Former Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin is a step closer to a potential broadcasting career.
Tomlin, who stepped down in January after 19 years and one Super Bowl championship in Pittsburgh, has signed with The Montag Group, an agency headed by Sandy Montag, according to Front Office Sports.
Alex Flanagan, a former on-air talent for NBC Sports and NFL Network, reportedly led the signing and will represent Tomlin day-to-day in potential contract talks with networks and streamers.

The Montag Group, which is a division of The Team (formerly Wasserman), represents veteran broadcasters Mike Tirico, Jim Nantz, Scott Van Pelt, James Brown and Dick Vitale.
Multiple networks have seen changes after the 2025-26 season.
NBC Sports parted ways with analyst Tony Dungy after 17 years on “Sunday Night Football” earlier this month.
Retired tight end Rob Gronkowski transitioned to Jimmy Johnson’s role on Fox’s Sunday pregame show, leaving a potential open seat.

CBS has an open broadcast spot on its NFL pregame show after retired quarterback Matt Ryan returned to the Falcons as their new president of football operations.
Tomlin, 54, informed Steelers president Art Rooney II that he was stepping down after the team’s brutal 30-6 loss to the Texans in the wild-card round of the playoffs in January.
He has been at the center of rumors on whether he’ll continue coaching or take his talents to television.
Early speculation had Fox as the favorite to land Tomlin, per The Athletic.
However, Tomlin has yet to announce his next career move.
The coach exited the Steelers at a time when fans are desperate for a postseason run.
Pittsburgh hasn’t won a playoff game since 2016.
Tomlin — who owns a regular-season record of 193-114-2 — never had a single season under .500 in Pittsburgh and his 201 total wins are the 10th most in NFL history.
Tomlin coached the club to a Super Bowl title, defeating the Arizona Cardinals, 27-23, in 2009.


