He came to the desert,
flashed that bright smile of his, and we were
hooked.
The Cardinals signed Edgerrin James? Are you kidding?
But it wasn't a joke. The Bidwills were about to move
into their new stadium and they were putting their
money where their luxury suites were, signing James to
a four-year, $30 million contract.
It was heralded as the most significant free-agent
signing in franchise history, and who could argue?
James was a four-time Pro Bowl selection, the yin to
Peyton Manning's yang in Indianapolis.
He was a symbol of hope and a promise of better days
ahead.
"We're serious about winning," vice president Michael
Bidwill said.
Thirty months have passed. The Cardinals are still
serious, but James no longer is the front man, the face
of the franchise. Instead, he has become an
afterthought, the commercial pause while Kurt Warner,
Larry Fitzgerald and Anquan Boldin catch their breath.
James' skills haven't completely eroded. He had 93
yards Sunday - averaging 5.2 yards per carry - and he's
on pace to rush for 1,321 yards, which would be his
most since 2005, his final season in Indianapolis.
But James isn't having the kind of impact - either on a
Sunday afternoon or over the course of the season -
you'd expect from a $30 million player.
Last year, James' longest run from scrimmage was 27
yards. His longest gain this year is 16 yards, making
him the only back in the top 10 in rushing who doesn't
have a carry of at least 20 yards.
To be fair, James never was a home run threat. His
longest run over his last six seasons in Indianapolis
was 43 yards.
But he seems to have reached the point of his career
where defenses no longer fear him.
Some of that is beyond James' control. One of the
reasons he was so effective with the Colts is that he
was playing with Manning, Marvin Harrison and Reggie
Wayne and behind a good offensive line. Defenses were
preoccupied with Indianapolis' passing attack, which
gave James room to run.
In addition, the Cardinals haven't made James a focal
point of their offense. He no longer carries the ball
in goal-line situations - rookie Tim Hightower has both
of Arizona's rushing touchdowns - and he rarely has the
ball thrown to him.
James, 30, caught a combined 207 passes in his final
four years in Indianapolis. But he had just 27
receptions last season, and he's caught only three
balls this year.
Here's the thing, though: If James were still one of
the NFL's best backs, wouldn't the Cardinals make it a
point of emphasis to get the ball in his hands?
No, the truth is, James has lost just enough bounce in
his step that he's become an average back.
The Cardinals know it. The team considered waiving
James after last season, but only if it could acquire a
younger, every-down back.
There's already talk, after three games, that Arizona
needs to give Hightower more carries because he has the
explosiveness James lacks.
James isn't going to disappear. Barring injury, he'll
carry the ball 300 times or so and rush for more than
1,000 yards.
But the running back who once represented everything
the Cardinals were going to be has become a supporting
actor.
And when James' days do end here - his contract runs
through 2009 - he likely won't be remembered for the
yards he gained, the passes he caught or the touchdowns
he scored.
He'll be defined, instead, by what the Cardinals did in
the first round of the 2007 draft.
Content with James, they took Penn State tackle Levi
Brown with the fifth overall pick.
And passed on Adrian Peterson.
(eastvalleytribune.com)