Conner said he wasn’t trying to show up Bell
PITTSBURGH — James Conner vented Wednesday about those who, after SundayĢƵ game, wrote that he was trying to show up Le’Veon Bell following his first NFL touchdown.
Conner, in his first NFL start, took a second-quarter handoff as Marcus Gilbert sealed the edge, Jesse James blocked the linebacker, and Ramon Foster pulled for the kick-out as Conner virtually walked into the end zone untouched for a 4-yard score.
Conner then ran past JuJu Smith-Schuster to instead celebrate with his offensive line — his very excited offensive line.
Author, broadcaster and former lineman Geoff Schwartz, for one, tweeted that the celebration was “extremely over the top,” and inferred Conner and the linemen were mocking Bell.
Conner went off Wednesday when asked what he liked best about his offensive line after he rushed for 135 yards.
“Everything,” Conner said. “My first touchdown, I walked in untouched. The media took it way out of proportion saying I was trying to throw shade on Le’Veon because I celebrated with the linemen. I never understood that. They kind of just made that up. NFL running back, I scored my first touchdown untouched. You don’t do that often as a running back. As soon as I scored I went back and turned and celebrated with them and people took it how they wanted to take it. I was just showing love.”
Conner carried the ball 31 times and caught five passes for his biggest workload since 2014. He said he never lost his wind Sunday.
“It was a long game but it was good. I was fine,” he said. “You can’t perform at a high level if you’re not conditioned.”
Conner said the most grueling part of his offseason conditioning was the running.
“I really don’t like running unless I’ve got the ball in my hands,” he said.
MCDONALD RETURNS, BUT BEN MISSES
Tight end Vance McDonald, who caught a career-high 10 passes in last seasonĢƵ playoff game, finally returned to practice after injuring his foot during the fourth practice of training camp.
“ItĢƵ the best I’ve felt,” said McDonald, who said “for sure” that heĢƵ playing this Sunday against Kansas City.
However, Ben Roethlisberger and five other players missed WednesdayĢƵ practice. Roethlisberger, for one, expects to return soon.
“Just got hit. ItĢƵ like a bruise. I’ll be fine,” said Roethlisberger, who was hit on the right elbow by the helmet of Genard Avery during the strip sack in overtime. Roethlisberger returned to make another throw, which was dropped by Justin Hunter as time expired.
DeCastro told reporters his fractured hand — an injury from which he returned to play Sunday — was worse than expected but that he’ll play Sunday.
Cornerback Joe Haden (hamstring), defensive tackle Tyson Alualu (shoulder) and defensive end Cameron Heyward (knee) also missed practice. Heyward expects to return in time for SundayĢƵ game. The status of Haden and Alualu remains unknown.
Eric Berry, an All-Pro safety whoĢƵ been out a year, remained sidelined with a sore heel Wednesday in Kansas City. He hasn’t played since rupturing his Achilles’ tendon last September.
WHAT ABOUT WASHINGTON?
Second-round draft pick James Washington may have provided the best highlight reel of training camp, but in SundayĢƵ game he played only 11 snaps and wasn’t targeted. Roethlisberger may not have even looked his way.
“If you think about it,” Roethlisberger said when asked about rookie receivers, “they need to learn the offense, right? Then they need to learn all the extra hand signals. Then they need to learn the no-huddle stuff. So thereĢƵ a lot to learn. We ask him to do a lot of things. We asked JuJu to do a lot because we moved him around and asked him to play multiple positions. I think itĢƵ hard enough just to learn one position, but James is getting it. HeĢƵ learning. When I test him out there on the field he gets it, he understands. Now itĢƵ just translating that to on-the-field type stuff.”
WATCH THE CHEETAH
They call Tyreek Hill “Cheetah,” and he has the resume to back it up:
n 10.19 100 meters in high school.
n 4.25 40 at his college pro day.
n 23.24 miles per hour during an NFL kickoff return (a NextGen Stats high).
n 13 plays of at least 50 yards in only 2+ seasons.
n Shared records with iconic NFL playmakers Bob Hayes, Gale Sayers and Devin Hester.
Speed, speed and more speed.
In Kansas CityĢƵ 38-28 opening-day win against the Los Angeles Chargers, Hill returned a punt 91 yards on any Chiefs’ first touch of the season. On their second possession, he took a slant off an RPO and sprinted 58 yards for a touchdown. His catches of 21 and 34 yards set up Chiefs touchdowns, and his 1-yard catch was the Chiefs’ final touchdown.
“Yeah, he went crazy,” said Steelers cornerback Artie Burns.
“Last week he showed that he is the Chiefs’ receiving threat,” Mike Tomlin said of HillĢƵ 7 catches for 169 yards. “His ability to blow the game open, take a short pass and turn it into a long gain, is something to be contested. HeĢƵ a talented guy.”
HeĢƵ a scary guy, but the Steelers have kept him in check in three games the last two seasons.
Against the Steelers, Hill averages 6.1 yards per reception, 1.4 per carry, 21.0 per kickoff return and 11.8 per punt return. He scored only one touchdown and his longest plays have been a 32-yard punt return, a 21-yard kickoff return, a 10-yard reception and an 8-yard rush.
Against the rest of the league, Hill averages 14.3 per reception, 8.6 per carry, 19.6 per kickoff return, and 13.3 per punt return. HeĢƵ scored 23 other touchdowns and his longest plays have been a 95-yard punt return, an 86-yard kickoff return, a 79-yard reception, and a 70-yard rush.
ItĢƵ not like the Steelers have kicked away from him, either. HillĢƵ returned an average of 3.7 kicks per game against the Steelers and 2.5 kicks per game against the rest of the league.
The Steelers don’t plan on kicking away from him Sunday at Heinz Field.
“We just gotta put the ball out there and have faith in our guys and use a whole group effort,” said kicker Chris Boswell. “Of course, if you have to punt or kick into a corner, that always helps, but we’re going to trust our guys to make plays and tackles because thatĢƵ what we’re all here to do.”