The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Versatile group of backs should see plenty of action

- By Dennis Waszak Jr.

FLORHAM PARK >> The Jets will have a busy backfield this season.

Le’Veon Bell is the star of the running backs group, of course. But, Ty Montgomery and Bilal Powell, and perhaps even Elijah McGuire and Trenton Cannon could all play significan­t roles in Adam Gase’s offense.

Through four training camp practices, it has been clear that Gase likes the idea of mixing and matching his backs while using them in various ways. There could be multiple ballcarrie­rs lined up at different spots on a given play, presenting a big-time challenge for opposing defenses.

“I can tell that in this offense the backs are going to be used a lot,” said Montgomery, who signed with New York as a free agent after splitting last season with Green Bay and Baltimore.

“We’re going to be asked to run the ball,” he added. “We’re going to be asked to catch the ball. We’re going to be asked to protect the quarterbac­k. We’re going to be asked to line up all over the field. I think it’s very useful. It creates mismatches.”

Bell was signed in the offseason to be the primary ballcarrie­r, a bellcow back who is used to plenty of touches. He had a league-high 406 of them in 2017, the last season he played in a game before sitting out all last year in a contract dispute with Pittsburgh. The Jets are being cautious during camp with Bell, who twice left practice briefly Sunday with cramping in his right leg. Gase had no concerns that it would be an issue, and Bell has shown no signs of rust when he has been on the field.

“For me, I’m going to go as hard as I personally can each and every rep,” Bell said. “It’s going to be more so on the coaches to hold me back just because of the fact I’m not going to hold myself back. If I have four reps, I’m going to run four reps as hard as possible. And I’ll stay in for the fifth rep if they don’t take me out. That’s the kind of player I am. They’ll protect me from myself.”

His dual-threat abilities are well-documented: He rushed for 5,336 yards and 35 touchdowns in five seasons with Pittsburgh, and caught 312 passes for 2,660 yards and seven scores as one of the league’s most versatile and dangerous offensive players. His 128.9 yards from scrimmage per game over his career is the best mark in the NFL since the 1970 merger.

The Jets gave Bell a fouryear, $52.5 million contract in the offseason, believing he’ll come back fresh. Sam Darnold predicts Bell will help “a ton.”

“There are a lot of ways that we’re going to involve him in this offense,” the quarterbac­k said.

And, Bell isn’t the only one.

Montgomery played wide receiver at Stanford and began his NFL career at the position with Green Bay before being moved to running back in his second season in 2016. He has thrived in a dual-threat role since, catching 107 passes for 892 yards and three touchdowns while rushing for 932 yards and seven scores in four NFL seasons.

“The more guys that we have that can do multiple things the better,” Gase said. “I think Ty’s flexibilit­y is huge for us. It helps you with the active (roster on gameday). You might be able to go a little light on wideouts because he has experience. You can go a little heavy on the backs that help on special teams as well because you can save a roster spot with a guy that can just only play offense, or can only play defense.

“When you’ve got a guy that can do multiple things and contribute on special teams, that’s valuable for us.”

 ?? SETH WENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jets’ Le’Veon Bell, right, talks with quarterbac­k Sam Darnold during training camp practice.
SETH WENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jets’ Le’Veon Bell, right, talks with quarterbac­k Sam Darnold during training camp practice.

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