The Steelers have a clear candidate to become one of their next major investments, and Joey Porter Jr. keeps making the case louder.
With Pittsburgh now under Mike McCarthy after moving on from Mike Tomlin this offseason, the focus has shifted to identifying the players who can anchor what comes next. Porter is firmly in that group. He’s entering the final season of his rookie contract, and after the way he has played through his first three years, an extension feels more like a matter of when than if.
ESPN recently asked league executives, coaches and scouts to help sort out the top cornerbacks in the league, and Porter didn’t crack the top 10. He did, however, land as an honorable mention, with one NFC defensive coach offering a strong endorsement: "He takes all the stress off the pass defense. He matches the best receiver in man coverage, and teams roll away from him in zone,"
That kind of reputation didn’t come out of nowhere. Steelers fans already knew the Porter name well thanks to Joey Porter, who played in Pittsburgh from 1999 to 2006. The younger Porter has built on that connection since earning a starting role in 2023, and his production has climbed with the responsibility.
Across his last three seasons, Porter has allowed a passer rating of 71.2 in coverage. In 2025, that number dropped to a career-best 57.1. Over 47 games and 41 starts, the Penn State product has piled up 165 total tackles, 31 pass deflections and three interceptions.
His 2025 numbers were especially sharp. Porter allowed a completion rate of 47.8 percent, which ranked sixth among cornerbacks.
His 57.1 passer rating allowed and 16 forced incompletions both ranked third. He also gave up just 32 catches for 325 yards and did not allow a receiving touchdown.
Pro Football Focus gave him a 74.1 coverage grade last season, good for 20th among 114 graded cornerbacks. And even with that clear CB1 workload, Porter handled the assignment and kept making life difficult for opposing top targets.
The money conversation is only going to get bigger from here. Spotrac projects a three-year extension worth $70.3 million, or $23.4 million annually.
But that still looks light compared with the market Porter is likely to chase. The top-paid cornerbacks - Trent McDuffie, Sauce Gardner and Derek Stingley Jr. - are all at $30 million per year or more, and Porter has every reason to aim for that tier.
For the Steelers, the message is simple: if they want to keep one of their best defensive pieces in place, they may need to start backing up the Brinks truck.
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For Pittsburgh, Smiths rise is a familiar reminder of how quickly a veteran tight end can change a market when he finds the right fit. He flashed enough last year to make teams take notice, and the Broncos need only sharpens the intrigue around a player who has already shown he can still be a difference-maker after the catch. [Read more 🡒]
