How the Steelers forged Aaron Rodgers-Mike Tomlin connection

Brooke PryorJan 9, 2026, 06:00 AM ETCloseBrooke Pryor is a reporter for NFL Nation at ESPN who has covered the Pittsburgh Steelers since 2019. She previously covered the Kansas City Chiefs for the Kansas City Star and the University of Oklahoma for The Oklahoman.Follow on X

PITTSBURGH — As Steelers staffers scurried to distribute AFC North championship hats and T-shirts and cameramen flooded the field, Aaron Rodgers and Mike Tomlin found each other on the turf at Acrisure Stadium.

Encircled by boom mics and clicking cameras, Tomlin extended a hand to his quarterback, pulled him in for a hug and told him he loved him.

This was the manifestation of the vision Tomlin, 53, saw when he pursued Rodgers 10 months ago, that the 42-year-old quarterback still had it — the knowledge, the arm, the swagger — to lead the Steelers to the postseason. And with a vintage fourth-quarter performance — and, of course, with the help of a missed Baltimore Ravens field goal — that’s just what Rodgers did.

Tomlin has been searching for the franchise’s next quarterback since Ben Roethlisberger’s 2022 retirement, sifting through the silt of the NFL draft and free agency for that priceless addition. Each time, though, the glimmers of hope turned out to be fool’s gold.

Rodgers is having fun, too. He threw 24 touchdowns to seven interceptions and had his highest completion percentage (65.7%) since 2021. Success looked different for Rodgers this season as he averaged a career-low 5.9 air yards per attempt.

Through Week 13, Rodgers completed just 7 of 28 attempts (25%) with two touchdowns and two interceptions on passes of at least 20 yards downfield. But his deep passing picked up in the final four weeks of the season as he completed 9 of 20 attempts (45%) with three touchdowns on such passes.

As Rodgers continues to surge, he’s finding motivation in winning for his head coach, endeared to him in part because of their similar experiences.

“We love Mike T, and Mike T has had an incredible career as a head coach to go that long and never have a losing season. It’s unbelievable,” Rodgers said this week, dismissing external criticism of the head coach that spiked after the Week 13 loss to the Bills.

“There’s always going to be something. When I was a young player, they said I couldn’t be considered elite until I won a playoff game. After that, it was until you win a Super Bowl, and oh, you haven’t won MVP yet. And whatever they might be for Mike T, he’s at what, 19 straight non-losing seasons, so they got to find something to try and get after him.

Through his nearly two decades at the helm of the Steelers, Tomlin has earned a reputation of being a players’ coach for his transparency with the locker room and his willingness to let players be themselves. Though the latter hasn’t always returned positive results, that trait was a significant component of Rodgers’ decision to play in Pittsburgh.

“I just think if you’re going to get the best out of someone, particularly someone that’s in a leadership position, they got to do it in a natural way, in their voice,” Tomlin said. “You’re cutting their leadership legs out from under them when you’re asking them to be somebody they’re not or to not do things in a real natural and organic sort of way. And so I think it’s negligent to ask him to be anything other than himself.”

That’s just what Rodgers has been since he arrived in Pittsburgh in June. Not only did he sign the one-year, $13.65 million contract on his own timeline, arriving just before mandatory minicamp, but he also brought his idiosyncrasies with him — and the team embraced all of it.

Rodgers started the bonding process with his pass catchers before he even signed, working out with DK Metcalf in Los Angeles in late March. Once he became a Pittsburgh Steeler, Rodgers hosted a group of offensive players in Malibu, California, for several days, taking them to dine at Nobu, shoot hoops with Houston Rockets star Kevin Durant at his exclusive gym and work out on a palm-tree-ringed field.

One of the first to build a close relationship with the quarterback was Ben Skowronek, a wide receiver entering his second year with the team. The pair bonded over their affinity for wired headphones and glass-bottled Mountain Valley Spring Water, and at Nobu, Rodgers introduced him to affogato, a dessert with espresso poured over vanilla gelato.

“He was like, you got to try this, and I tried it,” Skowronek said. “Unbelievable. Then when I went back to Arizona to finish off my offseason, I went out to dinner with my wife, and I was like, we got to try affogato. … We have a lot in common with lifestyle stuff.”

Rodgers also built a quick rapport with others in the locker room, too. His teammates soon learned Rodgers was as comfortable taking a joke as he was making one.

But after hugging his head coach Sunday night, Rodgers turned around and found Heyward waiting on him.

In Rodgers, the Steelers found a veteran leader for the offense, one capable of threading the needle between being relatable and demanding, urgent but relaxed, and assertive yet collaborative.

“He’s just such a leader and just such a commander,” Steelers left tackle Dylan Cook said. “You never see him freaking out, so it’s easy to play when your leader is relaxed at all times.”

Rodgers doesn’t solve the Steelers’ long-term quarterback conundrum. He might not even solve it beyond the next month, though recently the 42-year-old acknowledged he hasn’t yet made a determination on the 2026 season.

But he has done exactly what the Steelers needed — and hoped — he would do this season. He stabilized the offense and kept the locker room even-keeled.

“It’s a clean slate now,” Rodgers said. “Anybody can make a run. It’s the hottest team. We’ve won four out of five. We’re playing a lot better football than we were earlier in the season. I like our chances.”

“It’s chaos, disbelief, gratitude, a lot of emotions,” Rodgers said Sunday night, describing the moment Tyler Loop’s field goal sailed wide right. “I’m just really, really thankful. And that’s what I told [owner and president Art Rooney II] and [assistant general manager Andy Weidl] and [general manager Omar Khan], just to be able to get brought in here and be a part of this team, and just the way I bonded with the guys and the way they’ve put their arms around me and allowed me to be myself and listen to me and let me lead and inspire me the way they have. It’s a good group of guys.”

CloseBrooke Pryor is a reporter for NFL Nation at ESPN who has covered the Pittsburgh Steelers since 2019. She previously covered the Kansas City Chiefs for the Kansas City Star and the University of Oklahoma for The Oklahoman.Follow on X

“Thanks for bringing me here,” Rodgers told his head coach.

“Thank you,” Heyward told Rodgers as the quarterback pulled the defensive tackle in for a bear hug.

“Are you kidding me?” Tomlin responded. “Thank you for coming.”

Tomlin to Eisen: We’re excited to have DK Metcalf back (0:56)Steelers coach Mike Tomlin joins Rich Eisen and talks about what DK Metcalf’s absence meant for the team. (0:56)

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