Steelers Suddenly Have A Quarterback Problem Fans Feared Most

The Steelers face a tough quarterback decision as Will Howard's future with the team hangs in the balance amidst a crowded depth chart.

The Steelers may be heading toward an uncomfortable but very real quarterback decision, and Mark Kaboly’s latest prediction puts Will Howard squarely on the bubble.

Kaboly said, “Regardless of what happens in the preseason, Rudolph and Allar slot in at QB2 and QB3, with Howard as the odd man out,”

That possibility has to be taken seriously because Pittsburgh’s quarterback room is crowded in a way that can help and hurt at the same time. On one hand, the Steelers have Aaron Rodgers, a veteran who gives the team a proven presence under center. On the other, the depth behind him has become complicated, with Mason Rudolph and Drew Allar in the mix and Howard entering his second year.

At first glance, the setup looked ideal. Rodgers would provide the experience, while the younger passers could spend time learning and developing without being forced into action too soon. That kind of arrangement gives a team a chance to prepare for both the present and the future.

The problem is that all of those quarterbacks can’t stay on the roster if Pittsburgh decides to trim the room before the season begins. Rudolph is the only other quarterback on the roster with real NFL experience, and that matters.

He has spent six seasons in Pittsburgh since 2019 and has often served as the steady option when injuries hit. Last season, he filled in for Rodgers and finished with 310 passing yards and two touchdowns.

That résumé may be enough to keep Rudolph safe for now. It also makes the fight behind him tougher for Howard, especially if the Steelers stick to the kind of roster choices Kaboly is projecting.

Allar’s status adds another wrinkle. Since he is the higher draft pick and the bigger investment, the logic points toward Howard being the one who could be moved out. That’s the difficult part of carrying multiple young quarterbacks: if the team doesn’t believe there’s room for all of them, somebody’s draft value ends up wasted.

Pittsburgh fans have spent years wanting a dependable quarterback option in place for the regular season. Now the Steelers may actually have too many bodies in the room, which is a strange problem to have. Still, if Howard is the one who gets squeezed out, it would suggest the front office believes it has at least started to build something for the long haul.

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