Patrick Queen has the résumé of a big-name linebacker, but the way he’s played in Pittsburgh has left plenty of Steelers fans wanting more. The speed is real.
The power is real. The production, though, hasn’t matched the billing nearly often enough.
That’s why it stood out when ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler released his list of the NFL’s top-10 off-ball linebackers entering the 2026 season, based on votes from league executives, coaches and scouts. Queen didn’t make the cut, though he did land among the honorable mentions.
One AFC personnel evaluator put the issue in plain terms: "He is very good when he turns it on and uses his speed and strength. His play is too inconsistent for my taste,"
That assessment lines up with what has shown up on film and in the numbers since Queen arrived in Pittsburgh in 2024. He has the athletic tools that jump off the screen - a rocked-up 230-pound linebacker with 4.5 speed and plenty of pop when he’s flying downhill - but the position asks for more than traits. The discipline in coverage hasn’t been there often enough, and the splash plays have been scarce.
Last season, Pro Football Focus charged Queen with missing 20.3 percent of his tackle attempts, which came out to 32 missed tackles. In coverage, PFF said he gave up 74 catches for 829 yards and three touchdowns. His 43.5 overall grade ranked 79th among 88 qualifying linebackers, and his 32.4 coverage grade was seventh-worst at the position.
For all the snaps he played, the impact plays never really followed. Queen had just one sack and one fumble recovery across 1,112 defensive snaps. He also finished the year without an interception or a forced fumble, even while starting all 17 games.
That’s what makes the honorable mention placement a little tricky to square at first glance. But it may also reflect the state of the position around the league. The top names at off-ball linebacker, including Fred Warner and Roquan Smith, are moving out of their primes, and there hasn’t been a wave of younger players clearly taking over.
Queen isn’t a lost cause. The flashes are there, and when he’s locked in, he can look like the kind of linebacker who changes a drive.
But the Steelers have seen enough to know the same thing the league executive said out loud: the consistency has to improve. If Queen wants to be viewed as a top-10 linebacker in 2026, he’ll have to bring a lot more of those moments, and far fewer of the lapses.
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