The Pittsburgh Steelers have announced that head coach Mike Tomlin’s contract has been extended for three years through the 2016 season. Financial terms of the new five-year contract (two years remaining on his previous contract) were not disclosed by the team. Tomlin is scheduled to make $5.75 million in 2012 under his current deal.
“We are pleased to announce that Mike Tomlin will remain with the Steelers for at least five more years,” said Steelers’ President Art Rooney II said in a released statement. “Mike is one of the top head coaches in the National Football League and we are thrilled he will continue to lead our team as we pursue another Super Bowl title.”
Tomlin, 40, will enter his sixth season as Steelers head coach in 2012. He became the youngest head coach in NFL history to both coach in and win a Super Bowl when he led the Steelers to a 27-23 victory over the Arizona Cardinals in Super Bowl XLIII. By winning the Super Bowl in only his second season as a head coach, he also became the fastest to win a Super Bowl title in Steelers’ history.
The Steelers have made the playoffs in four of five seasons under Tomlin, including two trips to the Super Bowl.
“I am excited that I will continue to be the head coach of the Pittsburgh Steelers for years to come, ” Tomlin said in a released statement . “I am grateful to the Steelers organization for the opportunity I have been given over the past five years to work and live in this great city, and I am excited to continue to work to bring another championship to the Steelers and the city of Pittsburgh.”