As a group of reporters
surrounded Edgerrin James in the Cardinals' locker
room Sunday, fullback Terrelle Smith walked by
with a grin on his face.
"Who is that over there?" he said.
It was a valid question.
Before Sunday's 31-21 victory over the Seattle
Seahawks, James had become the invisible man. He had
just 11 rushing attempts in the Cardinals' previous
eight games, and he didn't carry the ball a single time
in three of those games.
It seemed a foregone conclusion that James would be
little more than a cheerleader as the Cardinals wrapped
up their season.
But that all changed Sunday. Given a chance by coach
Ken Whisenhunt, James responded with 100 yards on 14
carries and, in the process, likely reclaimed the
starting job he had lost to rookie Tim Hightower.
Whisenhunt wouldn't confirm James' reemergence as the
starter, but it seems inevitable. Hightower had just
three carries for three yards, while James ran with
power and speed, breaking off a 35-yard run in the
fourth quarter that was the longest gain by a Cardinal
this season and the longest of his Cardinals career.
Whisenhunt said he went with James because he thought
his experience in late-season and playoff games would
be helpful.
"We said early in the season we were going to need him
at some point," Whisenhunt said. "Give him credit, he
worked and he did a good job today."
One Cardinal who was happy to see James was quarterback
Kurt Warner.
"He's seeing things, getting us an energy in the
running game that we haven't had in a while," Warner
said. "I think he is going to pay some big dividends
for us down the road."
James, who was told early in the week by running backs
coach Maurice Carthon that he would start, said he
wasn't out to show anyone inside or outside the
organization that he still had it. He just wanted to do
what he's done throughout his 10-year career.
"I train to be somebody who hits the RBI and keeps
people on base," he said. " ... I hate to lose yards. I
just want to keep moving forward. At the end of the
day, you're going to have big days."
Other than requesting a trade, James had made little
noise since Hightower replaced him in the starting
lineup against St. Louis on Nov. 2.
"My family has gotten in trouble because they've always
reacted," he said. " ... I think it would have been
embarrassing to my mama to if I acted up and behaved
badly. That is what I didn't want to do - become a
distraction."
James not only re-established himself as Arizona's
primary back, he moved past Thurman Thomas and Franco
Harris into 11th place among all-time rushers.
"That's big for me," said James, who also had his 57th
career 100-yard game. "The first day I stepped onto the
football field, I wanted to be one of the best backs to
play this game."
(eastvalleytribune.com)