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Smith-Schuster, Conner return to practice

By Jim Wexell For The 5 min read
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Associated Press

Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster mingles with fans before the game against the Cleveland Browns Dec. 1.

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Associated Press

Pittsburgh Steelers running back Benny Snell (24) leaps in celebration with injured running back James Conner (30) after he scored against the Cleveland Browns during the second half of a game played on Dec. 1 in Pittsburgh. Conner returned to practice Wednesday.

PITTSBURGH — The cavalryĢƵ coming for the Pittsburgh Steelers.

Pro Bowlers JuJu Smith-Schuster and James Conner returned to practice full-time Wednesday, but neither was ready to proclaim himself fit for Sunday nightĢƵ critical game against the Buffalo Bills.

Smith-Schuster has missed the last three-plus games with a sprained PCL in his left knee, and after participating in his first full practice since before the Thursday night game in Cleveland said he’ll wait until Thursday morning to see if problems arise.

“I did OK,” Smith-Schuster said of practice. “I’m still trying to get in the groove, trying to get it right for the last couple of weeks, and trying to get my conditioning and get in shape, too.”

Smith-SchusterĢƵ production has fallen off this season from his team MVP levels of 2018, when he averaged 89.1 receiving yards per game. This year heĢƵ averaging 52.4, but is excited with the strides the offense has made.

“We have a young group thatĢƵ coming along,” he said. “EverybodyĢƵ just doing their part. ItĢƵ not like anyoneĢƵ being asked to do too much. You just do your part, one-eleventh of the squad, the team, and you get the job done.”

Smith-Schuster might’ve been asked to do too much more earlier in the season, since he was the only receiver who knew all the positions.

“But now that James WashingtonĢƵ playing inside it helps out the team a lot,” Smith-Schuster said. “ThereĢƵ not so much on me now, so it should be fun.”

Conner was less committal to playing Sunday. His shoulder injury cost him Games 8-9. He returned for Game 10 at Cleveland, but reinjured himself, left that game and missed the last three games.

“I felt good,” he said of WednesdayĢƵ practice.

Does he assume heĢƵ going to play Sunday night?

“I didn’t say that. Those are your words,” Conner said. “I said I felt good.”

RALLY ‘ROUND THE FAMILY

The Edmunds brothers — Trey, Terrell and BuffaloĢƵ Tremaine — all expect to play in Sunday nightĢƵ game. It will mark the first time since 1927 that three brothers have played in the same game.

The Rooney brothers of Duluth, Minnesota, played for the Eskimos in that long ago season.

“I think they said 92, 93 years. ThatĢƵ crazy,” said Terrell Edmunds, the Steelers’ strong safety and middle brother of the three. “Being out there with all of my brothers, itĢƵ a dream come true. ItĢƵ a blessing. A lot of people can’t really say that they’ve done that and itĢƵ something we can say we accomplished as a family. A lot of hard work went into this journey, and now we get to live out our dreams.”

Trey, the eldest, is a running back with the Steelers, and according to Terrell has been assured he will play, even with the return of Conner. Trey is also a core special-teamer for the Steelers.

Trey said they’ve all been planning for this moment. “Absolutely,” he said. “Every single day, while we were going through little league, through high school, college and just being there to actually see it happen right now is huge. You think about it and you dream about it, but you don’t ever really know if itĢƵ actually going to happen. And now that we’re a couple days away from it, we’re excited. Emotions are going to be everywhere, but itĢƵ going to be a good opportunity for our family.”

HEAD COACHES ONCE TEAMMATES

Mike Tomlin was a redshirt junior wide receiver at William & Mary when Bills coach Sean McDermott was a sophomore defensive back at the school. McDermott said he looked up to Tomlin at the time.

“What Mike did, he gave me a blueprint a little bit for what it looked like,” said McDermott, whoĢƵ in his third season at the helm of the Bills. “He was such a role model for a lot of us, myself included, on campus as a younger player. He was a good example for me as well as many others. And then to watch him go off and graduate and begin his coaching career, and the way he did it, and the way he climbed the ladder, I’ve always looked at him as kind of an older brother in the profession because of where both of us started.”

Did they encounter each other on the practice field?

“Him being a wide receiver and myself being a defensive back, we had our battles,” McDermott said. “More so I was a walk-on and he was a scholarship athlete, and he was established and I was just trying to get a pair of cleats. So, really, it was just me, again, watching him battle some of the older DBs, and yet having a good personality and a good rapport off the field with teammates.”

XĢƵ & OĢƵ

Duck Hodges got his first taste of wintry weather at WednesdayĢƵ practice and confirmed that his passes cut through the wind rather well. “Took me a couple throws to get adjusted, get used to it,” Hodges said. “I haven’t played in the snow. We did play in Youngstown, Ohio, one time so I have played in the cold weather before. … I’m going to be fine.” … Missing practice with injuries were TE Vance McDonald (concussion) and RB Jaylen Samuels (groin).

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