Porterville Recorder

Later Le'veon; Steelers move on with Bell out

- By WILL GRAVES

PITTSBURGH — The Pittsburgh Steelers spent the better part of 10 months waiting on Le'veon Bell to show up for work. They said all the right things, stressed they understood the star running back was making a business decision by opting to stay home in hopes of protecting himself ahead of a potentiall­y lucrative payday next spring.

And they'd welcome him with open arms whenever he returned.

On Wednesday, with Bell's absence for the rest of the season a certainty after he declined to sign his one-year, $14.5-million franchise tender , they exhaled. And pillaged. Bell's teammates invaded his locker after practice, helping themselves to whatever they wanted — or at least whatever fit — with Bell's career in Pittsburgh all but over. It wasn't personal. Just business. A celebratio­n of sorts to honor — they hope anyway — the last time they'll have to answer questions about Bell's unorthodox approach, one that included leaving his teammates in the dark about his plans.

"I think we all just assumed he'd be here and it'd be the same as the year before," guard David Decastro said. "It amazes me in this day and age when you can tweet about things but you can't talk to each other. You're so connected, but you're disconnect­ed at the same time. It's really interestin­g when you think about it from the big picture side of it. After that it is what it is, you stop worrying about it and you just move on."

Something the firstplace Steelers (6-2-1) are more than happy to do. They take a five-game winning streak into Sunday's game at Jacksonvil­le (3-6) looking for a bit of revenge against a team that beat them twice last season at Heinz Field, including a 4542 stunner in the divisional round of the playoffs.

Bell finished with 157 total yards and two touchdowns in the loss. The Steelers cleaned out their lockers the following day, Bell among them. Despite saying he wanted to be a "Steeler for life" he never returned.

Ben Roethlisbe­rger attempted to reach out to Bell, texting him before Tuesday's 4 p.m. deadline saying he hoped Bell would come in and sign. Bell never arrived and never responded to the quarterbac­k he played alongside during the first five years of his career.

"He was a great teammate here, a great football player," Roethlisbe­rger said. "To each his own on what they want to walk away from."

The Steelers, meanwhile, will try to move forward without the versatile Bell, who played a vital role in the team's run of four straight playoff berths. Yet they have hardly missed a beat thanks to the rapid developmen­t of second-year back James Conner. The former Pitt star is second in the NFL in yards from scrimmage (1,158 yards) and his 10 rushing touchdowns are already one more than Bell ever put up in a single season.

Conner's success, however, also put him in an awkward position. He considers Bell a friend — and while Bell did otherwise stay silent on Tuesday he did share an Instagram story that appeared to show him promoting Conner to make the Pro Bowl — and never wanted to be put into an adversaria­l position against a mentor.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO BY DON WRIGHT ?? In this Jan. 14, photo, Pittsburgh Steelers running back Le’veon Bell heads for the end zone after taking a pass from quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger during the second half of an NFL divisional football AFC playoff game against the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars, in Pittsburgh.
AP FILE PHOTO BY DON WRIGHT In this Jan. 14, photo, Pittsburgh Steelers running back Le’veon Bell heads for the end zone after taking a pass from quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger during the second half of an NFL divisional football AFC playoff game against the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars, in Pittsburgh.

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