Pittsburgh Steelers
The Pittsburgh Steelers are part of the AFC North Division in the NFL. Founded in 1933, the seventh-oldest franchise in the league has a large fan base to prove it. The Steelers were known as the Pittsburgh Pirates for the team’s first seven years. Now a four-time Super Bowl championship team, they celebrated their first of 33 playoff appearances in 1947.
Several elements of the Steelers franchise, like the Terrible Towel and Steel Curtain, have earned rightful places in NFL lore. Notable Steelers players past and present include Jack Lambert, Terry Bradshaw Joe Greene, Troy Polamalu, Jack Ham, and Ben Roethlisberger.
- Founded: 1933
- Owners: Rooney family
- Head coach: Mike Tomlin
- Super Bowl championships: six (1974, 1975, 1978, 1979, 2005, and 2008)
- Stadium: Heinz Field
- Team colors: Black and gold
Visit the Pittsburgh Steelers at NFL.com.
Read the latest articles about the Pittsburgh Steelers:
If the roles were reversed, T.J. Watt of the Pittsburgh Steelers would be in a much worse financial situation than Ronnie Stanley of the Baltimore Ravens.
Pittsburgh Steelers rookie wide receiver Chase Claypool made a nice off-the-field gesture to a Steelers fan diagnosed with dementia.
We’re almost halfway through the 2020 NFL season, and only a handful of contenders have stood out above the rest so far.
The Steelers have found their next Antonio Brown. With Chase Claypool emerging as a star, can Pittsburgh make a Super Bowl run?
The Pittsburgh Steelers just won their 17th straight home game against the Cleveland Browns, proving they’re still the little brother.
A year ago, Cleveland’s Myles Garrett ripped the helmet off Pittsburgh’s Mason Rudolph and hit him with it. The teams meet again Sunday.
Le’Veon Bell and Antonio Brown were the most dominant RB/WR duo in the NFL just three years ago, but now they’re both unemployed.
Chase Claypool had a breakout game in Week 5 with four touchdowns against the Philadelphia Eagles.
Terry Bradshaw moved straight from the Pittsburgh Steelers to broadcasting with CBS and then Fox Sports despite a warning to a top network executive.
Frustrated Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger us upset his team had to switch its schedule through no fault of its own.