
PITTSBURGH — General Manager Omar Khan did not wait for April to fix his roster. The Pittsburgh Steelers completely overhauled their perimeter attack this week, executing a blockbuster trade for Indianapolis Colts star wideout Michael Pittman Jr. and outbidding rivals for high-profile cornerback Jamel Dean. With Asante Samuel Jr. also re-signing, the urgency out wide vanished overnight. Now, the entire Steelers 2026 NFL Draft strategy points directly at the offensive trenches.
You could feel the collective exhale from the coaching staff inside the UPMC Rooney Sports Complex on Tuesday morning. Finding a reliable target opposite George Pickens was a massive headache all winter. Now, they have a certified monster in Pittman. Khan struck hard and fast. Securing Dean and Samuel Jr. locked down a secondary that desperately needed immediate, veteran help.
Fixing the outside exposed the interior. Veteran guard Isaac Seumalo bolted for the Arizona Cardinals in free agency. Left tackle Broderick Jones faces a murky future, rehabbing from spinal fusion surgery while heading into a contract year. Relying on Dylan Cook—a 28-year-old with exactly five NFL appearances—to protect the blind side is a massive gamble. Khan knows championships are won in the mud.
Instead of burning the 21st overall pick on wideouts like Omar Cooper Jr. or KC Concepcion, Pittsburgh can lock in on road graders. Need a high-floor guard? Penn State’s Olaivavega Ioane fits the bill. Want a day-one tackle? Clemson’s Blake Miller brings 54 career starts and nasty grip strength to the right side, while Utah’s Caleb Lomu oozes potential.
If Khan wants to swing for the fences, Alabama behemoth Kadyn Proctor offers massive upside. Proctor is a 6-foot-7, 352-pound anomaly with skill-position agility, though he might slide to guard in the pros. Watch out for Utah’s Spencer Fano. He dominated college edge rushers, but his 32 1/8” arms might force a slide on draft night. If teams view Fano strictly as an interior blocker, Pittsburgh could steal a ten-year starter late in round one.
“We saw the holes, and we aggressively patched them. We don’t want to walk into the draft desperate for anything. Now, we dictate the board, not the other way around.”
— Omar Khan, General Manager
This aggressive free-agency approach drastically raises Pittsburgh’s floor in the rugged AFC North. Nailing the offensive line in round one gives them a bully-ball identity to match their elite defense. The Steelers are no longer drafting for survival. They are drafting to dominate the line of scrimmage.
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