Desperate Steelers don't learn from past mistakes in this 3-round mock draft

   

Times appear rough for the Steelers this offseason. Most of their questions from 2024 are still issues, and the team appears directionless. They haven’t been a legitimate contender for a long time, and after a bitter collapse at the end of the year, things look bleak.

Desperate Steelers don't learn from past mistakes in this 3-round mock draft

The issue on this team runs deep. A lot of their struggles stem from poor draft classes to end Kevin Colbert’s time as GM. He overvalued replaceable positions and pigeonholed himself into taking specific positions. While Omar Khan has done a better job in the draft, we saw some big oversights by ignoring the receiver room last offseason.

In this mock draft, the Steelers prove they haven’t learned their lesson.

A team desperate for a turnaround can end up making some bad decisions. That is just what Pittsburgh does in these three rounds, ignoring deeper positions in the draft to fill immediate needs. It hasn’t worked historically, and I would dread it if the draft started off like this. These three rounds ignore the value in hopes of filling specific holes despite the needs elsewhere on the roster.

In short, this is what a desperate team could do during the 2025 draft.

Steelers Mock Draft Round 1: Jalen Milroe, QB, Alabama

Jalen Milroe has to be one of the most divisive quarterback prospects in a weak class. He failed to lead Alabama to their usual heights, and as a passer, he took a lot of chances that both helped and harmed his team.

Physically, he has everything you want in a quarterback. From a strong arm to incredible mobility, he looks the part of a dynamic running quarterback. On the ground, there isn’t a bigger threat in the draft, as he is that impressive on the ground.

While he can make any throw, his decision-making as a passer is suspect, and it is clear he needs some time to develop those traits. You also have to build an entirely new offense around him. Given how shallow this quarterback class is, taking him in the first round seems like a mistake.

While his ceiling is higher than Justin Fields's, there is no guarantee that he gets there. Being a first-round pick the expectation will be for him to be the guy sooner than later, but Milroe feels like a guy that needs a year or two to get there as a passer. This is a move that screams of desperation from a team that lacks a legitimate quarterback option.