Sources: Steelers plan to hire McCarthy as coach

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  • Brooke PryorJan 24, 2026, 01:45 PM ET

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      Brooke 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.

PITTSBURGH -- Mike McCarthy is coming home.

The Pittsburgh Steelers plan to hire the 62-year-old head coach, a Pittsburgh native, to be just their fourth head coach since 1969, sources told ESPN's Adam Schefter on Saturday afternoon.

The news of McCarthy's impending hire comes just 11 days after Mike Tomlin told the team he was walking away from the role after 19 seasons as the head coach.

The Steelers selected McCarthy after interviewing seven candidates virtually and three, including McCarthy, in person.

They also held in-person interviews with Minnesota Vikings defensive coordinator Brian Flores and Miami Dolphins defensive coordinator Anthony Weaver. McCarthy had his in-person interview Jan. 21, while Weaver was in the building Jan. 24. Flores interviewed first on Jan. 20.

McCarthy, who didn't coach a team in 2025, spent five seasons with the Dallas Cowboys before he and the organization failed to reach a contract extension after the 2024 season, leading to the Cowboys' hiring of Brian Schottenheimer.

McCarthy, who won a Super Bowl title with the Green Bay Packers in the 2010 season, brings that title experience to the Steelers, who last won a Lombardi Trophy to cap off the 2008 season.

There's some belief in the building, sources told ESPN, that bringing McCarthy in the fold could lure 42-year-old quarterback Aaron Rodgers to return to Pittsburgh after a one-season stint with the Steelers. McCarthy coached Rodgers for 13 seasons in Green Bay, and the pair won their lone Super Bowl title together.

Steelers owner and team president Art Rooney II previously said he believed Rodgers' decision about his future would be affected by Tomlin's departure.

"Aaron came here to play for Mike, so I think it would most likely affect his decision," Rooney said Jan. 14.

In hiring McCarthy, the Steelers made a departure from their previous hiring practices. Their most recent three previous head coach hires -- Tomlin, Bill Cowher and Chuck Noll -- were 38 or younger and had never been NFL head coaches.

In his news conference following Tomlin's resignation, Rooney expressed a desire to contend immediately. By landing on McCarthy rather than a first-time head coach, the Steelers signaled a belief that the veteran coach can immediately help them break a frustrating drought of postseason wins that dates back to 2017.

"I'm not sure why you waste a year of your life not trying to contend," Rooney said in that news conference. "Obviously your roster is what it is, changes every year. And so you deal with what you have every year, try to put yourself in a position to compete. Sometimes you have the horses, sometimes you don't, but I think you try every year.

"... We'll try to compete day one if we can."

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