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Bell misses second day of practice

By Jim Wexell for The 7 min read
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Pittsburgh Steelers running back James Conner (30) runs past Tennessee Titans defensive tackle Jurrell Casey (99) in the first quarter a preseason game on Saturday, Aug. 25, in Pittsburgh. Conner is preparing to start against the Cleveland Browns with the absence of Le'Veon Bell.

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Associated Press

Le’Veon BellĢƵ season is over as he did not show up on Tuesday to the Steelers’ facility to sign his franchise tender.

PITTSBURGH — Le’Veon Bell missed a second day of practice in this opening week of the season, and at least one team captain has had enough.

Maurkice Pouncey predicted Bell would report Wednesday after missing MondayĢƵ “bonus day,” and when that prediction didn’t come to pass Pouncey became upset.

“At this point, itĢƵ beyond business,” said Pouncey, the center and one of four team captains.

“Unless you want to come out and say as a man, ‘Hey I’m going to miss the first 10 weeks. It really sucks for my teammates but I have to do this. ItĢƵ a business decision.’ If you come out and say that, then you know what? As men in here we can all respect that. But to play hide-and-go seek, and no one knows what the hellĢƵ going on, like, you can’t communicate? What the hell?

“We’re way older than that. ThereĢƵ no point in not communicating it.”

Bell, of course, missed training camp because — as he did in 2017 — he refused to sign his franchise tender and wasn’t beholden by NFL rules to report to training camp.

But, he hasn’t reported yet in this opening week even though he can’t improve his income either way. As Pouncey said, itĢƵ not a business decision anymore.

Bell did recently watch Khalil Mack hold out and force a trade that resulted in a $141 million contract. But Bell, even if heĢƵ worth such stratospheric numbers, can’t do anything like that. He must play for $856,000 per week, or $14.5 million this season, even if heĢƵ traded, since the deadline has passed on extended contracts for tendered players.

The only other possible explanation for this holdout — which must end by Nov. 11 or he remains property of the Steelers next season — is that heĢƵ attempting to preserve his body for a big pay day in free agency next March.

“I thought the competitor in him would cause him to report,” Pouncey said, before asking the question everyone in Pittsburgh is asking: “What the hell?”

CONNER STEPPING IN

Can James Conner do better than the 32 yards on 10 carries Bell gave the Steelers in last yearĢƵ opener at Cleveland?

Perhaps last yearĢƵ rookie who rushed for only 144 yards in 14 games couldn’t. But the new and improved Conner, who rushed for 100 yards on 19 carries to lead the Steelers in preseason rushing, can and most likely will.

“James is a year better than he was last year at this time, so I think we are all excited about what he can bring to this offense and this team,” said Ben Roethlisberger. “Like I said, we have a lot of weapons. We’d like to have (Bell) out there, but we have guys that can make plays for us.”

Conner has improved his conditioning, receiving and pass blocking this season, and reporters sampling opinions of the offensive linemen Wednesday heard rave reviews.

“It means everything to hear the big guys up front give me props,” Conner said. “Those are the guys you want to get your respect from. It means a lot when those guys believe in you.”

When did Conner begin believing in himself?

“Always,” he said. “Always.”

SWITZER A 10 AGAIN

Ryan Switzer was one of two Steelers to change numbers. He chose No. 10, the number he wore in Dallas last year when he finished third in kickoff-return average among NFL qualifiers.

A native of Charleston, W. Va., and point guard for the George Washington High state championship basketball team of 2011, Switzer has been to Heinz Field “plenty of times,” but he was always more a fan of whichever team had Randy Moss at the time, because “Moss is from my hometown.”

Switzer was acquired by the Steelers for a flop of late-round draft picks a little more than a week ago because the Steelers had a need for a kickoff and punt return specialist and slot receiver. Switzer helps at all three spots.

Primarily a punt returner at the University of North Carolina, Switzer averaged 25.0 yards per kickoff return and 8.8 yards per punt return as a rookie for Dallas last season.

“The two kickoffs I returned in college were both onsides (kicks),” he said. “I was back there. They kicked it deep and I just ran and took a knee. So last year was the first time I ever did it, so it took some getting used to. But the more reps I got, the more comfortable I got. We had a good year.”

At 5-8½, 185, Switzer has slot-receiver size, and has often been compared stylistically to players such as Julian Edelman and Wes Welker.

“I hear every white guy,” Switzer said of comparisons. “I’ve never been compared to Eli (Rogers). I’ve never been comapred to Tavon (Austin). I’ve never been compared to Jarvis Landry. Never been compared to those guys, but I’ve been compared to the white guys.”

What about his potential in the slot? Switzer caught 96 passes out of the slot for QB Mitch Trubisky as a senior at UNC, but he caught only six passes last season for the Cowboys.

“I’m just waiting on my opportunity offensively,” he said. “I didn’t get it in Dallas last year. Thought I was going to get it in Oakland but they went in a different direction. ItĢƵ not a matter of whether I can play. ItĢƵ just a matter of the opportunity, so I’m trying to dive in the playbook here and become a dependable guy they can trust.”

As with a tight end, Roethlisberger has said it takes time to develop the necessary chemistry with his slot receivers.

“Yeah,” Switzer said. “Obviously, I’m new here. This is my second year and BenĢƵ 15th, so itĢƵ got to be my job to make sure I know the stuff that he can potentially call. But, I’m working on it. ItĢƵ something I don’t anticipate taking too long, but I’ve got a good foundation for Week 1 and I’m learning this game plan. We’ll go from there.”

XĢƵ & OĢƵ

Zach Banner changed his number to 72, the number his biological father, Lincoln Kennedy (6-6, 335), wore during his Pro Bowl years with the Oakland Raiders. Banner (6-8, 360), out of USC, was a fourth-round draft pick by the Indianapolis Colts in 2017 and was waived by three teams before landing with the Steelers on Aug. 12 and making the team as their fourth offensive tackle. … The Steelers listed only one injured player as Ramon Foster returned to his starting left guard position. Tight end Vance McDonald was limited by a foot injury. The Steelers are hoping for a pain-free Thursday morning in order for McDonald to participate in full practices. … The Steelers released running back Jarvion Franklin from the practice squad and signed fullback Trey Edmunds (6-½, 223), the older brother of first-round rookie Terrell Edmunds. The two played together at Virginia Tech in TerrellĢƵ freshman season, before Trey transferred to Maryland. He signed with New Orleans last year as an undrafted free agent and carried 9 times for 48 yards with a 41-yard touchdown run.

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