Report: Mike Tomlin extension announcement coming soon

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  • RuthlessBurgher
    Legend
    • May 2008
    • 33208

    Report: Mike Tomlin extension announcement coming soon

    Report: Mike Tomlin extension announcement coming soon

    Posted by Josh Alper on July 28, 2017, 11:19 AM EDT

    Mike Tomlin has been the head coach of the Steelers since the 2007 season and it doesn’t look like there’s a change coming anytime soon.

    Ed Bouchette of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reports that an announcement about a contract extension for Tomlin is expected from the team soon. Tomlin’s current deal runs through the 2018 season, although Ian Rapoport of NFL Media reports that it has already been stretched to 2019.

    Rapoport reports that an option for that season vested due to Tomlin’s win total over the life of his current contract. It’s not clear if that is the announcement that is expected from the Steelers as Rapoport adds that there has been talk about a longer deal that runs beyond the 2019 season.

    Tomlin is 103-57 in the regular season with the Steelers with one Super Bowl title and another AFC championship on his resume. He got to 100 wins faster than any other coach in Steelers history, which hasn’t stopped him from hearing criticism as the Steelers have fallen short of Super Bowl trips the last six years.

    That criticism doesn’t appear to be shared inside the organization, however, and it doesn’t look like the team will be looking for their fourth head coach since hiring Chuck Noll in 1969.

    http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2017/07/28/report-mike-tomlin-extension-announcement-coming-soon/
    Steeler teams featuring stat-driven, me-first, fantasy-football-darling diva types such as Antonio Brown & Le'Veon Bell won no championships.

    Super Bowl winning Steeler teams were built around a dynamic, in-your-face defense plus blue-collar, hard-hitting, no-nonsense football players on offense such as Hines Ward & Jerome Bettis.

    We don't want Juju & Conner to replace what we lost in Brown & Bell.

    We are counting on Juju & Conner to return us to the glory we once had with Hines & The Bus.
  • feltdizz
    Legend
    • May 2008
    • 27532

    #2
    I'm sure this will make a lot of yinzers angry. Which makes me happy
    Steelers 27
    Rats 16

    Comment

    • squidkid
      Legend
      • Feb 2012
      • 5847

      #3
      yipppeee for doing less with more
      steelers = 3 ring circus with tomlin being the head clown

      Comment

      • Sugar
        Hall of Famer
        • Oct 2008
        • 3700

        #4
        This is great to see. Happy for Coach T!

        Comment

        • Ghost
          Legend
          • May 2008
          • 6338

          #5
          Over the last 10 years the Steelers are 103-57 in the regular season, putting them third best in the league behind Pats and Packers. 7 out of 10 years in the playoffs. Yeah... why do we want that guy...
          sigpic

          Comment

          • RuthlessBurgher
            Legend
            • May 2008
            • 33208

            #6
            Originally posted by squidkid
            yipppeee for doing less with more
            You mock anyone who has anything remotely positive about our draft picks...steal of the draft!

            You also bitch about how the front office chooses to spend its money.

            And in spite of all of these questionable player acquisitions in your mind, the coach somehow leads this team to the AFC Championship game.

            Taking us further in the playoffs in each of the last several seasons is obviously doing less with more.
            Steeler teams featuring stat-driven, me-first, fantasy-football-darling diva types such as Antonio Brown & Le'Veon Bell won no championships.

            Super Bowl winning Steeler teams were built around a dynamic, in-your-face defense plus blue-collar, hard-hitting, no-nonsense football players on offense such as Hines Ward & Jerome Bettis.

            We don't want Juju & Conner to replace what we lost in Brown & Bell.

            We are counting on Juju & Conner to return us to the glory we once had with Hines & The Bus.

            Comment

            • RuthlessBurgher
              Legend
              • May 2008
              • 33208

              #7
              Mike Tomlin aims to lead the Steelers to the promised land

              Pittsburgh has the talent to make a run — starting with its head coach

              By Jason Reid

              July 28, 2017


              NEWPORT NEWS, Virginia — One of the coolest head coaches in the NFL showed up looking the part earlier this month at the Hampton Roads All-Star Football Camp, rockin’ camouflage shorts, a white T-shirt, a white baseball cap and unlaced black Air Jordans. Then, Mike Tomlin of the Pittsburgh Steelers put in work.

              After he dapped up campers, who eagerly greeted the hometown superstar, there were drills for him to oversee. Tomlin encouraged players to push harder. He corrected their technique. Later, he exhorted the group to maximize opportunities.


              Tomlin spent the day leading. It’s what he does best.

              “You always want people, especially young people, to look at how you handle your business and see that you’re doing things the right way,” Tomlin said while footballs whizzed past on the field at Christopher Newport University.

              “And you can always use any situation as a teaching situation. Hopefully, you show them the right way one time, they’ll know what to do the next time.”

              Although it seems like yesterday that Tomlin, then only 36, became the youngest coach to lead a team to a Super Bowl championship (Pittsburgh won the 2008-09 title), he has grown into one of the best in his business regardless of experience. The league’s third-longest-tenured sideline boss — only Bill Belichick of the New England Patriots and Marvin Lewis of the Cincinnati Bengals have been on the job longer — Tomlin enters his 11th season in Pittsburgh with a .644 winning percentage in the regular season.

              Last season, the Steelers finished a step short of reaching their third Super Bowl under Tomlin. He could get them there this season.

              Pittsburgh, which is loaded on offense, may have the game’s best trio at quarterback, running back and wide receiver in Ben Roethlisberger, Le’Veon Bell and Antonio Brown, respectively. As the Steelers start their first week of camp at Saint Vincent College in Latrobe, Pennsylvania, they have big goals. Tomlin plans to keep them focused on what it’ll take to achieve them.

              “What you can’t do is accelerate the process,” Tomlin said. “We know we’ve got talented individuals. We’ve got talented groups. We’ve got a talented team, and I embrace that. But we’ve got to enjoy the little moments. The now. The steps. You can’t get to where you want to go without traveling the whole road.”

              Tomlin rolls with some of the best.


              Roethlisberger is a two-time Super Bowl winner who holds all of the team’s career passing marks. Brown went from being a sixth-round pick (194 players were selected before him in the 2010 draft) to arguably the league’s top wideout. There’s no better big-play artist. As an all-around back, Bell (who has not signed his franchise tender and missed the start of camp) is second to none. Tomlin knows what he’s got.

              There are other receivers who dominate games; Julio Jones of the Atlanta Falcons and Odell Beckham Jr. of the New York Giants immediately come to mind. But if another team approached the Steelers about acquiring Brown, “I wouldn’t trade him for anybody,” Tomlin said. “I really stay away from the whole ‘this guy is better than that guy’ thing. I just don’t get into it, because I’m sure other coaches coach guys who can play and they feel strongly about their guys.

              “But I wouldn’t move my guy for another guy. I’m glad he’s with me. Ditto that statement with the other two [Roethlisberger and Bell]. Just keep the rest of the quote, write in one blank line and insert either name. It’s really the same thing with my quarterback and my running back. But that’s why we’re having this conversation about us having a good team.”

              The head coach is a big part of the conversation as well.

              Among black head coaches, only Cincinnati’s Lewis has held his gig longer than Tomlin. This season, the NFL will have eight head coaches of color, including seven who are African-American. That’s the most the league has had to kick off any season. Eight coaches of color also led teams in the 2011 season.

              League observers often point to Tomlin’s hiring in highlighting the Rooney Rule’s potential. In place since 2003 for head coaches and expanded in 2009 to include general manager jobs and equivalent front-office positions, the rule — named after Dan Rooney, the revered former Steelers chairman and onetime head of the league’s diversity committee who died in April — mandates that an NFL team must interview at least one minority candidate for these jobs.

              The rule has helped the NFL increase diversity within its coaching ranks, but, “obviously, we’ve got a ways to go,” Tomlin said. “For me, I always just concern myself with being an active participant in the progress. On a lot of levels. From saying what needs to be said to conducting myself in a manner that reflects how I want this to go from a business standpoint.

              “When I was a young guy in this league, man, I’d go to league functions. Guys like [former longtime assistant coach and head coach] Ray Rhodes would put their arms on me and give me a little inspiration. I smile when I think about that now. I smile about being in that position now to provide that for people.”

              Tomlin definitely inspired the campers in Newport News.

              He was reared in the Hampton Roads metropolitan area, which includes Newport News, a region that has produced several NFL greats. Hall of Famers Lawrence Taylor and Bruce Smith are on the long list, to name a few. Tomlin has never forgotten his roots.

              “One of the things I want to convey to them [the campers], whenever I come back, is that I’m a regular dude. I’m no different than them,” Tomlin said. “And the only way you can convey that is to spend time with them. I don’t coordinate this from a distance. I don’t participate in this at a distance.

              “I put my T-shirt on and get out and spend the day with these guys. Hopefully, in doing so, they can get close to me and realize I’m no different than them. Then, in turn, maybe they realize they can do whatever it is I do, or do whatever it is they aspire to do.”

              Tomlin once aspired to become a winning NFL football coach. He accomplished that and so much more.

              https://theundefeated.com/features/nfl-mike-tomlin-steelers-2017-2018-promised-land/
              Steeler teams featuring stat-driven, me-first, fantasy-football-darling diva types such as Antonio Brown & Le'Veon Bell won no championships.

              Super Bowl winning Steeler teams were built around a dynamic, in-your-face defense plus blue-collar, hard-hitting, no-nonsense football players on offense such as Hines Ward & Jerome Bettis.

              We don't want Juju & Conner to replace what we lost in Brown & Bell.

              We are counting on Juju & Conner to return us to the glory we once had with Hines & The Bus.

              Comment

              • pittpete
                Legend
                • Aug 2008
                • 6825

                #8
                He got you...LOL
                sigpic

                Comment

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