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Mike Tomlin Addresses Steelers Resignation Decision
Michael Longo/For USA Today Network-PA / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Mike Tomlin‘s Steelers tenure came to an end this winter when he resigned. The Super Bowl winner will spend the 2026 season trying his hand at broadcasting.

Tomlin informed the team of his decision shortly after Pittsburgh’s wild-card loss. He declined to offer public remarks on the matter until Sunday night, when it was officially announced Tomlin will work as an analyst for NBC next season. The new gig will see him travel to the location of each week’s Sunday Night Football broadcast instead of remaining in studio.

“It’s probably not an overnight decision,” Tomlin said during an interview with new colleague Maria Taylor (h/t ESPN’s Brooke Pryor). “But it’s probably not something that I could articulate or share with people. There’s a loneliness with leadership. I just thought it was a good time for me, personally. And by that, I mean just where I am in life. And I thought it was a good time for the organization, to be quite honest with you. We didn’t have a lot of success in the playoffs in recent years.”

The Steelers’ most recent postseason victory came in 2016. Finding a viable Ben Roethlisberger successor has proven to be challenging over the years, while a veteran-laden defense has fallen short of expectations on more than one occasion in the playoffs. Tomlin added some of Pittsburgh’s most experienced players are “worthy of the excitement and the optimism associated with new leadership.”

Mike McCarthy is now in place as the Steelers’ head coach. The former Packers Super Bowl winner spent five years with the Cowboys before he was out of coaching in 2025. A deal with his hometown team will see the 62-year-old return to the sidelines as Pittsburgh hopes to make a playoff run. The team’s quarterback situation is once again unclear deep into the offseason, with Aaron Rodgers yet to re-sign. Playing for Tomlin was part of the appeal for the four-time MVP, who spent much of his career previously working with McCarthy in Green Bay.

“I just think, Aaron, I just think being around him for the 12 months that I’m around him, he’s got a love affair with the game of football and not only the game, but the process, the informal moments, the development of younger guys, the interaction with teammates,” Tomlin added when asked about Rodgers. “And certainly he is still capable and in really good shape. And so I think at the end of the day, he’ll play football.”

Tomlin, just 54 despite having a 19-year run as a head coach to his name, had long been mentioned as a candidate to take up broadcasting. It soon became clear in the wake of his resignation decision that 2026 would not be spent on the sidelines in his case. A potential return to coaching on Tomlin’s part will of course be a key talking point leading up to next year’s hiring cycle.

This article first appeared on Pro Football Rumors and was syndicated with permission.

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