Steelers Suddenly Face A Familiar Payton Wilson Problem

The Steelers face a pivotal season as linebacker Payton Wilson's performance could dramatically impact his future and the team's defensive strategy.

The Steelers are heading into 2026 with a Payton Wilson decision that could shape the entire linebacker room.

That’s the reality after a second season that never really took off. Wilson arrived in Pittsburgh as a third-round pick with the kind of profile teams dream on: big frame, rare athleticism, and college tape that made plenty of people believe he should have gone earlier. The knee concerns pushed him down the board, and the Steelers were the team that got the shot.

For a while, it looked like that gamble might pay off. Wilson’s rookie year was encouraging enough to earn him a rotational role, and he flashed enough in limited action to hint at more. By the time his sophomore season arrived, he was the obvious breakout candidate.

Instead, the season went sideways fast. Wilson opened the year as the starter next to Patrick Queen for the first two weeks, but the run defense got gashed.

After that, the Steelers quietly pulled him out of base defense for most of the season. He never really settled in, and the splash plays that had made him such an intriguing prospect just weren’t there.

Now the Steelers are back in a familiar place: trying to figure out whether a linebacker can finally become part of the answer.

The odd part is that the room hasn’t changed much around him. The same linebacker group is coming back, and the same positional coach is still in place. The defensive coordinator is different, but there’s still a lot more continuity than overhaul in that unit.

That makes Wilson’s third year especially important. It’s not just about his own career arc. It affects what Pittsburgh does with the position going forward, especially with Wilson set to want a new deal next summer.

There are really three paths from here. He could keep stalling out and remain a limited piece on defense.

He could take a real leap and force his way into top-line linebacker conversation. Or he could land in the middle, putting together a better season than 2025 without answering enough questions to make the Steelers comfortable.

Only one of those outcomes gives Pittsburgh a clean solution.

If Wilson truly breaks out in 2026, the Steelers can live with the risk that comes with paying for one strong season, the way Zack Baun did a few years back. But if Wilson slips again, the team won’t be in position to extend him, and linebacker becomes a major need all over again. Wilson would fall out of the long-term plan, and Queen is also likely headed for free agency next offseason.

That middle ground might be the most frustrating of all. Wilson could have his best pro season and still leave the Steelers unsure whether he’s worth a new contract. That would leave Pittsburgh entering 2026 with another hole and another round of uncertainty at a spot that has been difficult to stabilize for years.

So the ask is simple, even if the stakes are huge: Wilson doesn’t just need to be better. He needs to break out. If he doesn’t, the Steelers’ linebacker problem isn’t going anywhere.

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