T. J. Watt, Pittsburgh Steelers
Despite the Pittsburgh Steelers' early playoff exit, star pass-rusher T.J. Watt doesn't want to play for any other team. "I want to be a Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh Steelers outside linebacker T.J. Watt left the team's Wild Card round playoff game versus the Baltimore Ravens with an apparent arm injury. He appea
The Pittsburgh Steelers' end-of-season collapse finished with a 28-14 loss to the rival Baltimore Ravens in the AFC Wild Card Round on Saturday,
The Pittsburgh Steelers could move on from edge rusher T.J. Watt if the price is right, but the franchise legend doesn't intend to find a new home.
This is exactly why the X-Factor doesn't come from the Pittsburgh defense. People already know what T.J. Watt and Co. are capable of. They already know that disrupting offenses is the Steelers' main gateway to victories and that the team will lean heavily on Teryl Austin's unit again this weekend.
Across the NFL, teams eliminated from Super Bowl contention are turning their focus toward a long offseason of coaching changes and contract negotiations.
The Pittsburgh Steelers season came to an end on Saturday with an ugly playoff loss to the Baltimore Ravens. Here are our big takeaways from Saturday. Saturday’s game marked two streaks for
Pittsburgh Steelers star edge rusher T.J. Watt offered a very candid admission on his playoff performance and how it must improve in 2025.
T.J. Watt is heading into the final year of his contract with the Pittsburgh Steelers, and some have wondered if the organization’s recent inability to break through in the playoffs might tempt him to look elsewhere.
T.J. Watt addressed his future following another Pittsburgh Steelers first-round playoff exit. Pittsburgh's postseason struggles continued with Saturday's 28-14 loss to the Baltimore Ravens. The Steelers have made the playoffs five times during Watt's eight-year career,
Moving forward, there has been talk that perhaps pass-rusher T.J. Watt is about to move on from the Steelers, but he made it clear that he wants to continue to wear the black and yellow, per Aaron Becker.