PITTSBURGH — The hum inside the UPMC Rooney Sports Complex feels heavier this spring. You can almost feel the tension radiating through the facility as the front office prepares for the Steelers 2026 NFL Draft. Holding the No. 21 overall pick, Pittsburgh faces a critical juncture. Head coach Mike McCarthy’s arrival shifted the offensive philosophy, and free agency brought serious reinforcements. Sebastian Joseph-Day signed a two-year, $11 million deal to anchor the defensive front. Jamel Dean, Jaquan Brisker, Rico Dowdle, and Michael Pittman Jr. added immediate veteran grit. Yet, the departure of Isaac Seumalo leaves a massive hole at guard, and the quarterback room remains shrouded in mystery.
The Trenches vs. The Targets
Pittsburgh holds enough cards to avoid desperation. The front office can draft for impact rather than sheer panic. Recent mock drafts split the consensus, pointing the Steelers toward bruising offensive linemen or a towering perimeter weapon.
Mel Kiper Jr. sends the Steelers straight to Happy Valley for Penn State guard Olaivavega Ioane. The 6-foot-4, 320-pound mauler surrendered zero sacks last season. Ioane doesn’t just block; he erases interior defensive tackles. Drafting him provides a permanent, decade-long solution for a rushing attack desperate for an attitude adjustment.
Daniel Jeremiah attacks the offensive line puzzle differently, projecting Clemson tackle Blake Miller to Pittsburgh. Broderick Jones struggled to lock down the left side. Jeremiah suggests drafting the 6-foot-6, 315-pound Miller to play right tackle, allowing Troy Fautanu to slide over to the blind side. Miller shattered the Clemson record by starting 54 consecutive games. He brings a violent, finishing mentality that perfectly fits the rugged AFC North.
Tim Crean takes a massive swing, mocking Washington wide receiver Denzel Boston to the Steel City. The receiver room needs a terrifying presence opposite George Pickens, even with Pittman Jr. in the fold. At 6-foot-4 and 212 pounds, Boston snatched 62 passes for 881 yards and 11 touchdowns last season for the Huskies. He possesses an insane catch radius. Adding Boston turns the passing attack into a multi-headed monster, severely punishing defenses that double-team Pickens.
Pete Prisco identifies the quintessential Steeler in Oregon interior lineman Emmanuel Pregnon. Pregnon transferred from USC and mauled defenders all through 2025. Prisco calls him the perfect fit. Pregnon dominates the run game with a nasty disposition and brings tremendous value late in the first round. He represents the kind of physical, under-the-radar prospect the franchise historically transforms into an All-Pro.
“It’s a great story.”
— Mike McCarthy, Head Coach, on a potential reunion with QB Aaron Rodgers
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
The 21st pick dictates how this offense operates in December blizzards. Upgrading the secondary and signing Pittman Jr. gives the front office total flexibility. If Aaron Rodgers actually heads to the Steel City—a rumor McCarthy slyly refuses to kill—the offensive line must be flawless to keep the veteran upright. A rookie road-grader like Ioane or Pregnon keeps the pocket clean and establishes the physical tone McCarthy demands. Alternatively, a weapon like Boston maximizes red-zone efficiency and creates mismatch nightmares. Pittsburgh built a playoff-caliber defense; now, they must draft the missing offensive puzzle piece that turns a Wild Card exit into a deep January run.

