Sad news for

PITTSBURGH — Sitting at the dais in the Steelers’ news conference room inside Acrisure Stadium, Pittsburgh quarterback Mason Rudolph admitted he had let his mind wander into the what-ifs.
What if Saturday was one of his final opportunities to prove he could make it as an NFL quarterback? After six roller-coaster seasons with only 18 starts — and just two in the past three years — did he truly belong in the leagu
With 290 passing yards and two touchdowns with no interceptions in the Steelers’ resounding 34-11 victory over the Cincinnati Bengals — Pittsburgh’s first win by more than one score all year — Rudolph proved to himself and a stadium of more than 66,000 fans that he can play winning football in the NFL.
“You got confidence in yourself as a player,” Rudolph said, “but you’re kind of thinking, ‘Am I going to jump into the commercial real estate realm next year or am I going to be playing quarterback?'”
Rudolph, who has been inactive for all but three games this season, made the most of his first start since Week 10 of the 2021 season from the jump. On the Steelers’ second play of the game, Rudolph connected with George Pickens on a short throw, and the wide receiver took it 86 yards to the house for the Steelers’ longest touchdown since Ben Roethlisberger hit JuJu Smith-Schuster for a 97-yard score in Week 12 of the 2018 season.