Steelers must spell Mendenhall

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  • hawaiiansteel
    Legend
    • May 2008
    • 35649

    Steelers must spell Mendenhall

    Kovacevic: Steelers must spell Mendenhall

    By Dejan Kovacevic, PITTSBURGH TRIBUNE-REVIEW
    Wednesday, August 10, 2011



    Flash forward to Baltimore on the 11th of September: Rashard Mendenhall bursts through a hole in the Steelers' line but is barreled backward by the Ravens' Ray Lewis. His ankle bends awkwardly. He is carted off the field, cringing in pain.

    Mike Tomlin looks down his sideline and sends in ...

    No easy answer, is there?

    Well, the Steelers had better find one, sooner rather than later.

    Mendenhall has been one part force, two parts workhorse the past two seasons, with 627 carries and 2,611 yards, including playoffs. That's the third-most carries in the NFL in that span. Yeah, he's 24 years young, tough, durable, and he holds onto the football more often than James Harrison thinks. But this is a grind not even Earl Campbell could sustain.

    Not that anyone concerned will acknowledge it.

    I asked Mendenhall about his workload yesterday at St. Vincent College, and he came back flatly: "That's part of the game, part of your job as a running back. I'm preparing to carry whatever load I'm given."

    Kirby Wilson, the Steelers' running backs coach, shrugged it off, too: "He's fine. He's a young man. He's built for it, and we feel like he's a special runner. Why take him off the field?"

    Why?

    Where do I start?

    In an era in which most teams have running back tandems — Baltimore, for instance, just added Ricky Williams to back up Ray Rice — Mendenhall has accounted for an alarming 62.7 percent of the Steelers' carries the past two seasons. Of the league's top 15 rushing teams last season, the Steelers, who ranked 10th, had the lowest-ranking No. 2 rusher in Isaac Redman with 247 yards.

    Moreover, Mendenhall isn't exactly the tiptoeing type. His 1,273 yards last season ranked seventh in the league, but his average of 3.9 yards per carry was the 11th-lowest of the top 50 in total rushing yardage. And remember how the goal line was supposed to be Redman's specialty after his spectacular showing in last year's camp? Mendenhall was just too good down there and finished with 13 rushing touchdowns to Redman's zero.

    The Steelers are going to run more than most seem to think. They did so 47.4 percent of the time last season, they've got uncertainty at wide receiver, and they now have run-blocking ace Willie Colon back at right tackle as part of an offense that loves to run to the right.

    Somehow, someone else needs to get involved at running back.

    But again, who?

    Wilson answered "probably Mewelde Moore," and that's understandable to an extent: Moore, 29, is in his eighth season, he was Tomlin's choice for four starts in 2008 to replace injured Willie Parker, and he isn't far off when he calls himself "one of the best third-down backs in the game." But first and second down count, too. Moore is far from a feature back.

    Baron Batch, the seventh-round draft pick, has been the buzz of camp, barreling through defenders as easily as he sprints around end. Kid looks like a keeper. But he's bound for special teams for now.

    Of the rest of the backs, the only one who entered camp with a realistic chance, Jonathan Dwyer, has shown up out of shape and deserves to be among the first cuts.

    So let's see more of Redman.

    The pedigree looks suspect, I'll admit. He was an undrafted free agent two years ago out of Division II Bowie State, spent 2009 on the Steelers' practice squad, then made just 52 carries last season. But he's a bullish 230 pounds, he picks up blitzes and, even though he's just an average receiver, it's hard to forget that touchdown catch in Baltimore last season after Troy Polamalu's brilliant strip of Joe Flacco.

    The Steelers at least sound open-minded about using Redman more.

    "That's why we have him here," Wilson said. "Isaac is someone who's made exciting plays for us when he's been out there, someone who has another level. We think highly of him."

    Redman is markedly more blunt on the subject.

    "Rashard had a lot of carries, and a man's body can only take so much. Hopefully they'll send some of those my way," Redman said with a smile. "Hey, this has turned into a two-back league. We all know that. I'm trying to step up and make this a tandem."

    It's a step worth taking.

    [url="http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/sports/steelers/s_750843.html#ixzz1Udr38jft"]http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsbu ... z1Udr38jft[/url]
  • fezziwig
    Hall of Famer
    • Jan 2009
    • 3515

    #2
    Re: Steelers must spell Mendenhall

    This always seemed to be the Steelers way. I would like to see Redman get more carries.

    Comment

    • Shoe
      Hall of Famer
      • May 2008
      • 4044

      #3
      Re: Steelers must spell Mendenhall

      Originally posted by fezziwig
      This always seemed to be the Steelers way. I would like to see Redman get more carries.
      Yup. You don't have to be a rocket scientist to see that Redman has some big-time ability, especially in terms of contact running... the guy can run through tackles like not a lot of guys can.
      I wasn't hired for my disposition.

      Comment

      • Oviedo
        Legend
        • May 2008
        • 23824

        #4
        Re: Steelers must spell Mendenhall

        Originally posted by fezziwig
        This always seemed to be the Steelers way. I would like to see Redman get more carries.
        6-8 per game is about right.

        What the article does indicate though is we still need a legit #2 RB who can do some of the same things as Mendy
        "My team, may they always be right, but right or wrong...MY TEAM!"

        Comment

        • feltdizz
          Legend
          • May 2008
          • 27531

          #5
          Re: Steelers must spell Mendenhall

          Originally posted by Oviedo
          Originally posted by fezziwig
          This always seemed to be the Steelers way. I would like to see Redman get more carries.
          6-8 per game is about right.

          What the article does indicate though is we still need a legit #2 RB who can do some of the same things as Mendy
          Redman will look like Mendenhall lite if they give him 8 touches a game.
          Steelers 27
          Rats 16

          Comment

          • fezziwig
            Hall of Famer
            • Jan 2009
            • 3515

            #6
            Re: Steelers must spell Mendenhall

            I think Redmen is good enough to be a starter. I think the two of them could give a terrific one two punch. Just think if they would employ a lead blocker once in a while, our run game would be difficult to stop IMO.

            I can dream can't I ?

            Comment

            • fordfixer
              Legend
              • May 2008
              • 10921

              #7
              Re: Steelers must spell Mendenhall

              Saddle Up: Steelers running game is basically a one-horse show ...
              ... and that horse is Rashard Mendenhall
              Thursday, August 11, 2011
              [url="http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11223/1166610-66-0.stm"]http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11223/1166610-66-0.stm[/url]


              By Ed Bouchette, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
              Matt Freed/Post-Gazette
              Rashard Mendenhall runs with the ball during last season's AFC Championship game. Barring injury, the running back will get the majority of the carries this season, as he did last regular season (321 attempts for 77.5 percent of the team's tries).

              Mike Tomlin believes in the two-back system. He said as much shortly after the Steelers hired him in 2007. Then, he went out and used Willie Parker, as promised at Tomlin's first midseason, until the wheels came off.

              Parker carried 321 times in Tomlin's first season and led the NFL in rushing right up until he broke his leg in the second to last game and never was the same. By 2010, he was out of football, his rushing yardage totals nearly cut in half from 1,316 to 791 to 389 in the following seasons.

              Tomlin might still believe in the two-back system, but that it might only occur when two backs he trusts can give him what Parker and his successor, Rashard Mendenhall, have.

              Coincidentally, like Parker in his final productive season, Mendenhall carried precisely 321 times last regular season. That represented 77.5 percent of all the running backs' carries. The rest were sprinkled among Isaac Redman, Mewelde Moore and Jonathan Dwyer.

              That will not change, barring an injury to Mendenhall.

              Mendenhall is the horse, and, while Redman will get some short-yardage calls, and he and Moore will see some third-down action, the Steelers will give the ball to Mendenhall and hope the wheels don't fall off.

              "I was taught that a long time ago, I never worry about a running back getting tired," said running backs coach Kirby Wilson, echoing a sentiment Tomlin made last season. "Usually in a ballgame, they'll take themselves out if they get exhausted. Over a long term in their careers that's never been an issue with me.

              "That's what they are there for, to run the ball and carry the load and deliver for us. So, I've never been concerned with that and I never will be. That's their job."

              You ride the horse. If you have two, the better, but Mendenhall is the Steelers horse, and they will lean on him as much in 2011 as they did in '10.

              Mendenhall had 409 touches last season through the Super Bowl, and that included 23 pass receptions in the regular season and four in the postseason.

              He started all 19 games and has not missed one since Baltimore linebacker Ray Lewis' brutal hit resulted in a fractured shoulder in the second game of '08 and a premature end to Mendenhall's rookie season.

              Mendenhall, only 24, could have more carries in his fourth season.

              "He's in excellent shape," Wilson said. "He always takes care of his body. He's a little bit ahead of the curve because when you know the offense as well as he does, you're able to concentrate more on the things that you want to do personally better. I think he's going to have a great year."

              If so, the mix behind him won't matter much, but, as they prepare for their first preseason game Friday against the Washington Redskins, the pecking order behind Mendenhall looks to be Redman, Moore and either Dwyer or rookie John Clay.

              Early in training camp, that fourth spot looked to be reserved for Baron Batch, but two things have happened since: Wednesday, late in practice at Saint Vincent College, Batch was carted off the field with a knee injury that appears to be serious. Competition for the fourth running back position now apparently will come down to Dwyer and Clay.

              Batch was not hit; he made a cut on the artificial turf field and went down. He had made a strong impression in his first two weeks.

              The other turnaround has been made by Dwyer, who has worked with strength/conditioning coach Garrett Giamont to shed much of the extra weight he carried with him to Latrobe two weeks ago.

              Redman was the Batch of 2009, a rookie running back hailing even more from nowheresville, undrafted after playing at Bowie State in Maryland. He made the practice squad as a rookie, then made the 53-man roster in '10 and surpassed Moore as a third-down back and in short-yardage situations. He could see similar action this season after rounding into a more polished, physically imposing back at 245 pounds, 15 more than his listed weight at the start of last season.

              "He's improved every year since he's been here," Wilson said. "It's fun to watch him grow. He's a big, strong man, 245 pounds. He's solid in blitz protection, solid in running routes and catching the football. He's excellent in short yardage. He's a guy you don't hesitate to put in because you trust him."

              Moore is a versatile veteran who helped save the '08 Super Bowl season by turning in two solid starts in place of the injured Parker, both victories.

              Redman, Dwyer and Clay likely will get most of the work Friday in Washington. Come September, Mendenhall will get nearly all of it.
              For more on the Steelers, read the blog, Ed Bouchette on the Steelers at [url="http://www.post-gazette.com/plus"]www.post-gazette.com/plus[/url]. Ed Bouchette: [email="ebouchette@post-gazette.com"]ebouchette@post-gazette.com[/email] and on Twitter: @EdBouchette.

              Read more: [url="http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11223/1166610-66-0.stm#ixzz1UhB7c13i"]http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11223/11 ... z1UhB7c13i[/url]

              Molon labe

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              Mike Tomlin

              American metal pimped by asiansteel
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              Comment

              • steelblood
                Hall of Famer
                • May 2008
                • 4166

                #8
                Re: Steelers must spell Mendenhall

                "Kovacevic: Steelers must spell Mendenhall"

                Ok, but don't ask Solomon Wilcotts to do it. He'll murder it for sure. "Mendinghall"
                Even if Bill Belichick was getting an atomic wedgie, his face would look exactly the same.

                Comment

                • Shawn
                  Legend
                  • Mar 2008
                  • 15131

                  #9
                  Re: Steelers must spell Mendenhall

                  Mendenall is getting an appropriate amount carries for a young elite back. He got around 18 more than Drew-Jones. Bettis averaged 333 carries per season in his first 5 seasons with the Steelers....around 20 more per season than Mendenhall. Sounds like this writer is just looking for material.
                  Trolls are people too.

                  Comment

                  • hawaiiansteel
                    Legend
                    • May 2008
                    • 35649

                    #10
                    Re: Steelers must spell Mendenhall

                    Originally posted by Shawn
                    Mendenall is getting an appropriate amount carries for a young elite back.



                    Arian Foster, Maurice Jones-Drew, Michael Turner, Chris Johnson, Ray Rice, Steven Jackson and Cedric Benson all had roughly 300 or more carries last season.

                    Comment

                    • RuthlessBurgher
                      Legend
                      • May 2008
                      • 33208

                      #11
                      Re: Steelers must spell Mendenhall

                      Originally posted by steelblood
                      "Kovacevic: Steelers must spell Mendenhall"

                      Ok, but don't ask Solomon Wilcotts to do it. He'll murder it for sure. "Mendinghall"
                      "Rotlessberger hands off to Mendinghall..."

                      Steeler teams featuring stat-driven, me-first, fantasy-football-darling diva types such as Antonio Brown & Le'Veon Bell won no championships.

                      Super Bowl winning Steeler teams were built around a dynamic, in-your-face defense plus blue-collar, hard-hitting, no-nonsense football players on offense such as Hines Ward & Jerome Bettis.

                      We don't want Juju & Conner to replace what we lost in Brown & Bell.

                      We are counting on Juju & Conner to return us to the glory we once had with Hines & The Bus.

                      Comment

                      • phillyesq
                        Legend
                        • May 2008
                        • 7568

                        #12
                        Re: Steelers must spell Mendenhall

                        An interesting question here is what do the Steelers think of Mendenhall long term? With his twitter stupidity over the offseason, is this somebody the Steelers will reward with a second contract? Or is this somebody that they will ride hard through the term of his rookie deal, only to part ways when he becames more expensive?

                        In a way, it could make a lot of sense. You get 5 relatively cheap years out of Mendenhall, then send him packing. Let somebody else give him big money after he's racked up a lot of wear and tear, and find another younger, cheaper back.

                        Comment

                        • flippy
                          Legend
                          • Dec 2008
                          • 17088

                          #13
                          Re: Steelers must spell Mendenhall

                          RBs are a dime a dozen.

                          But we did use a 1st round pick on the guy and I'd hate to let him go for nothing like we did with Santonio. It could end up costing us a SuperBowl, which I think we would have won with Santonio.

                          But wait, Mendy may have cost us the SuperBowl with his fumble. Doh! Run him to the wheels fall off like we did with Parker. He's just a RB.
                          sigpic

                          Comment

                          • aggiebones
                            Pro Bowler
                            • Jan 2009
                            • 1427

                            #14
                            Re: Steelers must spell Mendenhall

                            I agree to the dime a dozen idea and to some degree so do the Steelers. They do not want to give a RB some big stud contract. They'd rather use him when he is young, run him into the ground, then let him go.
                            But then they did use a first rounder on him.
                            So it does contradict itself.
                            I'd like to see them drop him closer to 280 carries, up Moore by 10 and redman by 40. Redman has not disappointed at all in his attempts and is a very good blocker including pass blocking. He can't do what Mendy can on the outside, but neither can any other backup in the league.

                            Comment

                            • RuthlessBurgher
                              Legend
                              • May 2008
                              • 33208

                              #15
                              Re: Steelers must spell Mendenhall

                              Originally posted by flippy
                              He's just a RB.
                              Hey! Watch it, flip! Oh, wait a minute...you meant Running Back, not RuthlessBurgher. Carry on.
                              Steeler teams featuring stat-driven, me-first, fantasy-football-darling diva types such as Antonio Brown & Le'Veon Bell won no championships.

                              Super Bowl winning Steeler teams were built around a dynamic, in-your-face defense plus blue-collar, hard-hitting, no-nonsense football players on offense such as Hines Ward & Jerome Bettis.

                              We don't want Juju & Conner to replace what we lost in Brown & Bell.

                              We are counting on Juju & Conner to return us to the glory we once had with Hines & The Bus.

                              Comment

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