Super Bowl-winning coach Mike Tomlin lands NBC role on 'Football Night in America' broadcast

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Mike Tomlin stepped away from his job as the Pittsburgh Steelers coach after the 2025 season to be with his family and travel and just decompress. Well, he’s apparently had enough down time and is returning to the NFL in a different role.Tomlin is joining NBC’s broadcast of "Football Night in America" show prior to the network’s Sunday Night Football telecast, a source close to Tomlin confirmed to OutKick Tuesday morning.ZERO BS. JUST DAKICH. TAKE THE DON't @ ME PODCAST ON THE ROAD. DOWNLOAD NOW!SNF is typically not just the highest-rated NFL game every week, but often the highest-rated show.The Athletic was first to report Tomlin’s imminent hiring.Tomlin, 54, is an obvious hire. He will basically replace Tony Dungy who announced after the season he was removed from the broadcast after 17 years.HALL OF FAMER TONY DUNGY ANNOUNCES NBC LET HIM GO AFTER 17 SEASONS ON THEIR PREGAME SHOWAnd why is Tomlin seen as a natural fit?Tomlin is a Super Bowl-winning coach — check.He never had a losing season during his 19 seasons as the Steelers head coach — check.He obviously understands the inner workings of a successful franchise and how NFL players react to situations and how to manage those players — check.And he has a way with words — check.About his ability to turn a phrases, which became every bit a Tomlin trademark as his coaching success, we offer some examples:Tomlin in recent years also began calling his team a "collective." And then other coaches started doing the same.Tomlin is at minimum expected to join host Maria Taylor, ex-Cowboys coach Jason Garrett and Devin McCourty on set of the pregame show and halftime segment. It is unclear how long this relationship will last.The source said Tomlin’s contract will include a clause that allows him to return to coaching if that is his wish.But one network executive pointed out Tuesday morning that coaches often join the media with expectations they’ll eventually step back into coaching, but because the pressure of television doesn’t equal that of coaching in the NFL and the money is very good, they never leave.Bill Cowher is one example of that.Like Tomlin, Cowher became a network studio analyst after his time with the Pittsburgh Steelers ended.