Steelers Training Camp Battle Could Cost A Former Draft Pick Everything

As the Pittsburgh Steelers gear up for training camp, fierce battles on the defensive line leave several players' roster spots hanging in the balance.

July has arrived, and the Steelers are heading toward training camp with one of their sharpest battles likely to come on the interior defensive line.

Quarterback will draw the headlines, as it always does, but the trenches may be where Pittsburgh’s roster gets sorted out. Cameron Heyward and Derrick Harmon are safe bets to make the team unless something catastrophic happens before cutdowns, yet the rest of the room is packed with players fighting for limited spots. Pittsburgh usually carries seven to eight interior defensive linemen on the initial 53, sometimes trimming that down to seven before Week 1.

That leaves a crowded mix of veterans, draft picks and holdovers all trying to survive the summer. Here’s how the early odds stack up.

Cameron Heyward sits at 100%. At 37, he’s still an ageless force coming off another excellent season.

There’s even a chance this is his final year in the league, which only adds to the sense that every snap still matters. The only real question mentioned here is how much new defensive coordinator Patrick Graham may want to limit Heyward’s workload in 2026.

Derrick Harmon also checks in at 100%. The Steelers’ 2025 first-round pick dealt with a pair of MCL sprains during his rookie season, but the difference was clear when he was on the field. He could end up leading Pittsburgh’s interior defenders in defensive snaps this season if he stays healthy.

Keeanu Benton is another 100% selection. Pittsburgh is working on getting him locked into a long-term extension, though the 2023 second-round pick could choose to bet on himself in a contract year. Benton has lined up as a nose tackle through his first three seasons, but Graham could move him into a role that better suits his skill set.

Sebastian Joseph-Day is also a lock at 100%. The Steelers landed him on a two-year, $11 million deal in free agency, a strong value for a defensive line piece with his experience and versatility. He’s not expected to start, but he should be a major part of the rotation.

Yahya Black comes next at 99%. The fifth-round pick from 2025 is about as close to a sure thing as it gets without being called a lock outright.

His size, mass and length stand out even on a defensive line full of bodies. He had some rookie-year struggles, but there’s no reason to give up on a player like that after one season, and he’s expected to be part of the rotation in Year 2.

Esezi Otomewo lands at 65%. He was a bit of a surprise roster survivor last year, earning one of the final spots on the defensive line, and he may have the inside track to do it again. Otomewo has played 21 games and logged 352 defensive snaps, giving him a real case for a small rotational role built on length, movement and athleticism.

Then the odds start to dip.

Dean Lowry is at 40%. He’s a veteran with more than 4,100 career defensive snaps and plenty of starting experience, but his path looks rough. A season-ending IR stint last August wiped out his 2025 season before it really began, and at 32 he’s now fighting uphill against younger, healthier competition.

Gabriel Rubio is also at 40%. The Steelers used a sixth-round pick on the Notre Dame defensive lineman in the 2026 NFL Draft, but that doesn’t guarantee him anything. His limited skill set and the competition around him could send him to the practice squad to start his NFL career.

Logan Lee checks in at 35%. This could be a make-or-break summer for him.

He’s entering his third NFL season with just 47 defensive snaps and 25 special teams snaps, and his career has already been slowed by injury after he missed his entire rookie year in 2024 with a calf issue that landed him on Injured Reserve. He played in only seven games last season and will need a strong camp to keep one of the last roster spots.

His backup longsnapper role helps, but only so much.

Kevin Jobity Jr. sits way down at 5%. The article makes clear that draft position matters, and if Pittsburgh had flipped the draft order between Jobity and Rubio, their odds might look different. As things stand, Jobity is a long shot who would need a standout camp and preseason to make the initial roster.

Anthony Goodlow and Kyler Baugh are both at 1%. That doesn’t mean it’s impossible, but it would take something close to a miracle. The depth chart is crowded, the reps will be limited, and neither player is guaranteed to make it through the preseason without being cut.

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