Mendenhall will be the starter once he returns

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  • SidSmythe
    Hall of Famer
    • Sep 2008
    • 4708

    #16
    Redman is a LOAD.
    Dwyer is a BEAST.
    Mendenhall is neither....he belongs in a finesse offense.
    Here We Go Steelers, Here We Go...
    Here We Go Steelers, Here We Go...
    Here We Go Steelers, Here We Go...!!!

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    • Shoe
      Hall of Famer
      • May 2008
      • 4044

      #17
      Originally posted by Jooser
      Amen brother, me too. There have been a lot of runs here lately that Mendy would have taken to the house.
      You guys are selling the other two, particularly Dwyer, short. Redman has an ability to make tough yards, but he certainly isn't the overall runner that Mendenhall is. But Dwyer is physically as talented as Mendenhall, though maybe not as fast. Dwyer is like tackling a horse... so he breaks a lot of tackles that Mendenhall never would. He also seems to have good vision, and very decisive... I'd say similar to Mendenhall. Mendenhall's best quality (over Dwyer) is his speed. Otherwise, I think it's a wash talent-wise.

      I hope they stick with whoever is hot.
      I wasn't hired for my disposition.

      Comment

      • hawaiiansteel
        Legend
        • May 2008
        • 35649

        #18
        A bad move rising?

        If Jonathan Dwyer and/or Isaac Redman continue to pound out 100-yard games and the Steelers return to Rashard Mendenhall when he's healthy, it will rank among the more controversial decisions in a while at a skilled offensive position.

        It will be reminiscent of that brilliant decision the coaching staff made in 2003 when it picked Amos Zereoue in training camp to bump Jerome Bettis out of his starting job. Or another in 2000 when Hines Ward was temporarily bumped from his starting job so they could install their two first-round picks, Troy Edwards and rookie Plaxico Burress, as the starting wide receivers.

        Another one worth recalling came in 1992. With Neil O'Donnell nursing an injury toward the end of that season, Bubby Brister, pictured inset, guided the Steelers to a 4-2 record down the stretch. The Steelers earned a playoff seed and had a week off before the Buffalo Bills came to town. Bill Cowher decided to return to O'Donnell at quarterback and he obviously was either rusty or not ready and in Three Rivers Stadium the Bills drubbed the Steelers, 24-3, in Cowher's first playoff game.

        It would be Brister's last game with the Steelers, and he went out the door saying about O'Donnell, "I can out-throw him, and outrun him."

        [URL]http://www.post-gazette.com/stories/sports/steelers/steelers-make-pitch-for-roethlisberger-as-mvp-661606/#ixzz2BtAHoRgy[/URL]

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        • NorthCoast
          Legend
          • Sep 2008
          • 26636

          #19
          Originally posted by RuthlessBurgher
          Mendenhall's career average is 4.1 yards per rush.

          Arian Foster is leading the AFC in rushing right now and is a slam dunk to be a starting RB in the Pro Bowl. He is averaging 4.0 yards per rush right now. Just sayin'.
          Fair enough. I was actually referring to avg rush yds/gm. So it means that Mendenhall isn't getting the carries that Foster gets..?

          Comment

          • Shawn
            Legend
            • Mar 2008
            • 15131

            #20
            Originally posted by SidSmythe
            Redman is a LOAD.
            Dwyer is a BEAST.
            Mendenhall is neither....he belongs in a finesse offense.
            The RB coach disagrees with you, and so do I. He has power, speed, vision, and hands. Behind a OL that doesn't allow penetration every other running play will help take his game to the next level.
            Trolls are people too.

            Comment

            • Slapstick
              Rookie
              • May 2008
              • 0

              #21
              Originally posted by Shawn
              The RB coach disagrees with you, and so do I. He has power, speed, vision, and hands. Behind a OL that doesn't allow penetration every other running play will help take his game to the next level.
              I'll agree with speed, vision and hands...I don't see the power aspect of his game...he is not a tackle breaker...
              Actually, my post was NOT about you...but, if the shoe fits, feel free to lace that &!+€# up and wear it.

              Comment

              • Snatch98
                Pro Bowler
                • May 2008
                • 1451

                #22
                Originally posted by Shawn
                The RB coach disagrees with you, and so do I. He has power, speed, vision, and hands. Behind a OL that doesn't allow penetration every other running play will help take his game to the next level.
                I couldn't agree more. We've never seen Rashard behind a line that was blowing open holes. I can't wait to see him back on the field with the way the line is run blocking.

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