The Pittsburgh Steelers may not be saying it outright, but their recent moves are delivering a clear message. As the franchise reshapes its future under new head coach Mike McCarthy, the door for Aaron Rodgers to return in black and gold is no longer merely ajar — it is steadily opening wider.
Since McCarthy’s arrival, the Pittsburgh Steelers have moved swiftly to restructure their coaching staff. After operating with the smallest and least expensive coaching staff in the NFL during the 2025 season, Pittsburgh is now expanding both in scale and ambition. Notably, most of the early additions carry familiar ties to Green Bay — the place where McCarthy and Rodgers once helped define an era.

The most prominent name is offensive line coach James Campen, McCarthy’s longtime lieutenant and one of the most influential figures in Rodgers’ career. Campen’s arrival in Pittsburgh immediately caught the league’s attention, not only because of his coaching résumé, but because of the deep personal connection he shares with the four-time MVP quarterback.
Rodgers has never hidden that bond.
“He’s been more than just a coach,” Rodgers once wrote. “A mentor, a confidant, a father figure, and a friend. We are all better for having been around him.”
Those words carry even more weight now, as Rodgers weighs whether the 2025 season truly marked the final chapter of his legendary career.

The intrigue has only grown with Scott Tolzien — a former Packers backup quarterback and current Saints assistant — interviewing for Pittsburgh’s offensive coordinator position. Tolzien spent three seasons learning directly behind Rodgers in Green Bay, and the mutual respect between the two remains strong.
“I learned more from him than any other quarterback,” Tolzien said. “He taught me how to read the game, how to enjoy football, and how to stay calm under pressure.”
Tolzien also emphasized McCarthy’s impact on his professional development.
“Mike has meant a lot to my career. From building game plans to managing a locker room, I learned everything just by watching how he did things.”
Rodgers, who signed a one-year deal with Pittsburgh and previously suggested that 2025 could be his final season, notably walked back that stance just days before the regular-season finale against Baltimore. While other teams could still enter the conversation, many around the league believe Pittsburgh remains the most logical destination if Rodgers decides to make one more run.
No public commitments have been made. Nothing has been finalized. But the structure is unmistakable: familiar voices, trust-based relationships, and a system Rodgers understands — and once mastered.
For a quarterback who has always valued trust as much as talent, the Steelers aren’t simply building a coaching staff. They are quietly rebuilding the feeling of home.