“You’re a Rooney — But You’re Not That Rooney”: Stephen A. Smith Unloads on Art Rooney II Over Mike McCarthy Hire
Stephen A. Smith doesn’t choose his words lightly when it comes to legacy franchises. And when the Pittsburgh Steelers — one of the most tradition-heavy organizations in sports — made the decision to hire 62-year-old Mike McCarthy as head coach, Smith didn’t just disagree.
He detonated.
On national television, Smith delivered a scathing critique of Steelers owner Art Rooney II, questioning not just the hire — but Rooney’s understanding of what the Steelers are supposed to represent.
“You’re a Rooney,” Smith said bluntly. “But you’re not that Rooney.”
The message was unmistakable. In Smith’s eyes, the move symbolized a fracture between the Steelers’ historic identity and their present-day leadership.
A Hire That Shook the League
Mike McCarthy is no stranger to success. A Super Bowl-winning coach. Decades of experience. A respected football mind. On paper, the hire checks plenty of boxes.
But this isn’t just any franchise.
The Steelers are built on continuity, innovation within structure, and coaches who grow with the organization — not arrive as recycled solutions. Smith argues that McCarthy’s hiring reflects a comfort-with-the-past mentality rather than a bold vision for the future.
“This feels safe,” Smith said. “And safe is not what Pittsburgh football was built on.”
“This Is Not the Steelers Way”

Stephen A. Smith’s harshest critique wasn’t about McCarthy’s résumé — it was about philosophy.
He pointed to the Steelers’ historical success in developing head coaches rather than importing aging ones. Chuck Noll. Bill Cowher. Mike Tomlin. All long-term bets. All culture architects.
Hiring McCarthy, Smith argued, suggests a lack of patience — and worse, a lack of imagination.
“You don’t chase yesterday when you’re supposed to be building tomorrow,” Smith said.
Art Rooney II Under the Microscope
Art Rooney II has long been viewed as a steady steward of one of the NFL’s most iconic brands. But Smith believes this decision exposed a deeper issue: fear.
Fear of missing the playoffs again.
Fear of instability.
Fear of letting go of relevance.
“Great owners don’t panic,” Smith said. “They lead.”
That’s where the line — “You’re a Rooney, but you’re not that Rooney” — landed hardest. It wasn’t personal. It was philosophical.
A suggestion that legacy alone doesn’t guarantee vision.
The Age Question Nobody Wants to Ask
At 62, McCarthy becomes one of the older head coaches in the league. Smith made it clear that age itself isn’t the issue — stagnation is.
The NFL is evolving fast. Offensive creativity. Player empowerment. Analytics. Adaptability. Smith questioned whether McCarthy represents evolution or resistance.
“This league is run by young minds right now,” Smith said. “And Pittsburgh just hired someone trying to keep up with them.”
Steelers Fans Are Split — Badly
The reaction from Steelers Nation has been explosive.
Supporters of the hire argue McCarthy brings stability, experience, and immediate credibility to a roster built to compete now.
Critics see it differently.
“This feels like settling,” one fan posted.
“We used to set trends. Now we’re following them,” wrote another.
Some fans went even further, echoing Smith’s criticism of ownership.
“This doesn’t feel bold. It feels scared.”
What This Means for Pittsburgh’s Identity
This hire may define Art Rooney II’s tenure more than any decision he’s made before.
If McCarthy wins — quickly — the criticism fades.
If he stalls — or worse, underperforms — the questions become unavoidable.
Did the Steelers abandon their philosophy?
Did ownership choose familiarity over innovation?
Did the Rooney legacy become a brand instead of a blueprint?
Stephen A. Smith believes the answers will come sooner than people expect.
“This is a crossroads moment,” he said. “And history will judge it harshly if it fails.”
More Than a Coach — A Statement
This isn’t just about Mike McCarthy.
It’s about whether the Steelers still believe in being different — or whether they’re content with being comfortable.
The hire sends a message. To players. To fans. To the rest of the league.
And Stephen A. Smith has already decided what that message sounds like.
Now the only question left is whether the Steelers can prove him wrong — or whether this moment becomes the one where the league realized Pittsburgh had quietly changed forever.