It’s well-known that Pittsburgh Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin hasn’t had the playoff success in the last decade or so that is expected within the franchise. Just three playoff wins in the last decade. That’s not good enough.
Neither is the seemingly usual .500 or slightly above record over the years. It’s understandable that some in the fan base use those stats as knocks on the future Hall of Fame head coach.
What can’t be used as a knock on Tomlin is the consistency he displays each and every season, putting together 16-straight non-losing seasons — a seemingly impossible task in today’s NFL landscape with free agency and more player movement than ever before.