Pittsburgh Steelers Expected To Get Multiple Key Defenders Back Ahead Of Week 12 Clash
If you follow the Pittsburgh Steelers, you know the specific kind of dread that ruins a Friday afternoon. That was the vibe in Pittsburgh on Friday when reports surfaced that Defensive Tackle Cam Heyward had sustained an ankle injury during the final session of the week. For a fanbase that treats defensive line play like a religion, seeing the 35-year-old veteran in a boot was enough to ruin the entire weekend before it even started.
But you can go ahead and exhale now. In a twist that feels like a minor miracle given the initial optics, the Steelers received a massive boost on Saturday. The team officially removed Heyward’s injury designation entirely. That’s right—he didn’t just get upgraded to questionable; he’s cleared for takeoff.
Steelers Defense Avoids Disaster Against Chicago
The timing couldn’t be better. While the walking boot optic was terrifying, it turns out Heyward is made of tougher stuff than the rest of us. The initial report had fans spiraling. Heyward had been resting on Wednesday and Thursday, standard operating procedure for a veteran of his tenure, only to get dinged up on Friday. Usually, a Friday injury is the kiss of death for Sunday availability. It implies a setback or a freak accident right before travel day.
However, the Steelers’ medical staff and Heyward clearly feel good about his ability to anchor the line this Sunday. He isn’t the only reinforcement arriving just in time. Veteran Cornerback Darius Slay, who has been navigating the league’s concussion protocol, also saw his injury designation removed. Getting two veteran defenders back in the lineup changes the entire complexion of this Week 12 matchup.
Why This Matchup Matters
If the Steelers were playing a pass-happy, finesse team, maybe you could survive a week without Heyward stuffing the middle. But they aren’t. They are visiting the Chicago Bears and Quarterback Caleb Williams.
Here is the problem with Chicago: they love to run the football. The Bears currently boast the No. 2 rushing offense in the entire NFL. Trying to stop a top-tier ground game without your best run-stuffer is like trying to stop a flood with a screen door. With Heyward active, the Steelers can stick to their game plan: force the young quarterback to beat them through the air, rather than letting Chicago dictate the tempo on the ground.
A Pivotal Moment In the Season
This isn’t just another game on the schedule. Both the Steelers and the Bears are atop their respective divisions. These are the grinder games that define playoff seeding down the stretch. Pittsburgh (6-4) needs every win to keep pace in the AFC North.
