the Steelers make a dozen selections, but I’m not going to try to predict them for my mock drafts. Some of you don’t like that, and I understand why, but I’m keeping things as I always have.

Reminder, this is what I think will happen. Not necessarily what I would do if I were making the decisions.

As always, let me know your thoughts in the comments below. Enjoy the draft. Can’t wait to see what happens.

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Previous Steelers Mock Drafts

Pre-Free Agency
Post-Free Agency
Post Pro Days

Round One (21st Overall) – Omar Cooper Jr./WR Indiana: 6001, 199 pounds

Analysis: I’m doing it. I’m breaking history. For good reason. Two, actually. As I outlined this weekend, Pittsburgh’s connections to Cooper might mean they didn’t feel a pre-draft “30” visit was necessary. To wide receivers coach Adam Henry, who worked with Cooper at Indiana in 2022, and to senior offensive assistant Frank Cignetti Jr., brother of Indiana head coach Curt Cignetti Jr.

It’s a rare advantage for any team. A unique opportunity that creates a unique moment for the Steelers to draft someone they didn’t host for a visit or have a decision-maker attend their Pro Day. In an offseason of changes headlined by Pittsburgh’s first new head coach in nearly 20 years, why not add another?

Mike McCarthy’s Monday answer about the wide receiver position might as well have been an advertisement for Cooper.

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“Historically, when you talk about a slot receiver, the first thing you think about: can the guy run an option route?” he told reporters. “Because that’s really what slot receivers were known for. In my experience, I’ve always looked for the guy that was athletic enough and had the ability to win outside the numbers.”

That’s Cooper. He played on the outside until 2025, when a teammate’s injury shifted him to the slot. He was just as successful. Cooper has just enough size to check the box McCarthy looks for, drafting the position 6-feet or taller about 90 percent of the time. Cooper runs great routes and knows how to get open. He’s tough, successful post-catch, and came up clutch by showing his great hands to make a game-winning snag against Penn State – a game I’m guessing had Pittsburgh personnel in attendance.

Predicting Pittsburgh’s first round this year is more difficult than ever. A new coaching staff and less information, even down to Art Rooney II not conducting a true media tour outlining the team’s needs, make the picture fuzzy. The Steelers could choose several positions, let alone players, to help the team in the short and long term. But my gut says Cooper will be the guy.

Omar Cooper Jr. Scouting Report

Others Considered: My order of confidence: WR Omar Cooper Jr., WR Denzel Boston, OG Vega Ioane, OT/OG Spencer Fano, and CB Jermod McCoy (as the fly in the ointment).

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Round Two (53rd Overall) – Gennings Dunker/OG Iowa: 6050, 319 pounds

Analysis: This is not about the mullet. Mostly. Dunker played left tackle at Iowa, but most scouts expect him to kick inside at the NFL level. Still, his tackle background gives him the flexibility to overlap between guard and tackle.

Dunker is big and physical, and his high school wrestling background is something Pittsburgh gravitates toward. The Steelers must be strong all across the offensive line in the AFC North, facing Myles Garrett, Trey Hendrickson, and (now) Dexter Lawrence twice per year. Dunker will have to change positions and sides; he does have at least a tiny bit of left guard experience and will be the favorite to start Week One. Learning from two quality o-line coaches, James Campen and Jahri Evans, will help.

Last thought. Not scouting the helmet, but Mike McCarthy loves drafting Iowa players: six of them in Green Bay and one in Dallas. Three of them were in the trenches, offensive or defensive linemen.

Gennings Dunker Scouting Report

Others Considered: WR Ted Hurst, S A.J. Haulcy, CB/S Treydan Stukes, OG Keylan Rutledge

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Round Three (76th Overall) – Malik Muhammad/CB Texas: 6000, 182 pounds

Analysis: Lots of box checking here. Muhammad was brought in for a pre-draft visit and fits the bill across the board. He brings a combination of youth as a third-year junior and still just 21 years old, experience with 29 starts, production with 19 career pass deflections, and athleticism with a 9.58 RAS.

Muhammad also has size, standing 6’0 with great length for his frame, 32 3/8-inch arms. His 182-pound listing at the Combine is less-than-ideal, but at his Pro Day, he bulked up to 190 pounds.

After signing Jamel Dean, I didn’t expect Pittsburgh to consider a cornerback early. But the four corners brought in for visits, plus the homework they did on the Pro Day trail, tells me they want to keep restocking the position in the AFC North, facing Ja’Marr Chase and Tee Higgins twice per season. Cleveland and Baltimore could add first-round wide receivers, too.

Malik Muhammad Scouting Report

Others Considered: OG Beau Stephens, S Bud Clark, DL Lee Hunter

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Round Three (85th Overall) – Darrell Jackson Jr./DL Florida State: 6054, 315 pounds

Analysis: If there’s a lineman who looks like a Steeler, it’s Jackson. Last week, DC Patrick Graham noted the need for having “big” bodies up front. Jackson checks that box in spades.

Pittsburgh met with him at the NFL Combine and brought him in for a pre-draft visit. The Steelers need to do all they can to increase their run defense after two underwhelming seasons.

Cam Heyward signed a contract extension, and they added Sebastian Joseph-Day, but long-term, the position remains thin. Jackson will provide reinforcements and excellent depth as the ideal build for playing up front. The question is whether Jackson can develop his pass rush enough to become a future starter.

If Mike Tomlin had remained Pittsburgh’s head coach, I would’ve mentioned that Jackson’s uncle is Dexter Jackson, whom Tomlin coached during Tampa Bay’s Super Bowl win. Alas, it stays just a fun fact.

Darrell Jackson Jr. Scouting Report

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Others Considered: OT Travis Burke, WR Skyler Bell, WR Antonio Williams

Round Three (99th Overall) – Marlin Klein/TE Michigan: 6060, 248 pounds

Analysis: Don’t scout the helmet. That’s a scouting adage. But in scouting the conference, the Steelers sure have a type. Since 2015, Pittsburgh has drafted five tight ends. Four of them have played in the Big Ten: Jesse James (Penn State), Zach Gentry (Michigan), Connor Heyward (Michigan State), and Pat Freiermuth (Penn State). That’s not just correlation.

The Steelers like projecting the position in a conference that showcases the running game and traditional pro-style offenses compared to other conferences: the wide-open Big 12, the RPO-heavy SEC.

Sure, it’s a new coaching staff, and those ties may no longer bind as strongly. But the two tight ends Pittsburgh brought in for visits this year? From the Big Ten: Ohio State’s Will Kacmarek and Klein.

To the player, Klein has an ideal frame and is a good in-line blocker. He’s a straight-line athlete and wasn’t heavily involved in the pass game, but could find more NFL production than in college. He’ll become the No. 3 tight end, a position that may initially have little importance but will become key if there’s an injury to Darnell Washington or Pat Freiermuth.

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Marlin Klein Scouting Report

Others Considered: CB Devin Moore, OT Markel Bell, QB Drew Allar

Round Four (121st Overall) – Dametrious Crownover/OT Texas AM: 6072, 319 pounds

Analysis: Monday’s story on Broderick Jones seemed to throw Pittsburgh’s plans for a loop. A Broderick Jones setback? The buzz around offensive tackle only heightened. Later that day, Omar Khan downplayed and seemingly refuted the idea that Jones suffered a setback – at least, nothing recently.

No matter his condition, the Steelers could stand to add more tackle depth. Pittsburgh took a look at hulking tackles Markel Bell and Travis Burke, and either could become the selection. But the tackle market is always hot during the draft, and the Steelers may miss out.

Crownover is a similarly big tackle with longer than 35-inch arms. A former tight end turned Texas A&M’s starting right tackle the last two seasons, he’s athletic with room to grow. Pittsburgh sent assistant o-line coach Jahri Evans to the Aggies’ Pro Day to check out the school’s four draftable linemen. I think they come away with at least one.

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Dametrious Crownover Scouting Report

Others Considered: QB Carson Beck, ILB Harold Perkins, DL Chris McClellan

Round Four (135th Overall) – Zakee Wheatley/S Penn State: 6031, 203 pounds

Analysis: For most of the pre-draft process, I believed the Steelers would draft safety early. They still could. But with just two pre-draft visitors brought in, the position might be less urgent to address than I first thought.

Still, there are long-term concerns. Jalen Ramsey is likely done after 2026, Jaquan Brisker signed just a one-year deal, and there’s no guarantee the nearly 30-year-old DeShon Elliott makes it through the 2027 season. Pittsburgh needs a free safety to replace Ramsey in 2027. Wheatley could be that guy.

A rangy center fielder, he’s picked off six career passes and made plays to all levels of the field (five tackles for loss, one sack, two forced fumbles). A slow 4.6 40 time pushes him down into Day Three, but creates good value for the Steelers, who, in this world, brought Joey Porter Jr., Brisker, and Wheatley from Penn State to Pittsburgh.

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Zakee Wheatley Scouting Report

Others Considered: OG Ar’maj Reed-Adams, S Jakobe Thomas, CB Tacario Davis

Round Five (161st Overall) – Kaden Wetjen/KR Iowa State: 5093, 193 pounds

Analysis: Pittsburgh needs a returner. Badly. So they take the best one in the entire draft. Kaden Wetjen is the No. 1 returner successful on punts (four career touchdowns) and kicks (two scores). He’ll knock out Pittsburgh’s needs at both positions and make an immediate impact, even assuming his offensive role is limited.

In the two years under the NFL’s new dynamic kickoffs, the Steelers have ranked as the league’s worst returners. Punt returner Calvin Austin III departed for the New York Giants. Pittsburgh has few rostered options now and nothing that looks potent. Wetjen brings the juice.

Kaden Wetjen Scouting Report

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Others Considered: ILB Jack Kelly, CB Ephesians Prysock, TE Will Kacmarek

Round Six (216th Overall) – Jaden Dugger/ILB Louisiana: 6046, 242 pounds

Analysis: A truly intriguing player, Dugger is a Pittsburgh native who played his high school ball at Penn Hills and was brought in for a pre-draft visit as a local exception. Beginning his college career as a safety at FCS Georgetown, Dugger transferred to Louisiana in 2024 and bulked up to play linebacker.

He’s raw and clearly still learning the position. But his frame is rare (35-inch arms truly make him a unicorn), his athleticism is evident, and his 125-tackle production showed he can make plays. I considered putting him even higher than this because his traits and upside will play on Day Three, but the sixth round feels reasonable, too.

Jaden Dugger Scouting Report

Others Considered: WR Kendrick Law, QB Taylen Green, EDGE George Gumbs Jr., RB/WR Eli Heidenreich

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Round Seven (224th Overall) – Tim Keenan III/NT Alabama: 6010, 327 pounds

Analysis: Adding more defensive line depth to begin closing out the draft. Keenan is a plugger in the middle who may not be a true space eater, but is stout and strong and can take on blocks. He could fight for backup nose tackle snaps.

Even if he’s not needed in 2026 (Sebastian Joseph-Day or Yahya Black may occupy the role), Keenan could be an asset in 2027. He may begin his career on the practice squad.

Tim Keenan III Scouting Report

Others Considered: WR/KR Barion Brown, DL James Thompson Jr., EDGE Max Llewellyn

Round Seven (230th Overall) – Caden Curry/EDGE Ohio State: 6026, 257 pounds

Analysis: Some project Curry to be selected a tick higher than this, but a deep EDGE class, along with Curry’s lack of length and sub-par athleticism, could push him down. Still, he’s a gamer with a red-hot motor and is productive. Similar to Jack Sawyer, his floor is higher than his ceiling, and he’s a good scheme fit, comfortable playing on his feet and dropping into coverage.

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Assuming Pittsburgh doesn’t make a major draft weekend trade, the Steelers are stocked at the position and can’t draft it too early, given the tough path any rookie will face.

Caden Curry Scouting Report

Others Considered: NT Dontay Corleone, RB Desmond Reid, TE Khalil Dinkins, DL Uar Bernard

Round Seven (237th Overall) – Joey Aguilar/QB Tennessee: 6032, 229 pounds

Analysis: Surprising myself by waiting until the final round to mock a quarterback. I expected to, like most others, shoehorn in Penn State’s Drew Allar or Miami (FL)’s Carson Beck in the third or fourth round. But looking at the landscape and seeing the other needs, it just doesn’t make enough sense.

Pittsburgh’s shown plenty of interest in the position, and that is a serious sign they plan on drafting one. But that crowds the room under an assumed Aaron Rodgers return. Mason Rudolph would become the odd man out, and does Pittsburgh want to go into the year with Will Howard and a rookie backing him up? There’s a case to be made that the answer is yes, given that McCarthy has seldom mentioned Rudolph since being hired, and that Howard is apparently QB1 to begin voluntary minicamp.

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But I think Pittsburgh waits. Their quarterback search will continue into 2027, making 2026 an exercise in “keeping the knife sharp” in scouting and evaluating the position.

For all of Mike McCarthy’s focus on drafting quarterbacks, he’s drafted six of them during his stints with Green Bay and Dallas. Five of them came in the fifth round or later. Having Aaron Rodgers and Dak Prescott helps, but McCarthy has never selected a “mid-round” quarterback before, defined as selected in the third or fourth round.

Why the seventh? As explained in my previous mock, this prevents Pittsburgh from having to compete to sign one in the UDFA pool. Waters that the Steelers don’t compete well in, offering tiny signing bonuses, as top names get $100-200k in partial base salary guarantees. Aguilar has the size Pittsburgh likes and is tough and poised in the pocket. He’ll enter the camp as the No. 4, and if he gets cut and goes to the practice squad, no one will bat an eye.

Joey Aguilar Scouting Report

Others Considered: NT Deven Eastern, CB Malcolm DeWalt IV, P Ryan Eckley

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Final Thoughts/Recap

A recap of my 12 picks:

Round One – Omar Cooper Jr./WR Indiana
Round Two – Gennings Dunker/OG Iowa
Round Three – Malik Muhammad/CB Texas
Round Three – Darrell Jackson Jr./DL Florida State
Round Three – Marlin Klein/TE Michigan
Round Four – Dametrious Crownover/OT Texas &M
Round Four – Zakee Wheatley/S Penn State
Round Five –Kaden Wetjen/KR Iowa
Round Six – Jaden Dugger/ILB Louisiana
Round Seven – Tim Keenan III/NT Alabama
Round Seven – Caden Curry/EDGE Ohio State
Round Seven – Joey Aguilar/QB Tennessee

The final positional tally: six on defense, five on offense, and I’m counting Wetjen as a special teamer (of the two sides, he’s obviously an offensive player). Good draft balance, especially with offense dominating the first two picks and three of the first five.

Even though I didn’t mock any, where could a trade happen? Somewhere on Day Two is an obvious place. Take a pair of those third-round picks and move up into Round Two, still giving the Steelers three total Day 2 selections (two in Round 2, one in Round 3). I still like the idea of trading down with Buffalo from No. 21 to No. 26 to pick up more capital, especially if it involves 2027 selections.

To increase the challenge and play probabilities, I limited myself to picking no more than *five* of the team’s pre-draft visitors. We know a chunk of the picks will come from that list, but not every pick will. Or even the clear majority. In the end, I ended with four: Muhammad, Jackson, Klein, and Dugger (a local visit).

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I went back and forth on this mock a dozen different ways. The picture this year feels fuzzier than ever. But it’ll be a fun weekend, and it’s an honor for Pittsburgh to play as the host city, where so many lives will change over the next three days.



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Pittsburgh’s new 2026 budget is approved, with nearly $30 million in realigned expenses

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Pittsburgh’s new 2026 budget is approved, with nearly  million in realigned expenses






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From ‘Steel City’ to ‘eds and meds’: As Pittsburgh welcomes NFL Draft, it isn’t so easily defined anymore

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From ‘Steel City’ to ‘eds and meds’: As Pittsburgh welcomes NFL Draft, it isn’t so easily defined anymore


When a Pittsburgh sports team appears on national television, it’s a sure bet that one of the commentators will refer to the team’s hometown as “the Steel City” in one way or another.

But even as the Steel Curtain defense was helping propel the Steelers to the first of four Super Bowls in the 1970s, the industry for which it was named was well into decline.

“It’s been nearly 40 years since the nadir of job destruction in the wake of heavy industry,” said Chris Briem, a regional economist at the University of Pittsburgh’s Center for Social and Urban Research. “The peak of those steel jobs was probably in the 1950s, honestly.”

Sportscasters will inevitably use the nickname when the NFL Draft sets up shop in Pittsburgh from April 23-25.

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But if Pittsburgh isn’t “the Steel City” anymore, what is it? What drives the economy and culture at the confluence of the region’s three rivers these days?

It may be tempting to look to the relatively simplified “eds and meds” shorthand of recent years. The region’s universities and health care systems certainly have beefed up their presence across the city’s footprint. But Briem, whose book “Beyond Steel: Pittsburgh and the Economics of Transformation” was released in February, said there is no one industry that has supplanted steel in the region.

And that’s probably a good thing.

A steel-dominated city

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“The book documents that we were a steel-dominated, steel-dependent region for a lot longer than we should’ve been,” Briem said. “I think the nature of us having multiple generations all connected to the steel industry was really infused into the culture.”

As steelmaking went away, civic and business leaders sought something to replace it.

“The short answer is, nothing has really replaced the steel industry, and nothing really will,” Briem said. “The conditions that made this such a dominating place to produce steel won’t be replicated here or anywhere else.”

During the Industrial Revolution and again during World War II, the navigable waterways that formed Pittsburgh’s footprint, and the Pennsylvania Railroad’s former dominion over regional commercial transportation, created the perfect conditions to turn the city into a steelmaking juggernaut.

But that production likely peaked more than a century ago, during the 1920s, Briem said.

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“It was really downhill after that, and it’s mostly accidents of history — the Great Depression, World War II — that extended its importance and made it seem as though it wasn’t in decline.”

The final steel mill within the city limits closed in 1998. Today, steel jobs in Pittsburgh proper are limited to office staff at the U.S. Steel headquarters Downtown, and that is primarily the result of its recent merger with Japan-based Nippon, further illustrating that the one-time American industrial titan has reached the point where it needed a partnership to survive. The only production facilities remaining in the region are in Braddock and Clairton.

Identity

As the Steelers were cementing their legacy as the greatest NFL team of the 1970s, the notion of Pittsburgh as “the Steel City” began to be replaced locally with the “City of Champions” moniker, says Anne Madarasz, chief historian and director of the Western Pennsylvania Sports Museum at the Heinz History Center.

“Out of that evolving dark time when steel was shutting down, you got this sense that while the city’s pride might not be on the front page of the paper, it was there in the sports section,” Madarasz said.

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The advent of “Steelers Nation” — the notion that no matter where you went in America, you could find a few Steeler fans — is directly tied to the death of steel.

“ ‘Steelers Nation’ was really created by the outflow of people from the region as steel was declining and our sports franchises were rising,” Madarasz said.

Michael Glass, director of urban studies at the University of Pittsburgh, said that following the region’s population dropping by several hundred thousand between 1970 and 1990, it is still largely trying to find its identity.

“We had coal, coke, steel, iron, glass, all of this manufacturing stuff,” Glass said. “It was easy for communities to understand their role in creating the region’s wealth — coal miners, steel workers, barge pilots. But after de-industrialization in the ’70s and gut punch after gut punch, we’re still struggling to sort of find a narrative to move us along.”

Glass said “eds and meds” only describes a small piece of the region.

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“It doesn’t describe the kind of economy where you could make a life for yourself the way you could with the good, often union-related jobs you had as part of that broader industrial complex that kept the region going for 150 years,” he said. “If you look out into Fayette County, eds, meds, steel — none of it matters with the level of disinvestment those communities are still fighting against.”

Despite the population decline in the wake of the steel industry, Pittsburgh has grown in many areas.

“When you look at the city today, there’s not just a single answer,” Briem said. “This is a much more diverse economy than it probably has ever been.”

Diversity

The seeds of today’s diversity began growing more than 100 years ago, Madarasz said.

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“Pittsburgh has been able to reinvent itself a few times over history,” she said. “Back in the 1920s and ’30s, the creation of the Mellon Institute took the power of Pittsburgh’s universities and combined them with industry to create this center of innovation for the future. The government invested in nuclear energy through the work of Westinghouse.”

Even the abandoned industrial properties left in the wake of steel’s collapse are seeing a second life in many cases — the former Homestead Works is the site of the Waterfront shopping center, and Hazelwood Green sits atop the former J&L steel property.

Tech companies also have found an upside in some of the region’s former industrial sites.

“AI companies are looking for space to build data centers, and we have old industrial sites they’re finding that are very suitable for that,” Madarasz said.

Glass said some towns have cast a skeptical eye toward such proposals.

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“You see some suspicion in these communities where people are asking, ‘Is this going to be a benefit to me, or is it going to take the water, take the energy, drive my energy costs up and not benefit my kids?’” he said.

Technology of a different kind has taken root primarily through Carnegie Mellon University: robotics.

“Without a doubt, Pittsburgh has the country’s largest concentration and mass of robotics research and start-ups,” said Howie Choset, professor of robotics, biomedical Engineering, electrical and computer engineering at CMU’s Robotics Institute.

He said Pittsburgh’s longstanding, blue-collar work ethic has helped the robotics industry bloom.

“We have this idea that in Pittsburgh, we make things,” Choset said. “We make machines that matter and that work. And I think that has really helped distinguish us from our peers.”

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Choset said that work ethic comes to light in comparing the typical investor or start-up in the Bay Area to one in Pittsburgh.

“In the Bay Area, they try to get as much investment as possible, and they try to get some dominant market, damn the reality,” he said. “Whereas here, we’re more focused on, ‘Let’s solve a problem that generates value.’ And you end up with a lot more companies that last a lot longer as opposed to companies that get a bunch of investment and burn out.”

Bloomfield Robotics, a company that spun off from CMU research labs, partnered with Kubota and last year debuted Flash, a robotic vehicle that can collect data on crop size, monitor plants for disease and send real-time data to farmers in order to maximize crop yields. Gecko Robotics has created robots that not only can inspect military vehicles and ships and collect data, but also make repairs in areas difficult for people to reach.

Choset said part of the legacy of Pittsburgh’s one-time industrial dominance is the hardworking ethos that he felt has attracted thought leaders and investors in tech and robotics.

Madarasz said Pittsburgh has benefited from being a relatively small city with a big-city culture, again, in no small part due to the industrial wealth concentrated in the region by people like Andrew Carnegie, Henry Clay Frick and Richard King Mellon.

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“We have Heinz Hall, the Carnegie museums, Phipps Conservatory, the Hillman library and cancer centers,” she said. “Those are all entities funded by industrial wealth that are now managed by foundations.”

Similar to the 1920s, Madarasz said, Pittsburgh today “benefits in many ways from a combination of academic research fueled by industrial and corporate wealth, with some partnership between industry and government to build the modern economy where health care, life science, robotics and computer engineering are dominant.”

That diversity has made the city much stronger, Briem said.

“We have the medical industry, the financial services industry and a great technology base here, and a lot of it is rooted in the ‘eds and meds’ that you hear people mention,” he said. “I think the big lesson is that the steel industry lasted longer than any one industry will exist in one region ever again. We have some great stories of post-industrial change, but we haven’t done as well spreading that change to the larger steel economy in places like Aliquippa, Clairton, Braddock and to some extent the Alle-Kiski Valley.”

Today, Pittsburgh is a prime driver for the regional economy. The city’s job gains constitute the bulk of all employment growth across Southwestern Pennsylvania over the past 15 years, according to Briem’s research.

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From 2010 through the middle of 2024, more than 75% of the Pittsburgh region’s employment gains have been generated by jobs within the city. Moreover, at the end of 2024, the city’s 2.7% unemployment rate was lower than that of any county in Southwestern Pennsylvania.

“There’s a strong persistence of memory in Pittsburgh,” Briem said. “We’ll never forget the steel industry. But we’ve moved on.”



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