No matter who the Pittsburgh Steelers starting quarterback ends up being, the franchise will have done something it has never done before. Last year, we noted the rarity of the Steelers starting a different Week 1 quarterback in four-straight seasons, something that hadn’t been achieved since the forgettable mid-1980s.

The team’s presumed goal was to find stability with Russell Wilson or Justin Fields. Instead, both have left town, and for a second-straight season, the Steelers completely changed out their quarterback room. Regardless if it’s Aaron Rodgers, Mason Rudolph, or someone behind Door No. 3, Pittsburgh will have a different Week 1 starter for a fifth-straight season: Ben Roethlisberger in 2021, Mitch Trubisky in 2022, Kenny Pickett in 2023, Justin Fields in 2024, and 2025’s starter.

Since switching to the T-formation in 1952, it’s the first time the Steelers have ever had such a streak.

Anything in the Single Wing era, the formation Pittsburgh used prior to the switch (the Steelers were the last team to make the change), is messy and doesn’t truly count. That formation was run-focused and allowed virtually anyone in the backfield to throw the football, making a true “quarterback” meaningless. Still, it’s more than a 70-year stretch of time

Below is a list of the Steelers’ Week 1 quarterback every year from 1952 to present day.

Year
Steelers Week 1 QB

2025
Rodgers/Rudolph/The Field

2024
Justin Fields

2023
Kenny Pickett

2022
Mitch Trubisky

2011-2021
Ben Roethlisberger

2010
Dennis Dixon

2007-2009
Ben Roethlisberger

2006
Charlie Batch

2005
Ben Roethlisberger

2003-2004
Tommy Maddox

2001-2002
Kordell Stewart

2000
Kent Graham

1997-1999
Kordell Stewart

1996
Jim Miller

1994-1995
Neil O’Donnell

1993
Mike Tomczak

1992
Neil O’Donnell

1988-1991
Bubby Brister

1985-1987
Mark Malone

1984
David Woodley

1983
Cliff Stoudt

1975-1982
Terry Bradshaw

1974
Joe Gilliam

1970-1973
Terry Bradshaw

1969
Dick Shiner

1968
Kent Nix

1965-1967
Bill Nelsen

1962-1964
Ed Brown

1959-1961
Bobby Layne

1957-1958
Earl Morrall

1956
Ted Marchibroda

1952-1955
Jim Finks

Besides 1982-1985, the only other four-season stretch Pittsburgh experienced came from 1967-1970 when the Steelers started Bill Nelsen, Kent Nix, Dick Shiner, and Bradshaw in his first year with the team. Bradshaw broke the streak with his 1971 start (a forgettable, four-interception performance in a loss to Chicago). There was also a different starter in four-straight years from 1991-1994 but Neil O’Donnell appeared twice over that span, not four brand-new names to the list.

This 2021-2025 stretch will be the first that takes it to five. A sixth season is likely in store. Rodgers, should he sign, is expected to be a one-year trial. Rudolph, should he get the chance, isn’t the long-term answer. Next season is when Pittsburgh figures to truly pursue a first-round rookie and though Mike Tomlin prefers veterans over youth, the team will have strong incentive to play him immediately.

Change isn’t good or bad. It just is. It’s also fair to argue teams shouldn’t stick with mistakes and organizations that can admit theirs and move on will more quickly solve the problem. There certainly wasn’t any sense hanging onto Mitch Trubisky for continuity’s sake. But the other side can be argued, too.

Teams constantly rotating through quarterbacks won’t find stability or Super Bowl-contending success. Pittsburgh spinning its wheels at quarterback represents a franchise that feels stuck. They won’t make progress until they find their quarterback of the future.

NFL teams starting five-straight quarterbacks is fairly common. But rarely has that been good company to keep. The 2013-2019 Cleveland Browns, 2019-2023 Carolina Panthers, 2000-2005 Chicago Bears, and 2004-2008 Oakland Raiders are just some examples of franchises that have done the same.

It’s an offseason of firsts. One of change. The Steelers have shed their leading passer, rusher, and receiver in a single offseason for the first time in team history. And they will have a new starting quarterback for the fifth straight season, whoever that ends up being.