Zero losing seasons, one Super Bowl, 6,933 days of stability—Tomlin didn’t just coach Pittsburgh, he built an NFL unicorn that may never be replicated.
Mike Tomlin’s resignation on Tuesday closes the longest active head-coaching tenure in North American major pro sports. In an era when NFL franchises cycle through play-callers faster than playbooks, Tomlin delivered something no other coach in the salary-cap age has: 19 straight seasons without a losing record.
0 – The number that separates Tomlin from every peer
Since 2007, 55 different men have held an NFL head-coaching job. All of them—all—have posted at least one losing season. Tomlin’s ledger sits at 0, a feat last accomplished over a comparable stretch by Tom Landry in the 1970s, when rosters turned over at a fraction of today’s rate.
.628 – Regular-season win rate (173-102-2)
Among coaches with 10-plus seasons, that slots 14th in NFL history, ahead of Hall-of-Fame brands like Bill Parcells and Hank Stram. The Steelers never dipped below 8-8, insulating a fan base from the 4-13 nightmares that torment Cleveland, Carolina and the Jets on rotation.
1 – The lonely “meaningless” game
Tomlin coached exactly one contest after Pittsburgh had been mathematically eliminated—the 2012 finale versus Cleveland. Every other regular-season snap arrived with playoff stakes, an unheard-of competitive window that kept Heinz Field ticket prices recession-proof.
8 – AFC North crowns
More than Baltimore (6) and Cincinnati (5) combined during his reign. Three came in his first four years, when Ben Roethlisberger was entering his prime and the roster still carried chunks of the Bill Cowher core. The other five proved Tomlin could reload, not rebuild, even as stars aged out.
.400 – Post-season win rate (8-12)
The blemish Steelers loyalists can’t ignore. After starting 5-2 in the playoffs with two AFC titles and a ring, Tomlin went 3-10 the rest of the way, including five straight double-digit losses and a record-setting seven-game playoff skid. The narrative flipped from “chaser” to “can’t win in January,” fair or not.
16 – Years since Pittsburgh’s last Super Bowl appearance
The 2010 run ended in a loss to Aaron Rodgers’ Packers. Since then, the Steelers have reached only one conference championship—a 36-17 drubbing at New England after the 2016 season. In a quarterback league, post-Big Ben instability under center became Tomlin’s kryptonite.
6 – Starting QBs since Roethlisberger retired
Kenny Pickett, Mitchell Trubisky, Mason Rudolph, Russell Wilson, Justin Fields and a 42-year-old Aaron Rodgers all took first-team reps in 2025. None posted a passer rating above 88, forcing Tomlin to win with defense and fourth-quarter chaos—an unsustainable cocktail against playoff offenses.
10 – Losses to Bill Belichick
Tomlin’s Steelers went 3-10 versus New England, including the demoralizing 2016 AFC title game. Belichick’s game-planning exposed Pittsburgh’s tendency to over-adjust; the Patriots repeatedly attacked the middle of the field where the Steelers’ linebackers had vacated zone responsibility.
36 – Tomlin’s age when he hoisted the Lombardi
In Super Bowl XLIII, the 36-year-old became the youngest coach ever to win it—until Sean McVay edged him in 2022. The victory over Kurt Warner’s Cardinals cemented the Rooney Rule’s original vision: diverse pipelines produce championship talent.
100,000 – Dollars for the “Jacoby Jones shuffle”
Thanksgiving 2013: Tomlin drifted onto the field during a kick return, forcing Jacoby Jones to veer inside. The NFL slapped him with the largest in-game fine for a non-player act in league history. Tomlin later called it “a blunder, not a strategy,” but rival coaches still use the clip as a cautionary tale on sideline awareness.
13 – Playoff berths
Only Bill Belichick (19) and Andy Reid (17) made more trips during Tomlin’s span. The consistency kept the Steelers on national-TV prime-time slots and turned every December game into a ratings anchor for the league’s broadcast partners.
9 – Consecutive seasons without a postseason win
That streak ties for the third-longest by a head coach with one franchise in the Super Bowl era, trailing only Marvin Lewis (16) and Jim Mora (11). The drought became the cudgel critics wielded every January, overshadowing the 0-losing-seasons miracle.
5 – Months before the iPhone dropped
Pittsburgh hired Tomlin on Jan. 22, 2007, five months before Steve Jobs released the first iPhone. The technological leap mirrors Tomlin’s tenure: when he arrived, teams still used laminated play-sheets; when he left, virtual reality and GPS chips tracked player hydration.
3 – Head coaches since 1968
Chuck Noll, Bill Cowher, Mike Tomlin—that’s the entire list for 57 seasons. The Rooney family’s patience is the NFL’s unicorn; no other franchise has let fewer than six coaches cycle through over the same span. The stability created a culture where rookies inherit institutional memory dating back to the Steel Curtain.
20,857 – Days since the last Steelers coach was fired
Bill Austin got the axe on Dec. 17, 1968. Since then, every Pittsburgh exit has been on the coach’s terms. Tomlin’s resignation keeps that unprecedented streak intact, reinforcing the franchise’s reputation as the anti-Browns—where coaches leave with buyout leverage, not cardboard boxes.
6,933 – Days Tomlin wore the headset
From his introductory press conference in a baggy pin-stripe suit to Tuesday’s somber farewell zoom, Tomlin roamed the Steelers’ sideline for nearly 19 calendar years. In that window, the Jets cycled through nine head coaches; the Raiders, eight.
What’s next? Pittsburgh must decide whether to promote from within—defensive coordinator Teryl Austin and offensive aide Arthur Smith are internal favorites—or venture outside for the first time since 1969. Whoever lands the gig inherits a roster short on franchise-QB capital but long on expectation: win now, lose never, and try to match a number that may never be touched again.
Stay locked on onlytrustedinfo.com for instant breakdowns of the Steelers’ search, the top GM candidates, and the next coach’s first 100-day plan—delivered faster than a T.J. Watt strip-sack.