Keeanu Benton Suddenly Has More To Prove Than Steelers Fans Expected

Keeanu Benton is vying for a pivotal contract extension with the Steelers, aiming to solidify his role on a formidable defensive lineup.

The Steelers spent much of their offseason reshaping the roster and locking up pieces they wanted to keep around. Cam Heyward and Chris Boswell got new money.

Nick Herbig and Darnell Washington landed four-year extensions. Keeanu Benton, though, is still waiting for his turn.

That puts the fourth-year defensive lineman in a different spot than some of his 2023 draft classmates. He was widely expected to be next in line for a new deal, but that hasn’t happened yet. So Benton heads into 2026 playing for another contract in Pittsburgh, and he still checks in at No. 20 on the Steelers’ Top 25 players for 2026.

The case for Benton is easy to see. The Steelers’ defensive line is expected to be the backbone of the team in 2026, and under a new defensive coordinator, that group is considered the deepest in the organization. Benton is a big reason why.

He took a major step forward as a pass rusher in 2025, helping Pittsburgh finish with the sixth-most sacks in the NFL. Over 17 starts, he posted 51 total tackles, 12 tackles for loss, six tackles for loss and 5.5 sacks. When it came to collapsing the pocket, he was a real problem.

But the next step is still out there. Benton’s run defense has to become a steadier part of his game if he’s going to earn the kind of extension he’s chasing. After starting every game last season, he’s expected to have a major role on the line again, and the Steelers need him to be more than just a pass-rush threat.

That’s where the tension sits with Benton’s profile. Pro Football Focus ranked him 106th out of 134 interior defensive linemen in run defense, which was a step back from his 95th-place ranking in 2024. The flashes are there, though, and when he’s locked in, he can look like a different player.

One of the clearest examples came on the opening series against the Chicago Bears last season. Benton won the battle against the Bears’ center on the first two plays of the game and helped hold the Chicago running back to short gains. It was a clean showcase of hand usage, leverage and quickness off blocks.

That’s the version of Benton the Steelers need more often in 2026. If he can bring that level of disruption snap after snap, his No. 20 ranking might end up looking far too low.

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