Why Pittsburgh is winning in December and why the “washed” talk never fit
The talk came fast and loud. Aaron Rodgers was done. The game had passed him by. The injuries had finally won. He was “washed,” the media said, ready for a farewell tour instead of a playoff push.
Someone forgot to tell Aaron Rodgers.
Now deep into December, Aaron Rodgers is doing what he has always done when doubts stack up. He is controlling games, dictating tempo and dragging expectations along with him. The results show up every Sunday. So does the confidence. So does the winning.
The Pittsburgh Steelers are playing their best football when it matters most, climbing to the top of the AFC North and looking like a team nobody wants to face. Rodgers sits at the center of it. Not as a caretaker. Not as a game manager. As the engine.
Start with the arm. The fastball is still there. Rodgers is driving throws outside the numbers, ripping seam routes and flicking passes with that familiar snap that used to torment defenses for more than a decade. Velocity has not faded. Placement has not slipped. His release still erases windows before defenders can react. When the Steelers need a third-and-long conversion, Rodgers does not hesitate. He hunts it.
What separates him now, just as it always has, is the command. Rodgers sees the field two steps ahead. He changes protections. He adjusts routes. He slows the game down for everyone else. Pittsburgh’s offense operates with purpose because its quarterback knows exactly what he wants and how to get it. There is no panic, even when drives stall or games tighten.
Watch how the Steelers move the ball late in halves. Watch the calm at the line of scrimmage. Rodgers scans, points, resets, then delivers. It looks simple because he makes it that way. Defenses show pressure and he welcomes it. He knows where the answer is before the snap.
Leadership matters even more in December. Cold weather football tests patience and belief. Rodgers brings both. Teammates respond to him because he has lived every moment before. He knows when to push and when to steady the room. That presence shows up in the huddle and on the sideline. It shows up in how the Steelers finish games.
Pittsburgh is not winning by accident. This team executes late. It protects leads. It closes. Rodgers’ fingerprints are all over that identity. He values the ball. He understands situations. He makes the defense defend every blade of grass without forcing hero throws.
The “washed” label never fit. It was lazy. Rodgers did not forget how to play quarterback. He did not lose his feel for timing or his appetite for competition. He simply waited for the right moment to remind everyone.
Now the Steelers are hot, confident and dangerous. December football belongs to teams that trust their quarterback. Pittsburgh trusts Rodgers, and he rewards that trust with precision and poise.
Aaron Rodgers is still that guy. The arm is live. The mind is sharp. The results are real. The rest of the league is finding out the hard way.








