Rodgers Real-Life Drama Is a Gift to TV, Sports Fans

Legendary QB says his choice to play for Pittsburgh this season was not made because of money, but was “a decision that was best for my soul,”
Rodgers Real-Life Drama Is a Gift to TV, Sports Fans
Aaron Rodgers #8 of the New York Jets warms up before the game against the Jacksonville Jaguars at EverBank Stadium in Jacksonville, Fla., on Dec. 15, 2024. Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images
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Star quarterback Aaron Rodgers’ career moves have been providing National Football League fans real-life drama that rivals fiction.

It started on a national level at the 2005 draft, when the University of California–Berkeley QB was widely expected to be the top two or three pick in the first round. However, NFL officials had to move him to a private room as he dropped down the board. The Green Bay Packers selected him with the 24th pick, stopping the slide and a stretch of compelling TV.

In Green Bay, Rodgers backed up superstar and fan favorite Brett Favre for three years before he got the starting nod in 2008. In 2011, he led the Packers to a Super Bowl victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers.

After 18 years in Green Bay, in 2023, he was traded to the New York Jets, where, hampered by injury, he spent a lackluster two years.

Now the drama figures to continue as Rodgers takes over signal-calling for the Steelers. He reportedly inked a one-year $13.65 million deal as Pittsburgh’s starting quarterback, to lead the team to the kind of postseason success it hasn’t enjoyed since the Steelers won the Super Bowl in 2009.

The four-time NFL Most Valuable Player had reportedly been linked to the Steelers for months, so this slow play was not exactly a secret. The team, which has been in desperate need of competent quarterback play for years, told us that with its actions. Rodgers hinted at the move, and the media fed us corroborating reports at every turn.

But as the script played out over several months, the surefire Hall of Famer reminded everyone that taking his time was, in a sense, taking other folks’ time as well.

The length of the process spurred two big names to voice their displeasure over the situation publicly.

Former Steelers quarterback and Hall of Famer Terry Bradshaw was the loudest member of the Pittsburgh family to aim verbal shots at Rodgers, saying alternative meds and California-style soul searching were more shine than substance.

“That’s a joke. That to me is just a joke,” Bradshaw said in a late-May interview on Arkansas’ 103.7 The Buzz.

“What are you going to do, bring him in for one year? Are you kidding me?

“That guy needs to stay in California. Go somewhere and chew on bark and whisper to the gods out there.”

A couple of months ago, Steelers star defensive lineman Cameron Heyward sounded off on the notion of waiting for Rodgers to join the squad. He used his own podcast to seemingly nudge the QB into action, one way or the other.

“I ain’t doing that darkness retreat, I don’t need any of that [expletive]. Either you want to be a Pittsburgh Steeler or you don’t. That’s simple. That’s the pitch,” Heyward said on his “Not Just Football with Cam Heyward” podcast.
Aaron Rodgers #8 of the Pittsburgh Steelers in action during Minicamp at UPMC Rooney Sports Complex in Pittsburgh, Pa., on June 10, 2025. (Justin K. Aller/Getty Images)
Aaron Rodgers #8 of the Pittsburgh Steelers in action during Minicamp at UPMC Rooney Sports Complex in Pittsburgh, Pa., on June 10, 2025. Justin K. Aller/Getty Images

“If you want me to recruit, that’s the recruiting pitch. Pittsburgh Steelers—if you want to be part of it, so be it. If you don’t, no skin off my back,” the seven-time Pro Bowler said.

And there were murmurs about Rodgers donning Bradshaw’s No. 12, which isn’t officially retired, because the new Steelers star wore that number with Green Bay for much of his career. But Bradshaw’s number is unofficially retired, and Rodgers ended up with No. 8 after punter Corliss Waitman graciously gave up the jersey to the legendary QB.
Rodgers spent 18 years with the Packers and won Super Bowl XLV. In his career, he has amassed 62,952 passing yards and 503 touchdowns.

With the Jets, he suffered perhaps the most dramatic Achilles injury in NFL history just four snaps into his career with a team that had high hopes for a playoff run. He hasn’t looked great since the injury, and he’s now 41.

Rodgers has been the kind of in-your-face figure whose personality forces the public to take one side or the other—love or hate. His darkness retreats, ayahuasca trip, “immunized” comment when asked about his COVID-19 vaccination status, and general evasive or self-reflective responses to media questions can be confounding.

The Steelers have a big national following, and the fans aren’t always interested in a soul-searching reason for a loss. They want wins. Coach Mike Tomlin needs wins.

Rodgers said the choice to play for Pittsburgh this season was not made because of money, but in his words, “was a decision that was best for my soul,” he said on June 10 after his initial practice as a Steeler.

But Pittsburgh is a town that won’t be very interested in deep moments of thought. It wants to see deep passes for six.

Bringing in a personality like Rodgers figures to provide watch-worthy twists throughout the season for the entire NFL-loving community and beyond.

Because of him, Pittsburgh is now one of the top teams to watch, as it now has enough talent to compete in a highly competitive division.

The show is on in Pittsburgh.

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John E. Gibson
John E. Gibson
Author
John E. Gibson has covered pro baseball in Japan for about 20 years and brings great knowledge and insight across the sports spectrum. His experience includes stints at The Orange County Register, The Inland Valley Daily Bulletin, The Redlands Daily Facts and The Yomiuri Shimbun’s English newspaper in Tokyo.