Steelers Hit With Another AFC North Slight Before 2026 Even Begins

Despite clinching the AFC North crown, the Steelers face skepticism and tight competition in the division as they navigate key roster strengths and weaknesses ahead of the new NFL season.

The Steelers may be carrying a fresh AFC North crown, but ESPN’s latest roster rankings say the respect still isn’t fully there.

For the 2026 season, Mike Clay, Aaron Schatz and Seth Walder slotted Pittsburgh at No. 19 overall. That puts the Steelers behind Baltimore at No. 5 and Cincinnati at No. 15, a placement that suggests ESPN sees more upside in the division’s other heavyweights than in the reigning champs.

Pittsburgh’s roster breakdown came with a clear theme. The EDGE group was tagged as the team’s strongest area, while off-ball linebacker was identified as the biggest weakness. Cornerback, meanwhile, was labeled the X factor.

That ranking will feel familiar in Pittsburgh. ESPN also had the Steelers at No. 19 entering the 2025 season, and the team responded by outperforming that spot. Baltimore and Cincinnati, by contrast, were ranked No. 1 and No. 9 last year and both fell short for different reasons.

There is at least a case to be made that Pittsburgh belongs higher this time. The Steelers did not lose much beyond Kenneth Gainwell and Isaac Seumalo, and both departures were addressed. On top of that, the offense got a boost with Michael Pittman Jr. and Germie Bernard joining the wide receiver room, while the secondary added two proven starters in Jaquan Brisker and Jamel Dean.

The clearest concern still sits at linebacker. Patrick Queen and Payton Wilson are back as the starters for a third straight season, which makes that spot easy to point to as the roster’s softest area. Even so, the overall picture does not show many obvious cracks.

There are bigger unknowns elsewhere. Mike McCarthy is entering his first season as head coach, and Aaron Rodgers will be 43 and trying to avoid another step back. Baltimore is also starting over with first-time head coach Jesse Minter, while Joe Burrow’s health and Cincinnati’s defense remain yearly talking points for a Bengals team that has not reached the playoffs since 2022.

The reality is that Baltimore and Cincinnati both having franchise quarterbacks works against Pittsburgh. Still, the Steelers look a lot closer to those two teams than ESPN’s numbers suggest. They do not need to be treated as the division favorite, but the gap between them and the Ravens or Bengals does not look especially wide, if it exists at all.

In Other News...

One Steelers Veteran Suddenly Doesn't Look Safe Anymore

Training camp is about to turn the Steelers wide receiver room into one of the more interesting battles on the roster, and Ben Skowronek is right in the middle of it. A veteran with value beyond the box score, Skowronek has long looked like the kind of player who helps a team in more than one phase, and his place in Pittsburgh has seemed relatively secure as the competition around him heats up.

But the numbers game is getting tighter, with Pittsburgh expected to keep only five or six receivers, and that leaves very little room for anyone to coast into September. Skowronek still has a case built on his versatility and his standing around the roster, yet the Steelers also have several younger options pushing for those limited spots, which makes the final evaluation more complicated than it first appeared. [Read more 🡒]

Steelers Already Have A Troubling Linebacker Situation Brewing

Malik Harrison arrived in Pittsburgh with a chance to settle into a meaningful role in the middle of the defense, but his path to doing so has already become a little murky. The Steelers signed him to a two-year deal in 2025, and with the offseason moving along, the team has also brought back Cole Holcomb, creating a crowded picture at linebacker for a unit that still needs dependable answers in the middle.

Harrisons standing now looks tied to more than just his own play, because the Steelers will be watching how he fits in camp and how the depth chart sorts itself out around Holcomb. The veteran has battled serious injuries, and his health and availability could shape the entire competition, leaving Pittsburgh with a decision that may not be fully settled until the summer starts to unfold. [Read more 🡒]

Payton Wilson Faces The Steelers Question That Could Shape This Defense

Payton Wilson gave the Steelers plenty to think about in 2025, staying on the field for all 17 games and piling up 126 tackles, two sacks and an interception. Even so, his role never quite matched the production. He started only four games, a sign that Pittsburgh still viewed him more as a rotating piece than a locked-in answer at linebacker.

ESPNs read on Wilson is encouraging for the long term, pointing to the kind of athletic upside that can lead to a bigger third-year jump. For the Steelers, though, the real issue is more immediate: whether Wilson can become dependable enough to settle in alongside Patrick Queen and help stabilize a defense that needs that spot to stop being a weekly question. [Read more 🡒]