GREEN BAY, Wis. — The NFL world waited for a timeline. Instead, Mike McCarthy offered a smile and a shrug.
Standing at the podium inside the Lambeau Field Atrium on Monday to honor the late Bob Harlan, the new Pittsburgh Steelers head coach faced the elephant in the room. Broadcaster Kevin landscape Harlan—acting as emcee for his father’s celebration of life—couldn’t resist asking McCarthy about a potential reunion with 42-year-old free agent quarterback Aaron Rodgers. The answer left the door wide open, but the clock is ticking loudly in Pittsburgh.
The Waiting Game in the Steel City
The Steelers sit in offseason purgatory. Rodgers piloted Pittsburgh to a division title in 2025 before former head coach Mike Tomlin officially stepped down. The veteran proved he still owns the gridiron:
- 10-6 regular-season record
- 3,322 passing yards
- 24 passing touchdowns
Now, General Manager Omar Khan and McCarthy must map out an offensive strategy without knowing who will take the snaps. McCarthy knows Rodgers better than anyone in the league. The two spent 13 seasons together in Green Bay, capturing Super Bowl XLV. When pressed on the current situation by Harlan, the coach maintained a calm front.
“Yes, it’d be a great story. I don’t know, and I would love to tell everybody breaking news. But it’s really cool to see Aaron at 42. To see a young man at 22 and all of what he’s been able to accomplish, and where he’s at in his personal life and trying to make this decision. He’s in a really good place.”
— Mike McCarthy, Pittsburgh Steelers Head Coach
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
The nostalgia hits hard, but sentiment doesn’t win football games. Last year, Rodgers waited until June 5 to officially sign with Pittsburgh. The front office cannot afford a repeat of that drawn-out saga, especially with the 2026 NFL Draft rapidly approaching.
If Rodgers walks away, the Steelers face a glaring void. The newly acquired Michael Pittman Jr. needs a reliable arm to deliver the ball. Draft analysts heavily link Pittsburgh to Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson at the 21st overall pick, while veteran stopgaps linger on the open market. The franchise essentially gave Rodgers a soft deadline of late April to make the call. Until the four-time MVP makes his decision, Pittsburgh’s entire 2026 blueprint remains locked in a holding pattern.

