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How the final stretch could define Mike Tomlin’s future

How the final stretch could define Mike Tomlin’s future

The Pittsburgh Steelers’ 2024 season was a tale of promise undone by a brutal finish. A 10–7 record was good enough to reach the playoffs for the second straight year, but it ended the same painful way Steelers fans have come to know all too well: a one-and-done postseason exit. A 28–14 Wild Card loss to the rival Baltimore Ravens not only extended Pittsburgh’s playoff losing streak, it underscored growing concerns about the franchise’s direction under longtime head coach Mike Tomlin.

What made 2024 sting even more was how close the Steelers were to something bigger. At 10–3, they controlled the AFC North and looked poised to host a playoff game. Four losses later, including defeats to the Eagles and Ravens, Pittsburgh collapsed into a road Wild Card matchup and another early offseason. Once again, a season that felt full of potential ended with familiar frustration.

During the 2024 regular season, the Steelers did enough to stay relevant, finishing 10–7 and second in the AFC North. On paper, it was another “successful” year: double-digit wins and a playoff berth. In reality, it felt hollow. Losing the final four games erased any momentum and turned a potential division title into yet another uphill postseason climb.

The Wild Card loss to Baltimore marked Pittsburgh’s sixth straight playoff defeat, all coming in one-and-done fashion. Even more concerning is how familiar the script has become: sneaking into the playoffs, facing a tougher opponent, and entering January with a sense that the Steelers don’t truly belong in the conversation. For a franchise built on postseason standards, that mindset is alarming.

Will History Repeat Itself Again?

Fast forward to 2025, and warning signs are already flashing. Pittsburgh jumped out to a 4–1 start before midseason struggles left them at 6–6, tied with the Ravens. A critical road win at M&T Bank Stadium helped the Steelers keep the AFC North lead, but the margin for error is razor-thin. A repeat of last season’s late collapse would almost certainly send them home again on Wild Card Weekend.

The path forward is simple but unforgiving. A strong finish — something like 4–0 or 3–1 — would secure a playoff spot without help and likely deliver a home playoff game. Anything less invites chaos, reliance on other teams, and renewed doubts about whether this group can take the next step.

After six straight playoff losses, multiple seasons of backing into the postseason, and a growing belief that Pittsburgh enters January with “no real chance,” the pressure is mounting. The final four weeks of this season, and the playoff game that follows, may determine more than just wins and losses. They may ultimately decide Mike Tomlin’s long-term future in Pittsburgh — and whether the Steelers can finally change a postseason narrative that has lingered far too long.

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