The Palm Beach Post

Bell, Blount have taken different paths to success

Once teammates in Pittsburgh, RBs meet for AFC title.

- Associated Press

PITTSBURGH — The football player and friend in Le’Veon Bell understood why LeGarrette Blount walked off the job that cold night in Nashville more than two years ago, jogging to the locker room with the clock still running as Bell and the rest of the Pittsburgh Steelers reveled in a critical victory over Tennessee.

For the teammate in Bell, things were a bit more complicate­d. Here was a guy who was supposed to have his back instead pouting his way out of town while Bell was in the middle of a breakout season.

“It made me think a little more differentl­y (about him),” Bell said. “But LeGarrette’s doing his thing.”

Blount’s doing it for the Patriots, not the Steelers, who cut Blount two days after his retreat. Blount was back with New England by the end of the week and three months later earned a Super Bowl ring while Bell sat at home recovering from a hyperexten­ded left knee that forced him to miss Pittsburgh’s playoff loss to Baltimore.

Yet Bell holds no grudges. The two remain in constant contact, though the texting may slow this week with the Steelers (13-5) headed to Foxborough, Mass., to face Blount and the Patriots (15-2) in the AFC championsh­ip game.

It wasn’t supposed to work out this way.

The Steelers signed Blount in the spring of 2014 believing he could be the bruising change-of-pace back they needed to complement the rapidly maturing Bell. And if Blount happened to become a mentor of sorts along the way, even better. Neither happened. In August 2014 Bell and Blount were picked up by a p o l i c e o f f i c e r a f t e r h e noticed the scent of marijuana smoke coming from a car Bell was driving, leading to a DUI charge for Bell, a drug charge for Blount and brief suspension­s by the NFL for violating the league’s substance-abuse policy.

The two split carries early that season, but as Bell’s touches went up and Blount’s productivi­ty went down, the future became apparent to both. Blount’s frustratio­ns bubbled over as Bell finished a 204-yard performanc­e in a Monday night game. By lunchtime Wednesday, he was released.

“For him to walk out on his team, yeah it hurt,” tackle Marcus Gilbert said. “Whenever LeGarrette Blount was over here, it was hard for him to fit into the offense because Le’Veon was on such a roll. He wanted more touches. It was just hard.”

To o h a rd , a ppa re n t l y, though for Blount the ends u l t i ma t e l y j u s t i f i e d t h e means. He helped push the Patriots to a championsh­ip shortly after re-signing and ran for an NFL-high 18 touchdowns this season, including two in a 27-16 victory in Pittsburgh in October. Bell had 149 total yards, 81 receiving and 68 coming on 10 receptions in the loss, a showcase of the versatilit­y few backs in the league can match.

“No, I’ve never seen anyone do that — to be as effective as he is,” Blount said. “It’s just something that he does. It’s his style.”

B e l l , Bl o u n t a n d t h e i r teams have moved on profession­ally. The role of steadying veteran presence the Steelers thought they might be getting with Blount has instead been filled by DeAngelo Williams. The 33-year-old has fit in seamlessly, showing there’s plenty of life in his legs during the first three weeks of the season while Bell served a second suspension for running afoul of the league’s drug policy, then gracefully stepping aside when Bell returned.

 ?? ELISE AMENDOLA / AP ?? Patriots running back LeGarrette Blount led the NFL in rushing TDs with 18. He was released by the Steelers in 2014 as Le’Veon Bell began to emerge.
ELISE AMENDOLA / AP Patriots running back LeGarrette Blount led the NFL in rushing TDs with 18. He was released by the Steelers in 2014 as Le’Veon Bell began to emerge.

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