The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

No-show Bell, 3-11 Gruden top letdown list

- By Dave Campbell

The hype trains touting NFL offseason activity typically start leaving their stations each January, when new head coaches are hired and fan bases are fired up about the fresh start that sends hope soaring high like the football in the air on the opening kickoff of a game.

There’s another round of departures in March, when the biggest-buck free agent contracts are signed to put some of the highest-profile players in the league on new teams snatching up missing pieces to their Super Bowl puzzles. Then, the first-round draft picks clamber aboard at the end of April.

By December, well, the derailment­s are inevitable.

From Le’Veon Bell to Jon Gruden to Leonard Fournette, here’s a pick-six of the biggest disappoint­ments in the NFL this year:

No-show Bell

The millions of fantasy football players who snagged Bell for a seeming bargain in their auctions and drafts would wholeheart­edly agree, though the Pittsburgh Steelers survived the absence of the two-time All-Pro running back due to the emergence of James Conner and, most recently, Jaylen Samuels.

Bell bet on himself, steadfastl­y refusing to sign his franchise tender without the promise of a contract extension at one of the sport’s most dangerous positions and ultimately accepting his ineligibil­ity for the season. The Steelers didn’t blink, either, and Bell will assumedly restart his career with another team in 2019.

Chucky’s nightmare

The Oakland Raiders, eyeing an eventual move to Las Vegas, gave Jon Gruden a 10-year contract worth about $100 million to return to the franchise he got his start with as a head coach.

The Raiders are in this for the long haul, after burning through nine head coaches in the 16 seasons that passed after Gruden shed his silver and black. Their 3-11 record two years after a 12-4 finish, however, is a shaker of salt in the wound for the Bay Area loyalists on the verge of losing their team. Watching traded stars Khalil Mack and Amari Cooper thrive elsewhere has only made this season hurt worse. No team has been easier to score on this year than the Raiders, who average giving up nearly 30 points per game.

Sophomore slump

Part a strong crop of rookie running backs last season, Leonard Fournette finished fifth in the league in yards rushing per game as the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars came so close to beating the New England Patriots in the AFC championsh­ip game. The Jaguars as a team would qualify as the league’s biggest letdown, so Fournette is hardly alone. But even with a mulligan for missing six games because of a hamstring injury, Fournette has taken a clear step back.

The fourth overall pick in the 2017 draft has averaged only 3.4 yards per attempt (46th in the NFL) and 56.6 rushing yards per game (24th in the NFL). Last week in a three-point loss to Washington, Fournette spent most of the second half on the sideline while undrafted rookie Dave Williams ate into his playing time.

Kicking it away

Sure, Chicago and Green Bay play on grass in cold climates, but Minnesota and Detroit have indoor stadiums. NFC North teams have enjoyed a long line of successful kickers. This year, though, has been a struggle, with 12-year veteran Matt Prater of the Lions the only specialist whose season has become a story. The Vikings cut rookie Daniel Carlson after two games and three missed field goals that cost them a victory against the rival Packers, who had their own issues with Mason Crosby. Cody Parkey ranks 28th in field goal percentage for the Bears, one spot behind Crosby.

So much for drama

That last-second 2-point conversion the Los Angeles Chargers used to win at Kansas City and tie the Chiefs for the AFC West lead turned that division race into a December thriller. That’s the exception, though, with the Bears, New Orleans Saints and Los Angeles Rams already in possession of topfour seeds in the NFC and the New England Patriots and Houston Texans holding two-game leads in their divisions with two games to play. That three-team race in the NFC East has been muted by all that mediocrity. The Baltimore Ravens, at least, have made the AFC North a legitimate competitio­n with the Steelers.

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 ?? STEVEN SENNE / AP ?? TOP: Raiders coach Jon Gruden has the same reaction fans in Oakland had when learning superstars Khalil Mack and Amari Cooper had been traded. EZRA SHAW / GETTY IMAGES BOTTOM LEFT: Leonard Fournette was fifth in the NFL in rushing as a rookie, but he’s averaging only 3.4 yards per carry in his follow-up campaign. TOM SZCZERBOWS­KI / GETTY IMAGESBOTT­OM RIGHT: No one blinked, so the holdout of Steelers tailback Le’Veon Bell lasted all season.
STEVEN SENNE / AP TOP: Raiders coach Jon Gruden has the same reaction fans in Oakland had when learning superstars Khalil Mack and Amari Cooper had been traded. EZRA SHAW / GETTY IMAGES BOTTOM LEFT: Leonard Fournette was fifth in the NFL in rushing as a rookie, but he’s averaging only 3.4 yards per carry in his follow-up campaign. TOM SZCZERBOWS­KI / GETTY IMAGESBOTT­OM RIGHT: No one blinked, so the holdout of Steelers tailback Le’Veon Bell lasted all season.
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