With 12 draft picks—most in the NFL—and Aaron Rodgers’ 2026 decision still unspoken, Pittsburgh’s seven-round haul projects a premium WR at 21, O-line help at 53 and Penn State’s Drew Allar as the developmental quarterback stash in Round 4.
From Tomlin to McCarthy: Why 2026 Feels Different
Mike Tomlin’s 19-year run is over. Mike McCarthy now inherits a 22-year non-losing streak that rode Tomlin’s weekly alchemy and Ben Roethlisberger’s Hall-of-Fame prime. The roster McCarthy steps into still won the AFC North in 2025, but the quarterback room is on the clock—Rodgers turns 42 in December and has yet to tell the team whether he wants one last shot at an eighth Lombardi run.
Rodgers尚未开口,12张彩票已到手
Whatever Rodgers decides, GM Omar Khan controls April’s draft like no other executive. Twelve total selections—beginning with No. 21 overall—give the Steelers the capital to chase upside at every turn. The first simulation of draft season from USA TODAY attacks three urgent needs: difference-making receiver, sturdy left tackle and the post-Rodgers quarterback plan.
Round-by-Round Blueprint
- 1-21 WR Denzel Boston, Washington — 6-4, 209 lbs. Twelve touchdown grabs in 2025; gives DK Metcalf a true size complement.
- 2-53 OT Caleb Tiernan, Northwestern — Three-year left-tackle starter rarely left the field; Broderick Jones insurance.
- 3-76 WR Zachariah Branch, Georgia — 5-10 jitterbug, 13.3-yard punt-return career clip; slot weapon if Rodgers returns.
- 3-85 S Zakee Wheatley, Penn State — Jalen Ramsey may slide back outside; Wheatley logged a 69.2 passer rating allowed in 2025.
- 3-99 CB Julian Neal, Arkansas — 55 tackles, 2 picks; length (6-2) fits Pittsburgh’s press DNA.
- 4-121 QB Drew Allar, Penn State — 6-5, 235, top-10 recruit who flashed elite arm before a senior ankle exit; the upside dart.
- 4-135 DL Kaleb Proctor, Southeastern Louisiana — 9 sacks at FCS level; Cameron Heyward’s eventual successor.
- 5-159 RB J’Mari Taylor, Virginia — 43 receptions; insurance if free-agent Kenneth Gainwell walks.
- 6-213 Edge Patrick Payton, LSU — 17 career sacks; developmental piece behind aging T.J. Watt.
- 6-214 G Joshua Braun, Kentucky — 43 college starts; plug-and-play interior depth.
- 7-224 LB Bryce Boettcher, Oregon — 136 tackles, special-teams demon.
- 7-237 CB Josh Moten, Southern Miss — Back-to-back five-pick seasons; 68.1 rating allowed.
Why Allar in Round 4 Is the Conversation Starter
Pittsburgh already rostered Will Howard (2024 sixth-rounder) and signed Rodgers to a short-term bridge. Drafting Drew Allar isn’t a Day-1 rescue plan—it’s a calculated lottery ticket. His 2025 season lasted six games before ankle surgery, yet 22 NFL teams will watch his scripted Combine throws for a reminder why recruiters once ranked him above 2025 first-rounders. In a historically thin 2026 QB group, the fourth round could be the ceiling rather than the floor, and the Steelers can afford the spin with five picks in the first 99.
Hidden Dominoes: Three Ripple Effects
- If Rodgers retires, Khan now has two contrasting developmental prospects—Howard’s quick-game accuracy versus Allar’s vertical arm—plus 2027 cap space, setting up a true camp competition.
- Double-dipping at receiver (Boston + Branch) telegraphs less faith in George Pickens as a solo alpha and pressures second-year OC Arthur Smith to spread the field for whoever is under center.
- Grabbing two cornerbacks in the first seven rounds signals the front office expects Jalen Ramsey to kick back outside full-time; Wheatley, Neal and Moten provide the interchangeable depth McCarthy loves in Dallas-style matchup defenses.
What History Says About 12-Pick Drafts
NFC teams leveraged 11-plus selections into deep playoff runs—2020 Cowboys, 2022 Vikings—while others (2019 Patriots) whiffed by chasing need over value. Pittsburgh’s front office quietly owns the league’s best fifth-round hit rate since 2015; grabbing Boettcher and Payton late continues that bargain-bin identity rather than splash chasing.
Bottom Line for Steelers Nation
Twelve picks buys margin for error, not a mandate for fireworks. This mock keeps Pittsburgh’s championship window propped open whether Rodgers chases one more ring or rides into the broadcast booth. Denzel Boston and Caleb Tiernan start fast; Zakee Wheatley and Julian Neal reload the secondary; Drew Allar is the upside stash that could make the post-Rodgers transition feel like a soft landing instead of rebuild slog. The Steelers don’t need to hit a home run—they need to rattle off a dozen singles, then watch the scoreboard change by October.
Stay locked on onlytrustedinfo.com for the fastest, most definitive Steelers draft intel as April’s board—and Rodgers’ verdict—takes shape. Read deeper every day; your war-room edge starts here.