Aaron Rodgers’ latest Steelers get-together had all the usual offseason trappings - teammates, sunshine, horseback riding, paddleboarding and campfires - but it also came with one absence that was hard to miss.
On Sunday, Rodgers posted Instagram photos from the retreat, and the group included DK Metcalf, Michael Pittman Jr., Ben Skowronek, Roman Wilson, Pat Freiermuth and Mason Rudolph. It looked like a standard pre-camp bonding session, the kind quarterbacks and pass catchers often do before the real work starts.
Will Howard, though, was not there.
That matters because Howard is believed to be in the mix for the Steelers’ backup quarterback job in 2026. Rudolph was part of the outing, but Howard was not, and that alone is bound to get people talking.
It’s still the offseason, so one set of photos shouldn’t be treated like a final verdict. Howard could have had other plans, or he may simply not have been invited. But his absence stood out, especially with Rodgers surrounded by several offensive teammates and a pair of quarterbacks.
Rookie quarterback Drew Allar and rookie receiver Germie Bernard also missed the trip, though their absence is easier to explain: they’re rookies.
Howard’s case is different. He’s a sixth-round draft choice who hasn’t taken a preseason snap in the NFL, much less a meaningful one, and that reality hangs over the conversation no matter how much buzz has followed him.
There’s also the Rodgers factor. The 42-year-old quarterback clearly has influence in Pittsburgh, and he spent months this offseason in the middle of the team’s quarterback picture, just as he did the year before. In a win-now setup, that kind of pull matters.
If the Steelers are leaning toward experience behind Rodgers, Rudolph makes a lot of sense. He’s a nine-year veteran who has played in 34 NFL games, started 19 of them, thrown 30 touchdowns and attempted 738 passes in the regular season.
For now, some around the Steelers already believe Rudolph is leading the race for QB2. Rodgers’ summer retreat didn’t settle the job, but it may have offered a hint about where Howard stands.
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