For the first time in two decades, Mike Tomlin will not be stalking an NFL sideline this fall.

Instead, he is heading to television.

Tomlin is joining NBC’s Football Night in America as a studio analyst, according to sources confirmed Tuesday, giving the network one of the most recognizable coaching voices of the modern NFL and marking a sharp turn for a man who had spent 19 seasons as the face of the Pittsburgh Steelers on game day.

The move lands only a few months after Tomlin resigned as Steelers head coach in January, ending one of the longest and most stable coaching runs in professional sports.

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Before stepping down, he had been the longest-tenured head coach in North American pro sports. He leaves Pittsburgh with a 193-114-2 regular-season record, an 8-12 postseason record and one of the league’s more unusual resume notes in the modern era: not a single losing season.

That part of the story still matters because Tomlin’s exit from coaching was not the sort of small shift that disappears in the offseason churn. He had become one of the defining sideline figures of the last generation, known as much for his tone and delivery as for the results.

NBC is clearly betting that the same style that made him one of the league’s most quoted coaches will translate cleanly to the studio.

The hiring also puts him in a familiar kind of historical company, at least in Pittsburgh terms. Tomlin becomes the second former Steelers head coach to move into network television after leaving the franchise. Bill Cowher joined CBS as a studio analyst in 2007 after stepping down from the Steelers and never returned to coaching. That comparison will now follow Tomlin whether he wants it to or not, because the obvious next question is whether this is a temporary stop or the start of his post-coaching life for good.

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Talks between Tomlin and NBC picked up in Augusta, Georgia, two weeks ago, according to ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler, and the deal moved quickly enough to give NBC a major new personality ahead of the 2026 season.

Tomlin leaves behind a Pittsburgh career that had plenty of headline moments, both good and frustrating. He won Super Bowl XLIII in just his second season with the Steelers, becoming at the time the youngest head coach ever to win a Super Bowl. The Steelers returned to the Super Bowl the following season but lost to Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers.

After that, Tomlin never got back to the game’s biggest stage, and his postseason track record turned into one of the more debated parts of his legacy. His last playoff win came in January 2017, an 18-16 victory over the Kansas City Chiefs, and his final game coaching Pittsburgh was a 30-6 wild-card loss to the Houston Texans this past January.

So NBC is getting, at minimum, a major name with immediate credibility and a voice fans already recognize, but the NFL is losing is one of its most familiar sideline figures, at least for now.

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