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Steelers legend Terry Bradshaw publicly criticizes GM Omar Khan for wasting a $290 million salary cap — one of the highest in the NFL, yet only met with a streak of inconsistent performance.

Posted on November 14, 2025

Controversy is brewing in Pittsburgh after franchise legend Terry Bradshaw, the four-time Super Bowl champion who defined the Steelers’ golden era, publicly criticized general manager Omar Khan for what he called “reckless spending without direction.” In an exclusive interview with 

“This isn’t the team I used to know,” Bradshaw said, his tone heavy with disappointment. “When you spend nearly $300 million on a roster, you don’t get to settle for inconsistency. The Steelers were built on pride and hunger — not spreadsheets and numbers. I look at them now and I have to ask myself: where’s that steel spirit that used to make the entire NFL afraid to walk into Heinz Field?”

His comments serve as a wake-up call for a franchise seemingly losing its identity, as the Steelers continue to show erratic performances despite fielding stars like Aaron Rodgers, DK Metcalf, and T.J. Watt

. Each win feels like a struggle, and every loss reveals cracks in both strategy and locker-room cohesion.

“They’ve got big names but no shared soul,” Bradshaw continued. “In Pittsburgh, players used to fight for honor, for the logo on their helmets — not for the number of zeroes on their contracts.”

According to ESPN, the Steelers currently rank among the top three highest payrolls in the NFL, behind only the Cowboys and Jets. Yet, their record hardly reflects that level of investment. Analysts have criticized 

“When you walk into the Steelers locker room, you should feel the history — the responsibility to carry on that legacy,” Bradshaw emphasized. “But now, I don’t feel that anymore. It’s like they’re trying to buy back greatness instead of building it.”

GM Omar Khan has yet to respond publicly. But in a city where football is more religion than sport, Bradshaw’s words carry the weight of gospel.
Because in Pittsburgh, greatness was never about the size of a paycheck — it was about 

As head coach of the Denver Broncos, Vance Joseph was 0-4 against Andy Reid and the Kansas City Chiefs. Since Joseph has returned as Broncos defensive coordinator, he’s 3-3 vs. the Chiefs.

The Broncos’ first matchup of the season vs. the Chiefs is coming this Sunday. This time around, the Broncos lead the AFC West at 8-2, while the Chiefs are in third place, at 5-4.

Coming off a bye, Reid has only ever lost four games as a head coach. The Broncos are going to get Kansas City’s best shot.

For Joseph, emerging with a fourth win over Reid’s squad starts with getting after Patrick Mahomes and limiting the Chiefs’ ninth-ranked scoring offense. Suffice it to say, Joseph admires Mahomes’ game, but that doesn’t mean he’s isn’t hankering to send the Chiefs home at .500.

“He’s been the best for a long time. He’s a winner. The plays he can make off-schedule. That makes it tough,” Joseph said. “Going against Patrick, obviously, how you rush him is important, how you cover is important, but the second part is just keep chasing him and keep plastering the back end because those plays they’ve made over the years, him and [Chiefs TE Travis] Kelce especially, have been hard of defenses.”

Adding to Joseph’s challenge this week is the expected continued absence of All-Pro cornerback Patrick Surtain II, and the fact that Kansas City has a few newer receivers the Broncos have yet to face. And they’re 

“It’s a true challenge, and they have these new receivers. It’s a track team,” Joseph said. “You have 4.26 [40-yard dash times], 4.30, so that makes it challenging.”

Over the years, Joseph has learned Reid’s tendencies and vice versa, but the Chiefs have had two full weeks to prepare for the Broncos. Reid has two games’ worth of tape to project what Joseph’s coverage units look like without Surtain locking down one side of the field.

Still, Joseph doesn’t base everything he does as defensive coordinator on his past experiences vs. Reid. Teams are always evolving, and Reid has been one of the consistent coaches always on that cutting edge.

“I take each game by the month at a time. I’m looking at what I’ve done over the last month, also, and he has to do that also. Teams do change,” Joseph said. “Pat hadn’t played in two weeks, so what are we doing without Pat? So that’s Andy’s concern also. It goes both ways. That’s why I don’t go back too much on certain opponents, obviously, because it matters what happened in the last month.”

Joseph strives to self-scout and stay hyper-aware of any tendencies he’s putting on tape, especially going against a savvy and perceptive opponent like Reid. Fortunately, the Broncos had three extra days this week — a mini-bye — to prepare for the Chiefs.

“I’m checking my numbers all the time as far as what I’m doing on certain downs and distances versus what, and versus what formation and personnels, so I’m keeping Andy kind of guessing also,” Joseph said.

The Broncos rank first in the NFL in sacks, red-zone efficiency, and third-down defense, and top-10 in total yards, rushing, and passing. Plus, Denver is only allowing 17.3 points per game, which ranks third.

The one fly in the ointment of Joseph’s ongoing defensive masterpiece this season is the relative lack of takeaways. The Broncos only have eight takeaways this season, which is the only key metric that ranks in the bottom-10 of the league.

Now, the Broncos’ takeaway fortunes have begun to change in recent weeks, but it’s not as if the floodgates have opened. If the Broncos are going to vanquish the Chiefs, Joseph’s defense will have to limit Mahomes and company, which is hard enough, and if they can take the ball away and give Bo Nix and Sean Payton an extra possession or two, that would be the cherry on top of a fourth straight home win over Kansas City.

“There’s a reason this team has won for a long period of time, and it’s talent, it’s coaching, it’s a program, it’s a GM, it’s ownership,” Payton said on Wednesday. “That’s where we’re aspiring to go.”

If the Broncos can defeat the Chiefs, it would make for their eight straight win of the season, giving them a 9-2 record entering their Week 12 bye. This game is more than a measuring stick; the Broncos have a chance to truly seize control of the AFC West, and signal a changing of the guard.

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