Bell’s tweet hints he’s ready to join Steelers
PITTSBURGH — Le’Veon Bell has decided itĢƵ time to get off his butt in Miami, and most likely head to Pittsburgh this week to sign his tender.
Bell tweeted half of that equation at 3 p.m. Monday when he typed “fairwell (sic) Miami.” It only makes sense that heĢƵ heading to Pittsburgh since Bell must sign his tender by Tuesday, Nov. 13 at 2 p.m. in order to receive credit for a season of service by getting paid for six weeks of work.
However, itĢƵ unlikely Bell would receive much time at running back, if we are to believe Mike Tomlin from a comment he made Monday at his weekly press conference.
Tomlin didn’t say he would “run the wheels off” James Conner, as he once famously said of Willie Parker, but Tomlin did lend support to James ConnerĢƵ post-game comment that “I’m built for it,” when asked about continuing this season at his current work pace.
“I agree with him,” Tomlin said Monday in a stamp of approval.
In half a season, the 6-1 1/4, 230-pound Conner has carried 151 times for 706 yards and caught 38 passes for 379 yards. That puts Conner on pace for 378 touches for the season.
In college, ConnerĢƵ high was 303 touches in a 13-game 2014 season, but rarely do NFL running backs touch the ball 378 times during the regular season on the way to winning a Super Bowl. The last was 5-11 1/2, 213-pound Terrell Davis, who touched the ball 417 times before delivering Denver the 1998 championship. Davis followed that 2,008-yard season with seasons of 211, 282 and 701 rushing yards before retiring at the age of 30.
Perhaps Bell will be needed down the stretch, so that Tomlin doesn’t “run the wheels off” Conner and shorten his career.
NO. 3 RECEIVER?
Ben Roethlisberger dismissed the idea of Bell playing on the field as a receiver at the same time with Conner, arguing that running backs can be covered by linebackers and BellĢƵ talents as a receiver are best suited for coming out of the backfield as a checkdown option.
But Roethlisberger didn’t look all that pleased Sunday with rookie receiver James Washington playing in Baltimore a week after he had been deactivated in favor of Justin Hunter.
On the second series Sunday, Roethlisberger threw a quick out to Washington, who didn’t turn around in time. The ball hit Washington in the knee and fell incomplete. As Washington returned to the huddle, Roethlisberger pointed in the rookieĢƵ chest and appeared to admonish him.
Four plays later, Washington turned quickly enough to catch an out for an 8-yard gain, but in the third quarter Roethlisberger was again displeased after a third-and-6 out to Washington went incomplete.”
“I think Ben was mad then because he wanted pass interference on that play,” said Mason Rudolph, who was WashingtonĢƵ quarterback for four years at Oklahoma State.
Rudolph feels itĢƵ only a matter of time before the rookie receiver begins flashing his skills in NFL stadiums.
“HeĢƵ a hard worker, smart and a talented athlete. Don’t worry about him,” Rudolph said. “I don’t want to speak for Ben, but my guess is that they’re still trying to get to know each other as quarterback-receiver. I mean, as the quarterback, I’m sure BenĢƵ attention has been on perfecting routes with Antonio (Brown) and JuJu (Smith-Schuster). Then you have the tight ends to work with, and also James coming out of the backfield. ItĢƵ just a matter of math with the amount of practice reps that are available each week.
“But, no, I wouldn’t worry about James. I have a lot of faith his game will emerge because he’ll keep working hard.”
DEFENSIVE BACKFIELD JOB FAIR
Coty Sensabaugh played 60 of 61 possible snaps at cornerback Sunday, the second consecutive game in which Artie Burns played only on special teams.
The two had rotated at the position from Game 3 at Tampa Bay through Game 6 at Cincinnati, but Burns was demoted following the game in Cincinnati, where he allowed an easy touchdown pass to Tyler Boyd and was called for pass interference during the Bengals’ late go-ahead drive.
Tomlin was asked Monday if Sensabaugh has established himself as the starter.
“You tell me based on usage,” said Tomlin.
Was Burns healthy in Baltimore?
“He was,” Tomlin said.
But Tomlin didn’t point to usage when asked whether Morgan Burnett can regain the starting strong safety job back from rookie Terrell Edmunds.
“Edmunds has done a nice job,” Tomlin said of his first-round pick, “but the totality of his play largely has been because of the lack of availability for Morgan, and as Morgan gains his footing from a health standpoint I am interested in playing both guys.
“A lot of exposure to young guys isn’t always good for their growth and development because with exposure comes negativity. Edmunds has done a nice job, but I am not going to forget why heĢƵ in the lineup down in and down out, and that is because Morgan has been hurt. As Morgan gets healthy I am open to infusing him back into the lineup and watching those guys compete and letting both guys play, hopefully getting productive play out of the position. That is my mentality, but that is no secret.”