Steelers’ most fierce positional battle to watch at 2025 training camp

Steelers’ most fierce positional battle to watch at 2025 training camp
ClutchPoints ClutchPoints

Despite all of the moves the Pittsburgh Steelers have made in the offseason, things may not work out. That’s especially true if they don’t get T.J. Watt under contract before the season starts. But the focus right now is the 2025 training camp, and here is the Steelers’ most fierce positional battle to watch.

The place to watch is the backfield, where rookie Kaleb Johnson is making a push to unseat starter Jaylen Warren. It should be quite a battle, but there is already talk that Johnson’s upside will make it hard for Warren to hold him off.

Steelers RB Kaleb Johnson eyeing first-team spot

How much push is Johnson making? If you listen to Gilberto Manzano, he’s a potential difference-maker, according to Sports Illustrated.

“How the Steelers’ offense takes shape in 2025 might hinge on Johnson’s development,” Manzano wrote. “If the rookie third-round pick makes an immediate impact, that would allow the young offensive line to establish a rhythm early in games and take pressure off Rodgers, who struggled with mobility last season with the New York Jets.

“There’s also the lack of depth at wide receiver behind Metcalf, meaning the Steelers might depend heavily on Johnson emerging as a productive playmaker in his rookie year.”

If Johnson is going to move into a starting role behind Aaron Rodgers, he will need to do more than just run the ball. Rodgers will demand Johnson excels in pass protection.

However, Mike Tomlin is already throwing praise in Johnson’s direction, according to a post on X by Eliot Clough via hawkeyeswire.com.

“This is a high-volume, capable runner who was the center of his offense,” Tomlin said. “A lot of NFL, Sunday-like runs, if you will. Meaning he did it from the home position or the pistol position into a lot of loaded boxes. It wasn’t a lot of guesswork or Saturday-like holes on his tape. And that made the evaluation a fun one and the projection an easy one.”

Johnson is 6-foot-1 and weighs 225 pounds, so size is in his corner. In contrast, Warren brings a 5-8, 215-pound body to the field.

But Tomlin said he’s not focusing on the physical attributes of Johnson.

“Less concerned about the measurables and really more concerned about the play style and the resume,” Tomlin said. “And certainly he is a guy that’s capable of high-volume carries.”

Pittsburgh’s offensive coordinator Arthur Smith said the team is excited to have a back like Johnson. Smith called Johnson “explosive,” according to steelers.com.

“Really explosive running back that we spent some time with,” Smith said. “One of the more instinctive backs that I’ve watched in a couple of years coming out of the draft. (He’s a) perfect fit regardless of whatever run scheme you’re running. He ran multiple (schemes) at Iowa. Really impressive as a volume runner as the game went on. And one of the more impressive stats you’ve seen in the fourth quarter — what he averaged in the fourth quarter. I believe it...