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Running back by committee with injury to Conner

By Jim Wexell for The 6 min read
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PITTSBURGH — The Steelers entered the season thinking they were deep at running back, but they’ll head to Oakland for one of the most important games of the season with a three-headed committee thatĢƵ carried the ball a grand total of 30 times this season.

ThatĢƵ one fewer than James Conner carried in the opener.

Conner, who replaced holdout Le’Veon Bell, is out with a sprained ankle. In his place steps a reclamation project who hasn’t had more than one full workday since blowing out his knee in October of 2014; a rookie fifth-rounder who has a high of five carries this season; and a converted fullback who was just called off the practice squad but is more of a special-teamer than runner.

Are the Steelers concerned?

“No,” said Ben Roethlisberger. “We’ve got our linemen and some guys who are willing to step up and fill the void.”

Those void-fillers are:

n Stevan Ridley, 29, is a sixth-year vet from Natchez, Mississippi, the hometown of Pitt legend Hugh Green. He had his promising career waylaid by a wicked knee injury in 2014.

Ridley had come out of LSU as an 1,100-yard rusher who was drafted by the New England Patriots in the third round in 2011. He rushed for 1,263 yards in 2012, and 773 yards in 2013, before the injury cost him a spot in the Super Bowl and then soon thereafter a spot with the team.

Ridley bounced to six other teams before landing in Pittsburgh on Dec. 19 of last season to replace an injured Conner, and he started the season finale against Cleveland. Ridley gained 80 yards on 17 carries, his biggest workload since the injury.

“ItĢƵ been awhile, man, but I’ve worked, I’m prepared, and I don’t doubt my talents at all,” said Ridley. “The LordĢƵ got a plan. It hadn’t been the plan that I wanted. ItĢƵ taken a little bit longer to get back out, get back in the locker room, back on the field, get some touches. ItĢƵ taken longer than I like, but I believe in the man upstairs. Right now I’m just excited about the opportunity, however it presents itself, whether it be two carries, 20 carries, whatever. I’m just going out there to get this W. I’m ready to contribute.”

Ridley has 18 carries for 56 yards this season, but hasn’t played in the last three games. The backup to Conner in those games has been …

n Jaylen Samuels, 22, the rookie from Charlotte, N.C., who scored 47 career touchdowns at North Carolina State as a running back, fullback, wildcat quarterback, H-back and tight end. With the Steelers, heĢƵ been a pass-catching running back with 31 yards on 12 carries and 54 receiving yards on seven catches. HeĢƵ caught two touchdown passes, including the game-tying 10-yard touchdown catch in the fourth quarter against the Chargers.

“I got through the hole, ran a checkdown route, Ben found me, I saw the pylon and just outran everybody,” was how Samuels explained the touchdown.

At a listed 225 pounds, Samuels doesn’t look fast but his 4.54 40 at the NFL Combine matched the catch-and-run Sunday night in which, as he said, he “just outran everybody.”

Has he ever been told heĢƵ faster than he looks?

“Yeah definitely,” Samuels said. “A lot of people think I’m just smooth, a smooth runner, but thatĢƵ just how I am. I kind of have that breakaway speed that can change on the field.”

“Me and Shay (Ryan Shazier) were talking about that during the last game,” said linebacker Jon Bostic. “He said itĢƵ crazy and I said he looks so slow, but then heĢƵ moving away from people. They always say your fastest guys are the guys that are most relaxed when they’re running. HeĢƵ relaxed. Look at track runners. Every track guy that you see pulling away from people, they look like they’re not even trying. ThatĢƵ what he looked like on the touchdown when he was running away from DBs.”

n Trey Edmunds, 23, from Danville, Va., the older brother of teammate Terrell Edmunds, was moved to fullback when he made the New Orleans Saints as an undrafted rookie last year. He carried the ball only nine times for 48 yards (including a 41-yard touchdown), and was released soon after making the roster again this season. The Steelers picked him up and put him on the practice squad until he was promoted earlier this week.

Trey is an eighth of an inch taller than Terrell (6-½) and ran a 4.48 40 at his pro day weighing 223 pounds. Terrell weighed 217 and ran a 4.47 40 and was a first-round draft pick.

“Playing fullback taught me to learn the game from a different aspect,” Trey said. “It gave me the appreciation I have now for fullbacks. Man, I’m telling you, look at Rosie (Nix). In New Orleans we looked at Zach Line. Man, those guys really, really bang, so it gave me a different appreciation from a different aspect.”

Trey still considers himself a tailback at heart. ThatĢƵ what he played at Dan River High under his father, former pro Ferrell Edmunds. Terrell was the quarterback.

“So heĢƵ familiar with the ball in his hands and heĢƵ fast and can run,” Trey said of his brother. “I was the tailback in the I-formation — power, downhill. We had a lot of quarterback sneaks and bootlegs and stuff like that.”

n Ralph Webb, 24, from Gainesville, Fla., was just signed to the practice squad. The 5-9, 200-pounder is the all-time leading rusher at Vanderbilt and sixth all-time rusher in SEC history. He ran a 4.48 40 at his pro day but wasn’t drafted.

The New England Patriots signed him after the draft and he rushed for 102 yards in the preseason, and appeared to catch the eye of Bill Belichick with his two-touchdown, two-conversion showing in the preseason opener. But, Webb was cut, signed to the practice squad, and then signed to the Tampa Bay practice squad before landing in Pittsburgh this week.

“Maybe itĢƵ my size,” the enthusiastic Webb said of his inability to stick in spite of his production. “Could be a number of things: numbers game, whatever teams are looking for at the moment. I’m just waiting for the opportunity to come my way. PittsburghĢƵ giving me the opportunity right now and I’m going to make the most of it.”

Linebacker L.J. Fort has worked against all of them in practice and offered this scouting report:

“Ridley, power back obviously. HeĢƵ got some sweet feet, too, to go along with it. Samuels has the receiving skills on screens and stuff. And I’m excited to see Trey, because heĢƵ been working his tail off in practice and he definitely has some juice to him. The new guy (Webb), heĢƵ bursty for sure. He has some wheels.”

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