For the Pittsburgh Steelers, their passing game has shifted toward a more dynamic, multi-layered identity, and as Mike Tomlin's team continues shaping the roster around that vision, including a potential change under center, wide receiver remains a premium position to reinforce.
Looking toward the spring, the 2026 class offers an intriguing blend of size, explosiveness, and developmental upside, giving Pittsburgh several avenues to add long-term playmaking talent.
Three names -- one on each day of the draft -- stand out as ideal fits for what the offense is building toward.
Wide receivers that Pittsburgh Steelers could target on each day of the 2026 NFL draft
Day One: Denzel Boston, Washington
Boston has emerged as one of the smoothest big-bodied receivers in the class, a player whose blend of size, fluidity, and technical polish is difficult to find.
His release game is already advanced, consistently varying how he attacks press coverage while maintaining a natural feel for pacing against zone, and for a receiver of his build, his ability to sink, redirect, and separate out of breaks is impressive, often giving him more room than defenders expect.
Add in his powerful and reliable hands, along with his ability to expand the strike zone at the catch point, and it becomes easy to see why he has become such an explosive fixture in Washington’s offense.
For an offense looking for a long-term perimeter playmaker with true No. 1 potential, Boston is a legitimate option on Day 1.
Day Two: Malachi Fields, Notre Dame
Fields brings a massive, imposing frame at 6-foot-4, yet moves with the stride efficiency and long speed of a talent much smaller.
Even in an offense where Jeremiyah Love has grabbed most of the spotlight, Fields has been a driving force behind Notre Dame’s ability to generate explosive plays. A former UVA transfer and track athlete, he consistently stacks corners and forces defenses to account for his ability to win downfield. But what separates him is his dominance at the catch point -- whether high-pointing, extending one-handed, or finishing through contact, he plays above the rim with ease.
His route running continues to polish as he adds nuance underneath and in the intermediate areas, and as his game rounds out, so does his draft stock.
For a Steelers unit that values physicality and competitive toughness at the position, Fields fits squarely into the kind of ascending Day 2 target they traditionally pursue.
Week after week Notre Dame WR Malachi Fields continues to pop on tape.
— Ryan Fowler (@_RyanFowler_) November 15, 2025
Hell of a play from the 6’4” UVA transfer. pic.twitter.com/2VCZIqMK8E
Day Three: Nyck Harbor, South Carolina
Harbor remains one of the most fascinating prospects in the entire class, a 6-foot-5, 235-pound world-class sprinter whose athletic makeup looks almost unreal for his size.
That’s 10.11 100m sprinter Nyck Harbor with a touchdown for South Carolina‼️
— CITIUS MAG (@CitiusMag) November 15, 2025
The dude is so fun to watch on the football field. pic.twitter.com/IaMX6RKNwH
His positional future remains open -- wide receiver, tight end hybrid, or an offensive weapon who defies standard labels -- but the traits are undeniable. With the ball in his hands, he accelerates like a much smaller player, erasing pursuit angles and turning basic touches into explosive gains.
For Pittsburgh, he represents the kind of early Day 3 swing that could eventually unlock a unique, matchup-breaking role into the offensive structure.
