PITTSBURGH — There is a sameness to the way the Pittsburgh Steelers keep ending their seasons.
Yet Mike Tomlin shrugged on Tuesday when asked if it feels as if the Steelers are ''stuck'' after their fifth first-round playoff exit in eight years, all of them embarrassing in their own way.
''Stuck is kind of a helpless feeling,'' the NFL's longest-tenured coach said. "And I don't know that I feel helpless.''
Maybe, but Tomlin also made it a point to not look for silver linings after Pittsburgh's promising start ended with a thud, culminated by a 28-14 beatdown at the hands of Baltimore on Saturday in which the Steelers were never really in the game.
''I definitely don't feel in the mood for optimism or the selling of optimism,'' he said. ''I don't know that that's appropriate. You know, it's disappointing not to be working. And so that's where we are.''
Which is where Pittsburgh has frequently been for most of the past decade: cleaning out its lockers and sifting through the ashes of what went wrong once the calendar flipped to January.
And while changes are certainly coming to the coaching staff — most likely on defense after the Steelers were gashed during a five-game freefall through the standings — Tomlin doesn't appear to be going anywhere as he enters the first season of a three-year extension he signed last June.
Tomlin believes he's still "capable" of helping Pittsburgh end its longest playoff victory drought since the ''Immaculate Reception'' more than a half-century ago.