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Steelers tab Pitt QB Kenny Pickett as Big Ben's successor

FILE - Pittsburgh quarterback Kenny Pickett throws during the NFL football scouting combine, Thursday, March 3, 2022, in Indianapolis. Franchises still searching for a prized quarterback won't find much star power in this year's crop of college QBs. Still, there's potential upgrades to be had in the likes of Temple's Malik Willis and Pitt's Kenny Pickett. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings, File)

Kenny Pickett is staying in Pittsburgh.

The Pittsburgh Steelers grabbed the former University of Pittsburgh star with the 20th overall pick in the NFL draft on Thursday night, making him the heir apparent to Ben Roethlisberger, who retired in January.

Pickett spent five seasons working on the other side of the building the Steelers share with the Panthers, coming into his own last fall when he threw for 42 touchdowns, was named ACC Player of the Year and finished third in the Heisman Trophy behind Alabama quarterback Bryce Young and Michigan defensive end Aidan Hutchinson.

The pick caps a meteoric rise for Pickett, who decided to come back for a fifth season rather than enter the draft last spring. Pickett's bet on himself paid off handsomely as he led the Panthers to an ACC title while he skyrocketed up draft boards.

Pickett was the first quarterback taken in what is considered a so-so class. The last time the first quarterback off the board was taken 20th or later was in 1997 when San Francisco selected Jim Druckenmiller with the 26th selection. Druckenmiller went 1-0 in two seasons with the 49ers before being traded to Miami and never playing in the NFL again.

Still, the Steelers have long rued passing on former Pitt star Dan Marino in the 1983 draft. Marino went on to a Hall of Fame career while the Steelers spent the next two decades searching for a franchise quarterback before taking Roethlisberger 11th overall in 2004.

General manager Kevin Colbert and his staff dove headfirst into the search, seeing some of the top quarterback prospects a half-dozen times in person and bringing in seven of them for pre-draft visits.

Colbert played coy during the run-up to his final draft with the team before retiring, saying he would be fine if Pittsburgh stood pat with Mitch Trubisky and Mason Rudolph even if in reality NFL teams need at least four quarterbacks to navigate training camp. Dwayne Haskins' tragic death on a Florida highway earlier this month only highlighted the need for help.

After the smoke cleared, Colbert settled on the prospect next door.

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