NFL Playoff Football Is Getting More Expensive — And Art Rooney II’s Comments Have Sparked a League-Wide Reckoning
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania – January 10, 2026
For decades, playoff football in Pittsburgh was never a privilege reserved for a few. It was a shared habit, a communal ritual. Living rooms lit up before kickoff. Sports bars filled early. The entire city moved in rhythm with the Pittsburgh Steelers.
But as Wild Card Weekend 2026 arrives, that tradition is confronting a new reality — not because of opponents or weather, but because of rising costs and a fragmented broadcast landscape.
To watch every NFL playoff game this postseason, fans may need simultaneous subscriptions to ESPN, Amazon Prime Video, Peacock, Paramount+, and Fox’s streaming service. Combined, that price tag can exceed $85 per month, turning what was once a broadly accessible experience into something increasingly out of reach. In a blue-collar city built on generational fandom like Pittsburgh, the shift isn’t just inconvenient — it strikes at identity.

That frustration reached a boiling point when Art Rooney II, the Steelers’ owner, publicly voiced his concern about the NFL’s current media direction. His comments quickly spread across the league, resonating far beyond Steelers Nation — because they reflected a concern shared by many football communities.
“There was a time when playoff football meant an entire city slowing down — every home turning on the same game, generations sitting together, and no one worrying about which platform the broadcast belonged to,” Rooney said. “When that feeling starts to fade, we have to ask ourselves what we’re trading away. The NFL grew because of community, because of connection — not because of paywalls that keep fans on the outside.”
Rooney’s words carried weight well beyond Pittsburgh. While the NFL is enjoying record-setting media deals and unprecedented revenue, a growing number of voices believe accessibility is being sacrificed for profit. Casual fans are tuning out. Older viewers feel left behind. Families that once gathered every January are now forced to decide which games are “worth” the cost.
From the league’s perspective, the streaming strategy reflects modern viewing habits: younger audiences, mobile consumption, and global reach. But the unintended consequences are becoming impossible to ignore — especially in cities where football is more than entertainment, where it serves as social glue.
Reports indicate the NFL is quietly exploring the possibility of launching a league-operated streaming platform, one that could offer select games at reduced prices or even free access. The idea remains in its early stages, but the fact it’s being discussed at all suggests pressure from fans and owners alike has reached the highest levels.
As the Steelers prepare for another postseason run, the NFL’s biggest drama isn’t confined to the field. It’s a defining moment for the league itself — a test of whether it can balance profit with principle.
In Pittsburgh, playoff football has never been just about wins and losses.
It’s been tradition.
It’s been belonging.
And as Art Rooney II made clear, those are things the NFL cannot afford to price away.
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