
For years, the Pittsburgh Steelers have built their identity around toughness, patience, and player development. The organization rarely hands out massive praise without reason, especially when it comes to young talent still trying to establish themselves in the NFL. That is why recent comments from Steelers coach McCarthy about Howard immediately grabbed attention around the league.
When McCarthy confidently stated that Howard would “absolutely be a starter in this league,” fans and analysts instantly began debating what the statement truly means.
In today’s NFL, coaches are usually careful with expectations. Publicly labeling a young player as a future starter can create enormous pressure before that player has even taken meaningful snaps at the professional level. Most coaches prefer generic compliments about effort, preparation, or potential. McCarthy’s wording felt different.
It sounded definitive.
That confidence has sparked growing curiosity about Howard’s development behind the scenes. Whether during practices, meetings, or offseason workouts, the Steelers coaching staff clearly appears impressed by something they are seeing consistently.
And in Pittsburgh, praise is rarely accidental.
The Steelers have historically valued discipline, football intelligence, and mental toughness just as much as raw athletic ability. Many talented prospects fail because they cannot handle the speed, complexity, or pressure of the NFL environment. When coaches within an organization known for stability speak this strongly about a young player, people pay attention.
Of course, not everyone is convinced.
Critics argue that projecting Howard as a guaranteed starter is premature. NFL history is filled with players who looked impressive during camps and offseason programs before struggling once real competition began. Some fans believe Steelers coaches may simply be trying to build confidence publicly while motivating Howard internally.
Others see the comments differently.
To many supporters, McCarthy’s statement reflects the type of confidence organizations only show when they believe they may have discovered something special. Those fans point to Howard’s physical tools, composure, and steady improvement as signs that his ceiling may be far higher than outsiders originally expected.
The reaction online has been intense.

Steelers fans immediately flooded social media with clips, scouting reports, and predictions about Howard’s future role. Some are already imagining him becoming a key piece of the franchise’s next era. Others are warning against unrealistic expectations that could quickly turn excitement into disappointment if Howard develops more slowly than expected.
That tension between optimism and caution is common whenever a young player receives significant praise early in his career.
Still, the timing of McCarthy’s comments matters.
The Steelers are entering a period where roster competition and long-term planning are becoming increasingly important. Every organization constantly searches for affordable young talent capable of eventually becoming reliable starters. If Howard truly develops into the player McCarthy believes he can become, Pittsburgh may have secured a valuable piece for years to come.
And that possibility is exactly why the comments became such a major story.
Around the NFL, coaches often reveal more through confidence than through detailed analysis. Sometimes the strongest indicator of a player’s future is not statistics or highlight clips, but the belief shown by people who work with him every day.
McCarthy’s confidence was impossible to miss.
What also stands out is how direct the statement was. He did not say Howard “could” become a starter. He did not say “if things go well.” He spoke as if becoming a starter feels inevitable.
That type of certainty creates expectations immediately.
Now attention will follow Howard throughout training camp, preseason games, and every public appearance. Fans will analyze every throw, every mistake, and every positive moment through the lens of McCarthy’s prediction. Fair or not, the pressure surrounding Howard has already increased dramatically.
But pressure can also create opportunity.

Some players shrink once expectations rise. Others thrive because belief from coaches unlocks confidence they did not previously show publicly. The Steelers are clearly hoping Howard belongs in the second category.
The organization also understands how quickly narratives form in today’s NFL media environment. One strong preseason performance could suddenly transform Howard from an intriguing prospect into one of the league’s most talked-about young players. At the same time, early struggles would immediately bring criticism from those who already believe the hype is excessive.
That is the reality of modern football.
Young players are judged faster than ever before. Fans expect immediate results, especially after bold public statements from coaches. Patience rarely exists online anymore. Players either become stars instantly in the eyes of fans or are labeled disappointments far too early.
Howard now enters that environment carrying significantly more attention than he did just days ago.
Yet inside the Steelers organization, that may not matter much. Pittsburgh has long believed its culture can help players manage outside noise while focusing on development internally. If Howard continues progressing the way coaches expect, the early pressure may eventually become irrelevant.
For now, though, one thing is undeniable: McCarthy’s statement changed the conversation completely.
Howard is no longer viewed as just another young player trying to make an NFL roster. Thanks to one confident prediction, fans are now wondering whether the Steelers may already know they have found their next breakout starter before the rest of the league catches up.