Steelers want Big Ben return, but cap hit an issue

NFL

PITTSBURGH — Ben Roethlisberger wants to return to the Pittsburgh Steelers for the 2021 season, team president Art Rooney II said Thursday, but to do that, the team and its veteran quarterback must make some difficult decisions.

With the salary cap decreasing because of a drop in revenue due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Roethlisberger’s $41.2 million cap hit for the 2021 is untenable, Rooney said.

“Ben wants to come back,” he said in his season wrap-up zoom call. “We’ve left that door open.

“I think we’ve been up front with Ben in letting him know that we couldn’t have him back under the current contract. I think he understands we have some work to do there. We’ll have more conversations internally, and we’ll have more conversations with Ben, and we’ll have to know what the cap number is to finalize some of those decisions.”

After the wild-card loss to the Cleveland Browns, Roethlisberger, 38, said he would talk with his family before making a concrete decision to return for 2021, but said he hoped the Steelers would want him back if that’s what he decided to do. But will Rooney and the team give him the opportunity to write his own end to a storied career?

“With Ben, we owe it to him to have a conversation about how he wants to end his career, and we intend to do that.”

To achieve cap relief and give Roethlisberger at least one more season to end on his own terms, the Steelers could ask the quarterback to take a pay cut in the final year of his contract. The Steelers have already pro-rated $22,250,000 of his contract, leaving just $19 million — $4 million in base salary, $15 million roster bonus — to work with in a pay cut or restructure. The more likely option is an extension and restructure that spreads some of the cap hit into the 2022 season. “I think that those are discussions we’ll have with Ben and his representative,” Rooney said of possibilities to massage Roethlisberger’s contract. “It takes two to figure that out and whether we can agree with what he wants, we’ll just have to see.”

As it stands now, the Steelers have three quarterbacks on the roster for the 2021 season: Roethlisberger, Mason Rudolph and newly signed Dwayne Haskins. But, Rooney acknowledged the team needs to add another signal caller, potentially putting them in the sweepstakes for one of the available big-name quarterbacks if they can configure the cap to be accommodating.

“I think when you look at our room, we’ll have to add somebody to the room this offseason,” Rooney said. “We’ll look at all the opportunities we have to do that.”

Determining Roethlisberger’s future is just the first step of many difficult decisions and discussions for the Steelers this offseason.

General Manager Kevin Colbert’s year-to-year contract is up after the draft, and while Rooney said the two have had many discussions about Colbert’s future, nothing is official.

“I feel like Kevin is going to come back, but who knows,” Rooney said.

Coach Mike Tomlin’s contract runs through at least the 2021 season with an option for the 2022 season, and in evaluating his head coach, Rooney said he believes Tomlin will lead the team in the future.

“We’ll address Mike’s contract with him as time goes on this offseason,” he said. “I’ll just say I feel comfortable in saying he’ll be our coach into the future. … In terms of the job he did, we didn’t finish the way we’d like. The playoff game, it’s hard to analyze … just turning the ball over that way, you’re not going to win many games. I don’t see how you attribute that to coaching preparation. I think the team went into that game prepared.”

Rooney also said that if it were all up to him, he would go into the 2021 season with the same roster the team had in 2020.

“If I had my druthers, I’d say if I could have the same roster back over in the next year, I’d do it,” he said. “Obviously, that’s not the case.”

With the team’s salary cap situation — the Steelers are estimated to be over by nearly $30 million with 48 players signed, according to ESPN’s Roster Management system — re-signing free agents like Bud Dupree and JuJu Smith-Schuster will be difficult, if not nearly impossible.

“It’s fair to say this will be the most difficult salary cap challenge that we’ve had in a long time, maybe ever,” Rooney said.

But the first step to figuring out the rest of the roster is to determine Roethlisberger’s future.

Asked bluntly if he wants Roethlisberger to return, Rooney paused and said he wanted him back, but offered no guarantees about the quarterback’s future.

“I think we’d like to see Ben back for another year if that can work,” he said. “But as we said there’s a lot of work to be done if that can happen, there may need to be decisions on both ends for that to happen.”

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