Basketball
Add news
News

Why hasn’t Le’Veon Bell rejoined the Steelers yet?

0 12

Le’Veon Bell is still holding out, but one report says the end of his absence is near.

The Pittsburgh Steelers’ 2018 season began without Le’Veon Bell, but he may be rejoining the team before the end of October.

Despite reports that Bell planned to rejoin the Steelers during the team’s Week 7 bye, that did not happen. Now, it’s looking more likely that Bell won’t return until Oct. 30, right after the trade deadline:

That would ensure Bell, who has yet to sign his franchise tender, could not be traded.

Bell’s prolonged absence is due to a contract dispute with the Steelers that began well over a year ago, but has reached a boiling point and will almost definitely end with the running back on a different roster in 2019.

The battle between the Steelers and Bell has even threatened to split the locker room with some players on the team calling out his “tiresome antics” and calling his holdout “stupid” and selfish. It caused other players on the team, like star receiver Antonio Brown, to jump to Bell’s defense.

After Bell missed the first two weeks of the regular season, the Steelers even stripped his name from the roster and depth chart.

What does Le’Veon Bell want?

The 26-year-old running back has been one of the most dangerous offensive weapons in the NFL since he entered the league in 2013, but still hasn’t had the opportunity to negotiate his worth on the open market. In each of the last two offseasons, the Steelers have used the franchise tag to keep Bell from having a chance to hunt for big money.

Bell isn’t hurting for money with a one-year, $14.5 million franchise tender from the Steelers, but the team’s last chance offer in the summer for a long-term deal with the running back included just $10 million guaranteed.

Now he has no choice but to show up on the one-year, $14.5 million deal or face weekly fines.

Why won’t he show up?

With Bell almost guaranteed to leave in free agency, the Steelers have no reason not to squeeze every drop of value out of the star. He led the league in touches in 2017, and Pittsburgh can now crank that total up even further.

If Bell hopes to be as valuable as possible in March, it makes sense for the running back to worry about his snap count and leave as much tread as possible for teams to invest in.

So there’s logic behind Bell sitting out some games in 2018 to better set himself up in 2019.

How long will he sit out?

If reports are true, Bell could be back in time for the Steelers’ Week 9 against the Ravens.

By not signing his franchise tender by Week 1, he forfeited $855,000 and he’ll continue to cut into that total the longer he sits. The longest he could do is sit out until Week 10, because if he waits any longer the 2018 season wouldn’t count and he’d be stuck under contract with the Steelers in 2019 too.

Either way, the Steelers didn’t expect him back any time soon from the start:

When his agent suggested that his holdout could be lengthy, he also said that Bell intends for 2018 to be the best statistical season of his career. That seems unlikely now.

Until he shows up the Steelers are relying on 2017 third-round pick James Conner to handle the load. And in Week 1, Conner looked up to the task. While Pittsburgh opened the season with a 21-21 tie against the Browns, Conner had 36 touches for 192 all-purpose yards with two touchdowns. In subsequent games, he struggled some, but has since rebounded with two straight 100-yard, two-touchdown games.

Could he be traded?

Not if he returns after the trade deadline, though that was unlikely to happen. Heading into Week 7, Adam Schefter reported that the Steelers did not plan to trade him, but wouldn’t rule it out either.

Trade rumors have gone back and forth about Bell since the start of the season. On the day of the team’s regular season opener, Schefter said the Steelers had “no interest in dealing” Bell:

But after an 0-1-1 start to the year with plenty of drama that was exacerbated by Bell’s absence, that tune changed:

Now, we’re back to the “it’s probably not happening” category.

It was going to be difficult, anyway, because the Steelers weren’t getting any value for Bell that tops the eventual compensatory pick they’d get if the running back leaves in free agency.

Comments

Комментарии для сайта Cackle
Загрузка...

More news:

Turtle Soup Maryland Blog

Read on Sportsweek.org:

Other sports

Sponsored