Steelers Could Finally Have A Shot At A Real Franchise QB

With uncertainty surrounding C.J. Stroud's future in Houston, the Steelers see a golden opportunity to potentially secure a quarterback upgrade to solidify their long-term strategy.

The Steelers’ quarterback hunt may not end with the draft, and the most intriguing name on the horizon is a familiar one in Houston.

Pittsburgh usually lives in that middle zone of the first round, where landing a long-term quarterback fix is more hope than plan. That reality has pushed the conversation toward a different kind of opportunity: a proven starter who could eventually become available if the situation in Houston turns sour.

In this case, that quarterback is C.J. Stroud.

A trade for Stroud is not a next-step move. It belongs in the 2027 conversation, not the present, and there is no reason for the Texans to move the 2023 No. 2 pick right now. But the coming season could force a decision, because Stroud is heading into the fourth year of his four-year, $36.3 million rookie deal without an extension.

His rookie year set a high bar. Stroud threw for 4,108 yards with 23 touchdowns and five interceptions, and that kind of debut tends to change expectations fast.

Since then, though, the picture has been less clean. Over 2024 and 2025, he put up 6,768 yards, 39 touchdowns, and 16 interceptions, and those numbers have left Houston with real questions about whether the early version of Stroud is the one they can count on going forward.

“If things don't go well in Houston this year, okay, I do think we start to get into the territory of: do the Texans listen to offers for C.J. Stroud?” Still Curtain co-editor Shayne Kubas wondered on the recent “Still Curtain” podcast.

The Texans’ roster only adds to the pressure. Houston has a championship-caliber defense, which means the expectations around Stroud are not small. If the offense doesn’t keep pace, the conversation around his future could get uncomfortable quickly.

For the Steelers, the appeal starts with protection. Pittsburgh is 21st in Sharp Football Analysis’ offensive line rankings, while Houston is 31st. By 2027, the Steelers’ young line could be in a much better place, and that matters with a quarterback like Stroud, who needs structure around him to do his best work.

“If you were to bring him to Pittsburgh, by that point, we assume, or we hope, the offensive line should be in a very, very good place,” Kubas said.

That fits Stroud’s game. He’s a pocket passer who works best with play-action and deeper concepts, and interior pressure can throw off his timing and force rushed throws. A steadier front in Pittsburgh could give him the kind of environment that helped him explode as a rookie.

Kubas also pointed to the possibility of Pittsburgh getting “a little bit of a discount on a franchise-level quarterback because of the questions with him.”

That kind of discount only becomes real if a few things line up: Stroud’s stock has to dip, Houston has to reach a contract crossroads, and Pittsburgh has to still be searching for its answer at quarterback. But if those pieces fall into place, the Steelers could be looking at a rare chance to pursue a quarterback whose upside would be greater than the price tag attached to him.

If Houston decides Stroud is holding an elite roster back from a Super Bowl run, Pittsburgh could offer a fresh start without asking him to carry another shaky offense. By 2027, that might be the sort of opening the Steelers have been waiting for.

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