PITTSBURGH — Art Rooney II sensed Mike Tomlin might be ready for a change. Nineteen years doing any job is a long time, let alone in the white-hot spotlight that comes with coaching the Pittsburgh Steelers.
So when Tomlin walked into Rooney's office on Tuesday and told his longtime boss he was stepping down after a largely successful run that included one Super Bowl victory, an appearance in another and 19 straight non-losing seasons, Rooney wasn't shocked.
''He was pretty clear about what his intentions were,'' Rooney said Wednesday as the Steelers began the process of hiring just their fourth head coach since 1969. ''We had a great conversation, and I understood where he was.''
Rooney described the impetus behind Tomlin's decision as ''more family-related than football-related" and stressed the team was ''certainly willing to make another run at it next year with Mike.''
Tomlin went 193-114-2 in Pittsburgh, tied with Hall of Famer Chuck Noll for the ninth most regular-season wins in NFL history. Tomlin arrived in Pittsburgh in January 2007 as a relative unknown 34-year-old defensive coordinator. He left as the longest-tenured head coach in major North American professional sports with a resume that will receive strong Hall of Fame consideration of its own, even if he never coaches another game.
Whether that happens is anyone's guess, though Rooney said it was his understanding that Tomlin does not intend to coach in 2026. A future in television, even if it serves as merely a breather before the 53-year-old married father of three returns to the sideline, could be in the offing.
Rooney did not try to talk Tomlin out of the decision, saying instead that the club is ''grateful'' for the way Tomlin carried himself both on and off the field during what Rooney described as a ''winning era'' for one of the league's most visible franchises.
That era, however, ended with the Steelers in a rut. Their season-ending 30-6 loss to Houston in the first round of the playoffs on Monday night marked Pittsburgh's sixth straight one-and-done postseason appearance, all of them by multiple scores.