PITTSBURGH — The Pittsburgh Steelers cannot afford to repeat the Kenny Pickett disaster in the 2026 NFL Draft. Reaching for a first-round quarterback traps a franchise in mediocrity. Pittsburgh needs to find value on Day 3. Enter Carson Beck.
Beck didn’t just transfer to the University of Miami; he resurrected his entire football identity. After a torn UCL and a rocky exit from Georgia, the 6-foot-5, 233-pound passer arrived in South Florida with a massive chip on his shoulder. He threw for 3,813 yards and 30 touchdowns in 2025, dragging the Hurricanes to the National Championship game against Indiana. You could practically feel the electricity in the air during his Miami Pro Day last week. He spun the ball with authority, erasing lingering doubts about his surgically repaired right elbow. The chilly morning wind didn’t deter the scouts, who packed the sidelines to watch him launch deep balls down the hashes.
What makes Beck a fit for Arthur Smith’s offensive scheme? It all starts above the neck. He is not a project; he is a processor.
“He understands everyone’s responsible for protecting the quarterback—and he can protect himself with how he reads defenses.”
— James Brockermeyer, Miami Center
Taking a swing on Beck in the third or fourth round gives Pittsburgh a high-upside developmental passer. Draft experts currently rank Beck as QB3 behind Indiana’s Fernando Mendoza and Alabama’s Ty Simpson. If the Steelers solidify their offensive line or secondary in Round 1, grabbing Beck on Day 3 provides a massive safety net. General Manager Omar Khan knows you build a perennial contender through calculated risks, not desperate reaches. Let Beck sit, learn, and fully heal. He might just become the steal of the draft.