Steelers No. 24 Player: Dylan Cook Has Huge Opportunity
Steelers No. 24 Player: Dylan Cook Has Huge Opportunity
Dylan Cook is an important piece of the puzzle for the Pittsburgh Steelers in 2026 following an impressive finish to last season.Jack Markowski|
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Pittsburgh SteelersThe Pittsburgh Steelers' offensive line may soon establish itself as one of the top units across the NFL.
From Troy Fautanu to Mason McCormick, Zach Frazier, Max Iheanachor, Gennings Dunker and even Spencer Anderson, the group has a ton of young talent across the board.
Dylan Cook's name can't be overlooked in that conversation after a strong showing last season, however, and he is of major importance to Pittsburgh's success in 2026, which is why he comes in as Steelers On SI's No. 24 player on the roster.

Cook's Background
Cook began his collegiate career as a quarterback at Montana State Northern before transferring to Montana in 2018 and moving to the offensive line.
He made 23 starts for Montana through the 2021 campaign before entering the 2022 NFL Draft. After going unselected, Cook signed with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and spent a majority of his rookie season on the team's practice squad.
Cook re-signed with Tampa Bay on a reserve/futures contract in January 2023. He was waived that May, though, and was subsequently signed by the Steelers.
Though he remained on the 53-man roster for the entire year, Cook did not appear in any games in 2023. A foot injury landed him on the reserve/injured list to open the 2024 campaign, and he was waived upon returning in late October before re-signing to Pittsburgh's practice squad.
Cook did not make the initial 53-man roster in 2025 and signed to the practice squad once again. After Broderick Jones and Calvin Anderson were placed on IR with neck and knee injuries, respectively, in late November, Cook was elevated for the Steelers' Week 14 matchup against the Baltimore Ravens.
He stepped in at left tackle once Andrus Peat suffered a concussion in the second half of that contest and never looked back. Cook remained at the position for the rest of the season and was a surprise standout, allowing just a single sack and six pressures over 291 total offensive snaps in the regular season, per Pro Football Focus.
The 28-year-old scuffled in Pittsburgh's Wild Card round loss to the Houston Texans, giving up three pressures and a sack, but his 2025 campaign was still a resounding success.

Why Cook is So Important to 2026 Steelers
On an offensive line that's brimming with young talent, particularly on the left side with the likes of Fautanu, McCormick and Frazier, Cook is arguably the biggest question mark on the unit next to Anderson, the presumptive favorite to win the right guard job.
Jones would have been in line to start at right tackle if he were deemed healthy, though he's likely to open the year on the PUP list as he continues to recover from his neck injury.
Pittsburgh selected Iheanachor in the first round of the 2026 NFL Draft with the hope that he'll eventually develop into a franchise right tackle. The fact of the matter is that while he has everything you look for athletically, his technique still has a long way to go before he can comfortably slot in as a starter.
For that reason, Cook will be tasked with holding down the fort for as long as needed this upcoming season. Bad offensive tackle play can make or break a team, meaning he's under some serious pressure to keep building on what he showcased in 2025.
Given how well he performed over a relatively small sample size, there has to be a fair amount of optimism regarding Cook's ability to stand strong and steady as somewhat of a stop-gap. It's not out of the question that he could stave off Iheanachor or Jones, either, if he plays well and makes it tough for the Steelers to make the decision to remove him from the starting lineup.
Cook has a huge opportunity in front of him, and if he thrives, that could do wonders for Pittsburgh's offense.
Published 6 minutes ago
JACK MARKOWSKIJack is a New Jersey native who graduated from the University of Pittsburgh as a Media & Professional Communications major in 2024 who is now covering the Pittsburgh Steelers and New York Yankees for On SI.
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Trading Giant Susquehanna Lost Over $70 Million To Mystery Insider Traders
Trading giant Susquehanna Investment Group said it was attempting to unmask the identities of individuals it claims made at least $100 million trading on inside information about a Chinese government crackdown on cross-border brokerages last month.
The Pennsylvania-based market-maker, which says it was the counterparty on most of the alleged insider trades, sued 100 John Doe defendants in Manhattan federal court on Monday. Susquehanna is seeking to recover more than $70 million it says it lost to what it believes is one of the largest insider-trading schemes in recent memory, Bloomberg reported.
While it’s unusual for a major Wall Street firm to sue as a victim of insider trading - which is normally policed by the Securities and Exchange Commission and federal prosecutors - in suing the dozens of unknown traders, aka "John Does", Susquehanna is using a tactic sometimes employed by the SEC to seek information it hopes will identify the alleged insider traders.
According to Susquehanna, many of the trades were made from accounts at Interactive Brokers Group Inc., as well as the platforms of two firms targeted in the Chinese crackdown, Futu Holdings and Up Fintech’s Tiger Brokers (we discussed this in May in "China Launches Crackdown On Cross-Border Stock Selling To Block Capital Outflows").
Susquehanna is seeking an order freezing certain accounts at those brokerages and authorizing subpoenas of them.
Susquehanna, which is one of the largest US market-makers and is active in options, stocks, energy, bonds and foreign exchange markets, said in an SEC filing that its equity positions in the first quarter totaled more than $893 billion. The closely held company based in the Philadelphia suburbs has made its co-founder Jeff Yass one of the richest people in the world with a fortune estimated at $92 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
Susquehanna’s allegations focus on 200,000 short-dated put option bets placed in the two weeks before the Chinese government’s May 22 announcement that it would punish firms helping mainland Chinese clients illegally invest overseas. The statement was released by eight regulators, including the China Securities Regulatory Commission, the central bank and the public security ministry.
Almost simultaneously, regulators released a statement singling out Futu, Tiger and the unlisted Long Bridge Securities for operating in China without onshore licenses. Futu and Up Fintech’s shares plummeted in response.
In its suit, Susquehanna alleges several accounts engaged in a pattern of “high risk, high reward trading” designed to take advantage of the projected drops. In one example, a trader purchased the option to sell Futu shares at $102.45 — down from $124.58 — up to a week after the Chinese government’s announcement.
There was “powerful evidence” the traders were using material non-public information to inform their well-timed bets, Susquehanna alleges. It said the tips could have come from Chinese securities regulators or personnel at Futu or Up Fintech.
The traders collectively purchased $12 million in options, yielding a profit of more than $100 million and a return of more than 900%.
“By way of comparison, Raj Rajaratnam’s infamous insider trading scheme at Galleon Management yielded only approximately $53 million in profits,” Susquehanna said in its complaint, referring to the hedge fund manager convicted in 2011.
According to Bloomberg, the alleged insider traders’ use of Interactive Brokers could prove awkward for that firm. The suit doesn’t accuse Interactive Brokers of wrongdoing, but founder Thomas Peterffy, also one of the world’s richest men with an estimated $104 billion fortune, is an outspoken supporter of legalizing insider trading.
“I’m in favor of not having any rules against insider trading. I would like all the information out there as soon as it’s available,” he said in an recent interview on Bloomberg. “Because look, as a society, we are better off knowing as soon as possible anything that is knowable.”
‘Avatar: The Last Airbender’ Season 2 Debuts With 8.7 Million Views in Four Days, Down 59% From Season 1
Season 2 of Netflix‘s live-action adaptation of “Avatar: The Last Airbender” debuted with 8.7 million views in four days. That total took it to the No. 2 position on the streamer’s weekly English-language TV rankings, but represented a large drop from Season 1: In 2024, the series debuted with 21.2 million views, meaning the new installation fell by 59%.
Still, the release of the new season brought about renewed interest in Season 1, which returned to the chart in third place with 3 million views.
Both “Avatar” seasons came behind “I Will Find You,” which had its second week as the most-watched title on Netflix. After debuting with 24 million views in four days last week, the Harlan Coben series leapt to 34.1 million views in its first full week of availability.
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