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No silver bells for Le’Veon this Christmas

By Jim Downey jdowney@heraldstandard.Com 3 min read
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So, the Pittsburgh Steelers apparently beat the Black Friday rush Wednesday by sacking the locker of former running back Le’Veon Bell.

Yes, former running back because Mr. Bell isn’t — and hasn’t been — on the 2018 roster. In a way, I guess, the players didn’t maraud his belongings because he wasn’t there to belong anything.

Le’Veon Bell left behind $14.5 million because he and his “brain trust” felt his future value was far more than $14.5 million.

ItĢƵ difficult for us mere mortals to understand such a decision, especially those of us who discover a 10-spot in a pocket on wash day and consider that an unexpected boon to the monthly budget.

I think lost in all this talk of big money and ego is the well-known way the Steelers do business with their football employees. They do not offer multi-year, guaranteed contracts. I realize itĢƵ not popular to take the employer point-of-view, but the approach makes business sense. Why pay for services rendered when said services haven’t been rendered yet?

I imagine insurance policies can cover loss of years of service not rendered, but itĢƵ well known thatĢƵ the way the Steelers do business and, quite honestly, itĢƵ worked well in the Super Bowl era, pretty much my lifetime as a Steelers fan, because the Steelers boast the best record in the NFL since the merger in 1970.

Bell was injury-free last year, but thatĢƵ the lone season he didn’t miss time because of an injury. Add the occasional brain cramp when heĢƵ not on the field, and he has a mark or two against offering a long-term, guaranteed contract.

Who knows … maybe Le’Veon is crazy, like a fox. If he can land with a team that has the cap space and is willing to guarantee him the big bucks heĢƵ looking for, then he made a smart business decision. But, if the Dez Bryant return offers a cautionary tale, taking time off might rest and protect the body. However, itĢƵ no guarantee the body will be ready and rarin’ to go when itĢƵ time to don the pads for real. 

The play of James Conner, of course, made the absence of Bell negligible this season. Conner apparently has cleared the leagueĢƵ concussion protocol and will line up against the Jaguars on Sunday. (Good news for my fantasy football GM because his team needs all the points it can amass for a late season playoff push.)

If Jaylen Samuels’ future plays out as the team hopes it will when he was drafted, the Steelers get two players with solid futures for far less money than Bell. Hey, itĢƵ harsh, especially if you’re big Christmas item is a No. 26 jersey, but thatĢƵ business, and like it or not Steeler Nation, thatĢƵ what itĢƵ all about.

Mike TomlinĢƵ attitude, at least publicly, through this whole ordeal is what it should be. The highly-successful coach (I realize how that point burns the get-rid-of-him crowd) continually said he was concerned with the players in the locker room, not those who weren’t. And, thatĢƵ just the approach the coaching staff should have. Can’t win with what he doesn’t have.

Face it folks, winning is what itĢƵ all about in the NFL. Mondays around western Pennsylvania are a lot friendlier and pleasant when the Steelers win. 

Along that note, hopefully the boys will avenge last yearĢƵ disappointing losses with a better performance against the Jaguars. A victory in Jacksonville sets up a very interesting December for a run to the AFC North title and a push for another Super Bowl victory.

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