Wilson is the first Steelers quarterback to earn a Pro Bowl nod since Ben Roethlisberger in 2017, while Maye is the Patriots' first Pro Bowl quarterback since Mac Jones was tapped
The end-of-season slide for the Pittsburgh Steelers coincided with a significant downturn in production for quarterback Russell Wilson ... the one that the Tampa Bay Buccaneers gave Baker Mayfield ...
NFL Network's Ian Rapoport reports former Broncos QB Russell Wilson could land with the Raiders and his former head coach Pete Carroll.
Since the hiring of Pete Carroll as the next head coach, there has been a thought that the Las Vegas Raiders could pursue Pittsburgh Steelers pending free-agent quarterback Russell Wilson. After one insider floated the idea earlier this week,
The Pittsburgh Steelers have some decisions to make under center this offseason. Both Russell Wilson and Justin Fields - the two starting quarterbacks for Pittsburgh this year - are without contracts.
Wilson helped lead the Seahawks to eight playoff appearances and one Super Bowl win in 2013 and produced the best seasons of his NFL career under Carroll. Making matters more interesting is the fact that Wilson reportedly wanted to join the Raiders last offseason prior to signing with the Steelers.
The Denver Broncos replaced Russell Wilson as starting quarterback with rookie first-round draft pick Bo Nix. Now, Wilson is returning the favor.
His time with the Seahawks saw him draft and develop Russell Wilson into his franchise quarterback and with the passer set to become a free agent following a one-year stint with the Pittsburgh Steelers, it didn’t take long for speculation linking Wilson with a move to the Raiders to emerge.
Pete Carroll has not ruled out a reunion with his former quarterback Russell Wilson following his unveiling as the new head coach of the Las Vegas Raiders
For the 10th time, the NFL Pro Bowl will include Russell Wilson after the Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback earned a call-up, ending a drought dating back to 2017
Mike Tomlin started the 2024 season the way he ended the 2023 season and every season before that as Steelers head coach: By making obscenely suboptimal fourth down decisions.