Patrick Queen Is Fueling A Familiar Steelers Debate On Defense

Are the Pittsburgh Steelers relying too heavily on Patrick Queen to solve their linebacker woes and improve a defense still struggling against the run?

The Steelers have spent years trying to patch the middle of their defense, and Patrick Queen was brought in to be the clean answer. He came with speed, pedigree, and the kind of profile that made sense for a team that had grown tired of piecing the linebacker spot together.

The availability has been there. The bigger question is whether the impact has matched it.

Queen has not missed a start since arriving in Pittsburgh. In his first Steelers season, he started all 17 games and led the team with 129 tackles. He also added seven passes defended, six tackles for loss, five quarterback hits, two forced fumbles, and a fumble recovery.

That tackle total stood out as one of the better single-season marks by a Steelers defender in the modern era, and it quickly made him a centerpiece of the defense.

He stayed in that role in 2025, starting every game again and finishing with 120 tackles, a sack, four passes defended, a forced fumble, and a fumble recovery. Through two seasons, Queen has piled up 249 tackles. For a Steelers team that has been burned by injuries and inconsistency at linebacker, that kind of durability matters.

But durability is not the same thing as solving the problem.

Queen is being counted on as more than just a reliable body. Pittsburgh is leaning on him as a major fix for a defense that needs to be tougher against the run and less exposed in the middle of the field. That is where the concern starts to creep in.

He has been on the field almost constantly, but being present on every snap and controlling those snaps are different things. The Steelers have gotten activity from Queen. What they have not gotten consistently is the kind of impact that changes how the defense functions.

The numbers from last season sharpen that worry. Queen finished 78th among 88 qualified linebackers in PFF grade, a ranking that doesn’t wipe out the tackle production but does put it in context.

A linebacker can rack up tackles when he is around the ball all the time. The real issue is whether those plays are happening on Pittsburgh’s terms.

The run defense tells the same story. The Steelers ranked No. 27 in run stop win rate at 29% last season.

That is a rough place for a defense with T.J. Watt, Cam Heyward, and the kind of investment Pittsburgh usually makes up front.

Queen is not solely responsible for that number. Defensive line play, fits, safety help, and scheme all play into it. Still, an every-down inside linebacker sits right in the middle of those breakdowns, and if the Steelers are asking Queen to be the stabilizer, they need more than steady attendance and big tackle totals.

He looks the part, he plays every week, and the stat sheet gives him plenty of credit. But the same issue keeps hanging around: Pittsburgh may have found a linebacker who is always available, yet it still hasn’t shown it has found the one who can actually fix what keeps breaking.

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