Steelers take Penn State quarterback Drew Allar in third round of 2026 NFL draft

(File Photo: Source for Photo: FILE – Penn State quarterback Drew Allar (15) throws during the school’s NFL football pro day, Wednesday, March 18, 2026, in State College, Pa. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Mike McCarthy built his reputation in the NFL on mentoring young quarterbacks. He won’t lack for opportunities in his first season coaching the Pittsburgh Steelers.

Pittsburgh — which is still waiting for Aaron Rodgers to decide if he wants to run it back in 2026 — drafted Penn State’s Drew Allar in the third round of the NFL draft on Friday, turning to another nearby prospect a year after taking Ohio State’s Will Howard and four years after selecting Pitt’s Kenny Pickett.

Pickett flamed out in two seasons. The jury remains very much out on Howard, who spent a sizable chunk of his rookie year on injured reserve.

Enter Allar, who endured injury trouble of own last fall for the Nittany Lions. Once projected as a potential first-round pick during the early stages of his four-year run in Happy Valley, the 6-foot-5, 228-pound Allar is very much like Howard: a tall, strong-armed presence in the pocket who is hardly considered a sure thing as a pro.

Still, the Steelers saw enough to use the 76th overall pick on Allar, whose arrival gives the team another young arm to join a room that also includes veteran backup Mason Rudolph and — if he decides he wants to return for a 22nd season — Aaron Rodgers.

Quarterbacks coach Tom Arth said he believes the decision to take Allar will not have “any impact” on the team’s willingness to bring back Rodgers, who guided the club to an AFC North title in his first year with Pittsburgh.

Steelers general manager Omar Khan said whoever ends up being the franchise quarterback the team has lacked since Ben Roethlisberger’s retirement in early 2022 needs to be built to play in the AFC North. In that sense, Arth thinks Allar checks some pretty significant boxes.

“He has big hands, He has a strong arm. He’s built to last,” Arth said. “I think that when you’re talking about playing in the elements and playing the physical brand of football that it is in the AFC North, you need a guy like that. And Drew certainly fits that mold.”

Even if Allar didn’t quite live all the way up to the massive expectations that were placed upon his shoulders when he became the starter at Penn State in 2023. Allar passed for 7,402 yards with 61 touchdowns and 13 interceptions in 45 games but struggled against high-caliber competition.

Allar, who helped Penn State to a College Football Playoff berth in 2024, went 0-6 against combined against Ohio State, Michigan, Oregon and Notre Dame in his career, completing just over 50% of his passes with seven touchdowns against four picks.

Arth pointed to Allar’s footwork and consistency as things he’ll need to clean up as he transitions to the NFL. Still, the Steelers were won over by what Arth described as Allar’s “high ceiling” and his humility after his college career ended with an injury in a 22-21 home loss to Northwestern, a setback that came just before head coach James Franklin was fired.

“To see and to really learn and hear about the type of teammate that he was, the way that he helped his backup quarterback prepare, week in and week out in the meetings that the two of them had privately, it was really impressive to me,” Arth said. “And I think it just tells you the type of person that he is and the type a teammate that is.”

Allar grew up in Medina, Ohio — about 45 minutes south of downtown Cleveland — and his family holds season tickets to the rival Browns.

“I guess that’s out the window now!” Allar said with a laugh.

While Arth would like to see Howard and Allar compete to bring the best out of each other as they develop, Allar has more modest goals.

“My focus is just going to be on how I can make myself better 1 percent each day,” he said. “That’s gonna be my main goal, putting my head down and going to work.”

Allar was one of four selections by Pittsburgh on Friday. The Steelers selected Alabama wide receiver Germie Bernard in the second round, with Georgia cornerback Daylen Everette and guard Gennings Dunker from Iowa joining Allar as third-round picks.

Skenes perfect into 7th, Griffin hits first 1st career homer on his 20th birthday in Pirates’ 6-0 win over Brewers

(File Photo: Source for Photo: Pittsburgh Pirates’ Konnor Griffin reacts after hitting his first major league home run during the third inning of a baseball game against the Milwaukee Brewers, Friday, April 24, 2026, in Milwaukee. (AP Photo/Kayla Wolf)

MILWAUKEE (AP) — Paul Skenes had a perfect game into the seventh inning, Konnor Griffin hit his first career home run on his 20th birthday and drove in three runs to help the Pittsburgh Pirates beat the Milwaukee Brewers 6-0 on Friday night.

Skenes (4-1), the NL Cy Young winner, didn’t allow a base runner until Jake Bauers’ sharp single to right with two outs in the seventh. He was vying to become the first pitcher to throw a perfect game in American Family Field, previously known as Miller Park, which opened in 2001. There have been two no-hitters.

Skenes gave up one hit over seven shutout innings. He struck out seven and didn’t walk a batter. He threw 93 pitches — 62 for strikes.

Mason Montgomery and Isaac Mattson completed the one-hitter.

Skenes had another no-hitter close call in Milwaukee on July 11, 2024, when he allowed no hits over seven innings in a 1-0 win. The Brewers’ only hit in that game was Bauers’ single off Colin Holderman in the eighth.

Griffin hit a solo shot off Brewers starter Brandon Woodruff (2-1) in the third.

Nick Gonzales’ run-scoring single in the fourth extended the Pittsburgh lead to 2-0. The Pirates added another run in the fifth on Oneil Cruz’s RBI force-out. Ryan O’Hearn doubled and scored on Spencer Horwitz’s single as the Pirates lead grew to 4-0 in the sixth.

Griffin’s two-run single in the eighth put the Pirates up 6-0.

The Brewers made a series of moves prior to the game, recalling first baseman/outfielder Tyler Black and left-hander Shane Drohan from Triple-A Nashville. They also optioned right-hander Carlos Rodriguez to Nashville and designated outfielder Luis Matos for assignment.

Up next

RHP Mitch Keller (2-1, 2.79 ERA) was set to start for Pittsburgh on Saturday against Jacob Misiorowski (1-2, 3.04).

Donna Groom and the Skyliners will perform in Beaver Falls

(Credit for Photo: Photo Courtesy of the Beaver Valley Community Concert Association)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Beaver Falls, PA) The Pittsburgh doo-wop group Donna Groom and the Skyliners will perform at a show presented by the Beaver Valley Community Concert Association at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 5th at the Beaver Falls Middle School auditorium. The group is known for their harmonies and their classic hits which include “Since I Don’t Have You,” “This I Swear,” and “Pennies from Heaven.” Groom has been an essential part of The Skyliners since 1982. You can purchase tickets at the door. They are worth $25 for adults and $5 for students. The doors open at 6:45 p.m. Cash or check are the only forms of payment that are accepted and there is no reserve seating.

“Hall of Fame High” documentary highlights history of Aliquippa High School Football

(File Photo of Aliquippa Quips Flag)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) Several Pro Football Hall of Famers and a community came together on Wednesday at the Heinz History Center in Pittsburgh for the premiere screening of “Hall of Fame High,” which is a documentary on the history of Aliquippa High School Football. This happened a day before the 2026 NFL Draft began in the Steel City. Former Aliquippa standouts and football greats Darrelle Revis and Ty Law as well as Hopewell standout and fellow football great Tony Dorsett were present at the event. The film was directed and produced by Jesse Washington, a longtime journalist and filmmaker who is now with ESPN’s Andscape. Washington took his vision into telling a story on how the small town of Aliquippa perseveres no matter what has been thrown at them. A Q&A Panel for the audience was also hosted by NFL Network host Rich Eisen. From the beginnings of Aliquippa as a steel town with a built-in toughness, to the closing of the mills and having to deal with the crack cocaine issues that swept the city, the documentary showcased what it truly meant to come from that town. According to Washington: “I couldn’t think of a more deserving city to tell a story about than Aliquippa, not just with their sports, but about the great things this town has done. Aliquippa has been through so much and has made great progress. Throughout this whole project, it has been a privilege to tell their story, and I am happy that they trusted me to do it.” In addition to Aliquippa’s story outside of the sports, the documentary tied into the story of the upbringings in Aliquippa of Dorsett, Law Revis and fellow Pro Football Hall of Famer Mike Ditka. It showcased the athletic prowess of the past players to wear the Quips uniform like Charles Fisher, Ditka, Law, Revis, and recent graduates like Tikey Hayes and Cam Lindsey and told much more.

Teenage girl stabbed in Downtown Pittsburgh; another teenager taken into custody

(File Photo of Handcuffs)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) Pittsburgh Police are investigating after a teenage girl was stabbed yesterday in Downtown Pittsburgh. The incident happened shortly before midnight in the 400 block of Wood Street. According to Pittsburgh Public Safety officials, a teenage girl who had a knife approached another teenage girl before stabbing her. Officials confirm that the victim suffered a slash across her wrist and was taken to a hospital. The juvenile female suspect was taken into custody by officers. Charges against her are pending but she is expected to face charges. Pittsburgh EMS transported the victim to the hospital in stable condition. Officers at the Downtown Public Safety Center responded within moments and apprehended the female actor.

Parking garage partially collapses at North Shore apartment complex; structure condemned

(Credit for Photo: Photo Courtesy of Giuseppe LoPiccolo/Pittsburgh Post-Gazette) Caption for Photo: Cars hang after an I-beam collapsed in the garage of Bracken House Apartments on Friday, April 24, 2026. The collapse the day before pinned multiple vehicles and left others suspended from the floor above.)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) A parking garage at an apartment complex on Pittsburgh’s North Shore partially collapsed yesterday. According to Pittsburgh Public Safety officials, the incident occurred at about 8:45 p.m. at the Bracken House garage in the 100 block of Anderson Street. The city Department of Permits, Licenses and Inspections is investigating this incident. Officials confirm that even though several vehicles were damaged in the collapse, no one was injured. A resident of the building sent WPXI a photo of a letter posted on the structure, saying it has been condemned. 

Norfolk Southern’s profit fell 27% as it didn’t collect big insurance payments for 2023 East Palestine, Ohio derailment

(File Photo: Source for Photo: FILE – A Norfolk Southern freight train rolls past the U.S. Steel’s Clairton Coke Works, in Clairton, Pa., Tuesday, Aug. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)

(Atlanta, GA-AP) Norfolk Southern railroad’s first-quarter profit fell 27% because it didn’t collect big insurance payments related to the East Palestine, Ohio, derailment and its planned merger with Union Pacific added to its costs.

The Atlanta-based railroad said Friday that it earned $547 million, or $2.43 per share. That’s down from $750 million, or $3.31 per share, a year ago. The disastrous derailment in the small town on the Ohio-Pennsylvania border has generally boosted earnings in recent quarters as the railroad collected insurance payments, but that wasn’t the case this time, so it combined with planning costs related to the merger, earnings per share were reduced by 22 cents. Last year’s results were also helped by some land sales.

Without those unusual costs, the railroad’s profit would have beat Wall Street estimates. The analysts surveyed by FactSet Research predicted the railroad would earn $2.51 per share.

CEO Mark George said the railroad also dealt with the uncertain economy that reduced the shipments it delivered by 1%, along with severe weather and rapidly rising fuel costs.

“Despite these challenges, our employees safely delivered a solid service product, managed costs effectively, and earned the continued trust of our customers. As conditions improved, we captured momentum exiting the quarter, reinforcing the strength of our operating foundation and the dedication of the entire Norfolk Southern team,” George said.

The railroad’s revenue was relatively flat at just under $3 billion. But its expenses jumped 15% compared to last year when insurance payments from the derailment added $185 million to Norfolk Southern’s bottom line.

Norfolk Southern is working with Union Pacific to update its application to merge that the railroads plan to submit next Thursday. The U.S. Surface Transportation Board rejected the railroad’s first request to approve the $85 billion merger because the regulators wanted more information. The STB hasn’t yet decided whether the deal that would cut the number of major freight railroads down to five will enhance competition.

Norfolk Southern operates trains all over the eastern United States. Combining with Union Pacific’s network west of the Mississippi River would create the nation’s first transcontinental railroad.

Former Primary Health Network CEOs Sentenced to Prison for Defrauding Non-Profit Medical Organization of Millions of Dollars

(File Photo of a Gavel)

Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News

(Pittsburgh, PA) United States Attorney Troy Rivetti announced today that two former CEOs of Primary Health Network (PHN), a non-profit medical organization headquartered in Sharon, Pennsylvania, have been sentenced in federal court to terms of imprisonment on their convictions for conspiracy to commit wire fraud and money laundering. The sentences were imposed on fifty-eight-year-old Drew Pierce of West Middlesex, Pennsylvania, and seventy-two-year-old Jack Laeng of Lake Milton, Ohio. Pierce was sentenced yesterday to 40 months of imprisonment and Laeng was sentenced on April 16th, 2026, to 24 months of imprisonment. According to information presented to the Court, Pierce engaged in multiple schemes to defraud PHN over the course of almost a decade, with Laeng joining him in two of those schemes. Pierce, Laeng, and others first agreed to enter into contracts with a developer on behalf of PHN in return for kickback payments of 50% of the funds the developer received from PHN. PHN’s board of directors was not aware of the kickback payments, which ultimately caused a loss to the company of more than $1.5 million. Laeng was the CEO of PHN for the beginning of the scheme, from 2011 to about 2014, at which time Pierce took over as CEO. Pierce, Laeng, and others also engaged in a scheme in which they inserted a company called TopCoat between PHN and the company’s legitimate vendors. PHN paid TopCoat through the scheme, which provided no services other to then pay the true vendors a lesser price. PHN’s board of directors was unaware that TopCoat performed no actual work and was made up entirely of PHN insiders. The TopCoat scheme caused a loss to PHN of more than $400,000. In addition to these schemes, Pierce separately engaged in another kickback scheme, as well as in a scheme to pay his own personal expenses out of PHN accounts and conceal those payments as business expenses. Another co-defendant in some of the schemes, Mark Marriott, is scheduled to be sentenced on May 8th, 2026.

Report: Pennsylvania still has time to capture billions in federal solar tax credits

(File Photo: Source for Photo: FILE – Employees of NY State Solar, a residential and commercial photovoltaic systems company, install an array of solar panels on a roof, Aug. 11, 2022, in the Long Island hamlet of Massapequa, N.Y. The Biden administration is announcing Thursday, April 20, 2023, more than $80 million in funding as part of a push to make more solar panels in the U.S. and make solar energy available in more communities. (AP Photo/John Minchillo, File)

(Reported by Danielle Smith, Keystone News Service)

(Harrisburg, PA) Researchers say Pennsylvania still has time to capture billions in federal solar incentives, but they’re close to slipping away. Solar capacity has grown sixfold since 2019, but expansion is still needed to maximize Inflation Reduction Act tax credits, according to the Keystone Research Center’s “Use It or Lose It” report. Economist Stephen Herzenberg with Keystone Research Center says most projects awaiting grid connection are solar, and maintaining momentum is key to avoiding electricity shortages and price spikes. He says Pennsylvania needs commercial and grid-scale projects to capitalize on federal tax credits established in 2022 before they expire.

DeGrom has 62nd 10-K game and Carter hits inside-the-park HR as Rangers beat Pirates 6-1

(File Photo: Source for Photo: Texas Rangers pitcher Jacob Degrom throws to the Pittsburgh Pirates in the first inning of a baseball game Thursday, April 23, 2026, in Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)

ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Jacob deGrom struck out 10 over 5 2/3 innings, Evan Carter hit an inside-the-park home run while Corey Seager went deep and the Texas Rangers beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 6-1 on Thursday night in the rubber match of their three-game series.

It was the 62nd career 10-strikeout game for deGrom (2-0), who has a 2.13 ERA in his six starts. The 37-year-old, two-time Cy Young Award winner threw 63 of 89 pitches for strikes, allowed five hits and exited after issuing his only walk.

Carter’s two-run homer for the game’s first runs came when he lined a 97.5 mph full-count fastball beyond the reach of right fielder Ryan O’Hearn in the third inning. The ball ricocheted hard off the bottom of the wall and Carter rounded the bases for his first career inside-the-parker, and third homer this season.

That came two pitches after home plate umpire Dan Merzel signaled ball four, but that was overturned on a ABS challenge by the catcher Joey Bart and kept Carter at the plate instead of a walk.

Seager made it 6-0 in the fourth with his three-run homer, his sixth of the year being a 382-drive pulled into the right-field stands off Pirates rookie Bubba Chandler (1-2).

Chandler allowed six runs and seven hits while striking out four and walking three.

Oneil Cruz hit his eighth homer for Pittsburgh, a two-out solo shot in the fifth.

Pirates shortstop Konnor Griffin played his last game as a teenager, going 0 for 4 the night before his 20th birthday. He was the last batter of the game, striking out against Peyton Gray, a 30-year-old right-hander making his big-league debut with a 1-2-3 inning.

Gray was called up earlier Thursday after eight years going through the minor leagues, independent ball and four winters outside the United States.

Up next

Pittsburgh goes to Milwaukee on Friday night for the first of 10 consecutive games against NL Central foes. The Rangers stay home to open a three-game series against the Athletics.