INDIANAPOLIS — The clock is ticking on the 2026 NFL offseason, and all eyes are fixed on a 42-year-old quarterback. Aaron Rodgers delivered an AFC North crown to Pittsburgh last year, but his future remains a mystery. Steelers general manager Omar Khan stepped to the podium at the NFL Scouting Combine on Tuesday and made one thing clear: the franchise wants him back, but they will not wait until summer this time around. Rodgers tossed 24 touchdowns and racked up 3,322 passing yards in his first season wearing black and gold. The team finished with a 10-7 record before suffering a brutal playoff exit against the Houston Texans—marking Pittsburgh’s seventh straight postseason loss since 2016.
The Mike McCarthy Connection
Mike Tomlin stunned the football world by stepping down after 19 seasons. Now, a familiar face holds the clipboard in Pittsburgh. Mike McCarthy, the man who drafted Rodgers and won Super Bowl XLV alongside him in Green Bay, is the 17th head coach in Steelers history. You could feel the urgency radiating from Khan at the podium. The chilly Indianapolis air seemed to match the cold reality: Pittsburgh needs an answer. That 13-year Wisconsin connection heavily increases the odds that Rodgers will return for a 22nd NFL season.
Khan confirmed both he and McCarthy spoke with Rodgers last week. History tells a frustrating story for the front office. After his release from the New York Jets, Rodgers held serious talks with the Minnesota Vikings before they moved forward with J.J. McCarthy. Following that, the four-time MVP dragged his free-agency decision out until June 2025. The Steelers refuse to repeat that timeline. Both sides want a quick resolution before the new league year kicks off on March 11.
“I think the circumstances are a little different, but just conversations we had, I think neither side wants to have this drag on like it did last year. The door is open to have Aaron back.”
— Omar Khan, Steelers General Manager
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
The Steelers sit at a franchise crossroads. If Rodgers walks away, Pittsburgh hands the keys to a murky quarterback room. They remain high on 2025 sixth-round draft pick Will Howard out of Ohio State. A fractured hand derailed Howard’s rookie campaign, burying him on injured reserve, but McCarthy reportedly loves his arm talent and size for the bruising AFC North.
Relying on an unproven second-year pro to navigate winter shootouts in Baltimore and Cincinnati carries massive risk. The defense remains a top-tier unit capable of a deep January run. They just need a signal-caller who can protect the football and hit receivers in stride. Khan built a roster ready to win now. If Rodgers decides to hang up his cleats, expect Pittsburgh to aggressively attack the veteran free-agent market. The next two weeks will define the Steelers’ 2026 season.

