OWINGS MILLS -- The truth
hurts, and so does his body.
In an extremely candid interview Thursday, Baltimore
Ravens running back Willis McGahee acknowledged the
painful reality of his unproductive season punctuated
by a shaky performance during a 24-10 win over the
Washington Redskins. McGahee seemed sad about the
situation.
"I'm back to normal, but I played like doo-doo,"
McGahee said. "It's nothing to be happy about it, just
have to do better this game."
McGahee rushed for just 32 yards on 11 carries against
the Redskins, losing a fumble, dropping a pass and
bobbling a pitch that went out of bounds.
He missed practice Wednesday because of a family issue,
but returned to work Thursday and remains hopeful that
he can turn things around.
When asked if the coaching staff still believes in him,
McGahee replied: "To tell you the truth, I wouldn't. I
haven't had the best season. Right now, Le'Ron [McClain
and Ray [Rice are the hot guys. You stick with your
guns."
Since rushing for a season-high 112 rushing yards and
scoring two touchdowns against the Houston Texans he
has gained just 58 yards over the past four games. His
longest run was seven yards during that period, and he
was benched against the Cincinnati Bengals.
McGahee has rushed for just 521 yards and five
touchdowns with a 3.4 average on 152 carries. He is on
target to post career lows for rushing yards, rushing
average and carries one year removed from leading
Baltimore with 1,207 rushing yards.
His role has continued to decline as the Ravens have
emphasized a committee approach to the running game.
"It's still going to be running back by committee, we
like that," offensive coordinator Cam Cameron said. "I
think it's good for us from a game-plan standpoint.
We're not going to overreact if a guy plays really
well, and give this guy the stamp as the starter or a
guy doesn't play well and he's not going to play. Every
guy has a rough game every now and then, and we're
going to need every one of these guys down the
stretch."
McGahee has dealt with injuries to his eyes ribs and
ankle and underwent arthroscopic surgery on his left
knee in August following an offseason where he rarely
attended workouts and minicamps.
"I'm not making any excuses," McGahee said. "I made a
decision to go out there and play, and I haven't been
performing the way I can."
McGahee dismissed the notion that he's simply one long
run away from shaking out of his slump.
"I'm looking for a whole complete season, not just one
carry," he said.
Although it would be expensive for the Ravens to part
ways with McGahee after the season, he knows that this
year has raised doubts about his future status with the
organization.
"You can't pout," McGahee said. "You look at the last
performance I had, it wasn't good. You have to deal
with your medicine."
(hometownannapolis.com)