Steelers' hiring mess exposed a head coach search that was never real

Art Rooney II's hiring process was beyond frustrating.
Dallas Cowboys HC Mike McCarthy
Dallas Cowboys HC Mike McCarthy | Sam Hodde/GettyImages

The Pittsburgh Steelers announced Saturday that they have officially concluded their head coaching search, hiring Mike McCarthy, the former head coach of both the Packers and the Cowboys, as their next head coach. The news sent shockwaves through the league, with fans and analysts alike quickly criticizing the decision. Many believe it is the worst hire of this year’s head coaching cycle.

For a franchise that held one of the most attractive openings in the NFL, the Steelers managed to fumble the process entirely. Their approach felt panicked, disorganized, and embarrassingly out of touch. Rather than showing a genuine commitment to changing the direction of the franchise, the organization doubled down on familiarity and comfort.

The interview process only reinforced that reality.

It became increasingly clear that the Steelers were never serious about exploring new ideas or flipping the narrative of a team stuck in mediocrity. Instead, they stayed stuck in the mud, conducting a hollow search that made it obvious they had one candidate in mind all along.

The Pittsburgh Steelers' interview process was never serious, and it was Mike McCarthy from the start

The start of the Steelers' head coaching search felt genuinely promising. The organization requested interviews with some of the youngest and most intriguing names in the coaching cycle, creating early optimism that this time might be different.

That optimism quickly faded when Pittsburgh only brought in three candidates for in-person interviews: Brian Flores, Mike McCarthy, and Anthony Weaver.

Instead of expanding the search or using their position as one of the league’s most attractive openings to their advantage, the Steelers rushed the process unnecessarily. They had the flexibility to wait for the championship games to conclude and interview additional candidates who were widely viewed as favorites for the job, including Chris Shula and Nathan Scheelhaase.

Rather than doing their due diligence, they hurried a decision for no clear reason.

In hindsight, the interview process feels like little more than a facade. It became apparent the Steelers only had one candidate in mind all along: Mike McCarthy. The remaining interviews appeared to be procedural obligations rather than genuine evaluations, giving the impression that the Rooney Rule was treated as a box to check rather than a meaningful opportunity to explore alternatives.

None of this should have come as a surprise. The Steelers have spent more than a decade prioritizing comfort and familiarity over innovation, clinging to the status quo while the rest of the league evolved.

Art Rooney II continues to believe this team is closer to Super Bowl contention than reality suggests, and that belief appears to have clouded his judgment. McCarthy’s ties to Pittsburgh, combined with his past connections to Omar Khan and Andy Weidl in New Orleans, made him an easy and comfortable choice.

Rooney, who previously admitted he never had doubts about Mike Tomlin and planned to keep him long term before unexpectedly parting ways, ultimately replaced him with a near mirror image. McCarthy represents the offensive version of Tomlin: a similar resume, a respected past, and a glaring lack of recent postseason success.

Instead of following the blueprint that brought the Steelers sustained success under Chuck Noll, Bill Cowher, and Mike Tomlin by hiring young ascending coaches with defensive foundations, the organization chose a 62-year-old Mike McCarthy.

It is a move that signals fear of change rather than a commitment to progress, reinforcing the belief that, since taking over after Dan Rooney passed, Art Rooney II has been unwilling to do anything differently.

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