Steelers Camp Could Settle Three Huge Questions Fans Know Too Well

The Pittsburgh Steelers head into Training Camp 2026 with looming decisions on a key contract extension, potential shifts in defensive strategy, and a contentious backup quarterback battle.

Three weeks from now, the Pittsburgh Steelers will be back on the fields of St. Vincent College, and the familiar Latrobe heat will come with the familiar camp questions. The roster has plenty to sort through, but a few issues already stand out as the ones worth watching closest once Training Camp opens.

One of the biggest revolves around Joey Porter, Jr., who showed little during this spring’s OTAs and arrives in Latrobe still pushing for an extension or a new deal. His case is easy to understand.

He has moved from a corner known mostly for grabby hands and penalties to one who has become a dependable cover man and gives up very few touchdowns. His camp is about where he belongs in the cornerback hierarchy, and his people are making that argument to the Steelers front office.

The market backs up his side, at least to a point. JPJ is in position to seek around $30 million per season, and ESPN’s recent survey of NFL coaches, executives and scouts did not include him among the top ten cornerbacks.

That kind of list may not mean much on its own, but it does show up in negotiations. The sense here is that something gets worked out during camp, because the Steelers can’t afford to have him off the field.

On the other side of the ball, the defense is going to look different under Graham, even if the full picture won’t be clear right away. During OTAs, he leaned on two deep safeties far more often than Pittsburgh has under Mike Tomlin, a look that usually points toward more coverage and less pressure.

That does not mean the Steelers will stop being aggressive or stop bringing heat. It means the approach changes.

Graham comes from the Bill Belichick coaching tree, and that matters. His defenses are not built to look the same every week.

He can adjust the number of bodies in the box, the amount of blitzing, and the balance between man and zone coverage depending on the opponent. The other familiar thread is the Belichick idea of taking away the offense’s best player.

Whether Graham leans on that as heavily as Belichick did remains to be seen, but it was a defining feature of those units.

Camp and the preseason won’t reveal everything, but they should give a real sense of how different Graham’s scheme is from what Pittsburgh has used before.

Then there’s the backup quarterback job, which always draws more attention than a position that may never see the field should. That’s just football. Teams know the starter usually won’t make it through a season untouched, so the No. 2 spot matters more than most people outside the building want to admit.

This year, Mike McCarthy has to choose between Mason Rudolph and Will Howard. Rudolph is the veteran, the one with starting experience and the kind of professionalism coaches trust.

His ceiling is known at this point. Howard is the mystery, because an injury wiped out his rookie-year snaps and left him largely untested.

He was a sixth-round pick for a reason. His athleticism is decent, not special, and his arm is average to above average at best.

He is not the kind of quarterback who is going to wow anyone. His trouble getting the ball to a receiver on a deep sideline out route is real, as discussed on the SCB Steelers Inside Blitz last week with Alan Saunders.

At the same time, Howard is likable and seems to have command of the huddle. The question is whether McCarthy wants to keep developing two young quarterbacks behind a 42-year old Rodgers.

That battle will be under a bright microscope all through camp and the preseason. McCarthy has carried younger backups before, but every situation brings its own answer.

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