Pittsburgh Steelers' Mike Tomlin sets NFL record by avoiding losing season for 15th straight year to start career - ESPN
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Pittsburgh Steelers' Mike Tomlin sets NFL record by avoiding losing season for 15th straight year to start career

PITTSBURGH -- On a momentous night for Ben Roethlisberger, Pittsburgh Steelers coach Mike Tomlin captured his own significant milestone.

With Monday night's 26-14 win against the Cleveland Browns in the quarterback's apparent home finale, the Steelers moved to 8-7-1 with one game left, ensuring that Tomlin will avoid a losing season for the 15th consecutive season as head coach. That mark to begin an NFL career sets a league record, breaking Marty Schottenheimer's streak from 1984 to 1997 during tenures with the Browns and Kansas City Chiefs.

But Tomlin, notoriously understated when talking about personal accomplishments, downplayed the benchmark Tuesday.

"Not as I sit here today, and I say that humbly," Tomlin responded when asked if setting the mark was meaningful. "Our agenda, this year, is to get into [the] single-elimination tournament and then pit our skills against others in that single-elimination tournament in an effort to win the world championship. That's our mentality every year.

"And so with that mentality, it's just certain hardware that you expect to pick up along the way. And if you don't, you'd be seriously disappointed. That's just an expectation that we have here in Pittsburgh."

Now 49 years old, Tomlin set a record more than a decade ago as the youngest head coach to win a Super Bowl when he was 36 and coached the Steelers to a win against the Arizona Cardinals in Super Bowl XLIII. He has endeared himself to his team and established himself as one of the league's best coaches for his messaging and relationship with his players.

"He challenges his players," longtime defensive lineman Cameron Heyward said earlier this season. "He expects the best. When he challenges us, it's individually, but it's for the collective group. He does it from a place where you know he wants the best for you, and to have a coach do that at such a one-on-one level even when he's the head coach is pretty special."

In his 15 seasons, Tomlin has compiled a 161-93-2 record, though he's just 8-8 in the postseason.

"This team is full of tradition and history," Roethlisberger said after Tomlin captured his 150th regular-season win earlier this season against the Chicago Bears. "And so, I'm sure that he's proud of it, and he should be. There's a lot of -- I guess there's not a lot of great coaches, but the coaches that have been here have been pretty historic."

This season, Tomlin helped right the ship after the Steelers started out 1-3 and went on a three-game winless streak in the middle of the season. Now, with just a Week 18 game in Baltimore left, the worst the Steelers can finish is 8-8-1.