The Pittsburgh Steelers ’ offseason plan at quarterback has been easy to doubt from the outside.

Mike Tomlin gave unreliable veteran Aaron Rodgers months to decide whether he definitely wanted to play in the Steel City with no good backup plan on the depth chart if the mercurial Rodgers decided to retire.

Pittsburgh failed to re-sign Justin Fields (Jets), let Russell Wilson (Giants) walk out the door, replaced them with free agent signing Mason Rudolph and rookie sixth-round pick Will Howard — and then they waited.

And waited. Until Rodgers finally agreed to terms on a one-year contract on Thursday.

While Pittsburgh’s slow-played signing of Rodgers was unorthodox, former Steelers Super Bowl champion Willie Colon said Thursday on the “Talkin’ Ball with Pat Leonard” podcast that th

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