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Mike Tomlin steps down as Pittsburgh Steelers head coach
Summary
Mike Tomlin has stepped down after 19 seasons as the Pittsburgh Steelers head coach; he won one Super Bowl and led the team to 13 playoff appearances.
Content
Mike Tomlin has stepped down as head coach of the Pittsburgh Steelers after 19 seasons. He was the longest-tenured head coach in major American professional sports when he left. Tomlin guided the club to a Super Bowl win early in his tenure and to 13 playoff appearances overall. He departs having tied Chuck Noll for the most regular-season wins in franchise history.
Key facts:
- Mike Tomlin stepped down a day after the end of his 19th season in Pittsburgh.
- He won one Super Bowl and led the Steelers to the playoffs 13 times, including eight AFC North titles.
- Tomlin finished with 193 regular-season wins, tied with Hall of Famer Chuck Noll for the franchise record.
- His postseason record was 8-12, and he lost each of his last seven playoff games by double-digit margins.
- The team's most recent playoff loss was a 30-6 home defeat to Houston, reported as the most lopsided home playoff loss in team history.
- Tomlin had two years remaining on the contract extension he signed in 2024, with the club holding an option for 2027.
Summary:
Tomlin's departure ends one of the longest coaching runs in American professional sports and leaves the Steelers preparing for a rare coaching search. The club has not announced a successor and the timeline for naming one is undetermined at this time.
