Kaden Wetjen is still trying to process how fast life has moved.
Not long ago, the former Iowa standout was finishing his college run by helping the Hawkeyes beat Vanderbilt in the ReliaQuest Bowl. Then came senior showcases, the wait for the 2026 NFL Draft, and a selection that landed higher than many expected. The Pittsburgh Steelers grabbed the speedster at No. 121 overall in the fourth round, and even with that behind him, Wetjen says the whole thing still feels a little unreal.
That feeling only got stronger once he found himself sharing a huddle with Aaron Rodgers.
After a charity golf event, Wetjen was asked about the craziest moment since joining Pittsburgh, and he answered with the kind of line that makes it easy to see why he’s been a media favorite.
"I used to play with Aaron Rodgers on Madden 10 on the Wii. Then I'm in the huddle with him, and I'm like, this doesn't feel real."
Wetjen said he remembered playing as Rodgers in Madden 2010 on the Wii, and now he’s lining up with him in real life. For a rookie still getting settled, that’s a pretty wild leap from video game controller to NFL huddle.
Rodgers’ path to Pittsburgh has been a bumpy one. His career took a major hit when he tore his Achilles in the first game of his first season with the New York Jets.
After two uninspiring seasons in New York, he moved on to the Steelers. One season in Pittsburgh later, he was back on the market as a free agent, before deciding to return late in free agency.
Now Wetjen gets the chance to learn from him.
That matters for a rookie trying to find his place. Wetjen is projected to do most of his work on special teams, but he has also been grinding to earn snaps on offense.
If he can build a strong connection with Rodgers, that could pay off in more than one way. Anything he gives Pittsburgh on offense would be a bonus on top of what he brings on special teams, and Rodgers’ reputation for putting players in the right spots only helps.
The Steelers’ offense could use that kind of help. Last season, the unit leaned heavily on the run and had just one clear go-to receiver in DJ Metcalf. There’s a clear push to change that this year, and Wetjen’s speed gives him a chance to fit into certain offensive packages even if he isn’t near the top of the depth chart.
For now, though, the big story is simpler than all the roster math: Wetjen is a rookie living out a moment he once only knew from a game on the Wii. And with Rodgers likely in his last professional season, Wetjen has every reason to soak up as much as he can.
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Stirtz had the most eye-catching all-around line for Oklahoma City, finishing with 22 points, six assists, two rebounds, one steal and one block in 30 minutes. Sandfort added 19 points off the bench, and Dix kept his starting spot with 14 points, six rebounds, one assist and one block, leaving the Thunders Iowa trio with plenty of individual production even as the bigger question around their summer run still hangs in the balance. [Read more 🡒]
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Sages timing matters because Iowa is moving forward without Bennett Stirtz, which changes the way the offense will have to function. Rather than leaning on one clear centerpiece, the Hawkeyes appear headed toward a more shared approach, and Sage said he expects to be involved more often with the ball, around the rim, and as a scorer when needed. [Read more 🡒]
