The Pittsburgh Steelers' top wide receiver is just a year away from entering free agency for the first time, but after a "solid exit meeting," the team prefers to sign George Pickens to an extension before another team gets the chance to next offseason.
Contrary to Omar Khan's extension comments, Steelers insider Gerry Dulac doesn’t believe George Pickens will remain with Pittsburgh beyond 2025.
From Antonio Brown to Diontae Johnson to Chase Claypool to George Pickens, Mike Tomlin has coached his share of problematic wide receivers on the Pittsburgh Steelers over the past decade. The first three played their way out of the organization via trade,
Pickens and Monroe will face off on Saturday, Feb. 22 at 7 p.m. ET. Don't miss out on any of the action with NFHS Network.
South Carolina Gamecocks safety Nick Emmanwori faces off against Dallas Cowboys wide receiver CeeDee Lamb, Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver George Pickens, and Minnesota Vikings wide receiver Justin Jefferson in a Simulcast 40-yard dash.
Pittsburgh Steelers general manager Omar Khan says their desire to keep wide receiver George Pickens is mutual.
Steelers general manager Omar Khan emphasized the team's desire to retain top vertical threat George Pickens on Tuesday.
Where does George Pickens slot into the future plans of the Pittsburgh Steelers? That is the critical question the team must answer, but for now, it certainly seems like he is part of their future plans,
Pickens has been inconsistent, but the Steelers have also trotted out a wide assortment of quarterbacks during his first three seasons in the NFL. Having him as the top target for, say, Jordan Love would be huge for Matt LaFleur’s Packers offense.
The latest ESPN mock draft says a wide receiver will be going to the Pittsburgh Steelers, to help complement George Pickens.
If you squint, you can maybe see a path that wide receiver George Pickens can walk down with the Pittsburgh Steelers for at least one more year. And based on how general manager Omar Khan spoke about him this past week at the NFL scouting combine,
It’s amazing how one little, four-letter word can change the scope of an entire conversation. No. I’m not even talking about one of those four-letter words. The word I’m talking about is pretty basic: here.
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