Edgerrin James has had to
navigate some treacherous terrain in his career,
but never in territory that felt this unfamiliar.
Call it the land of aging running backs who feel
they're being phased out for younger, shinier models.
In the Cardinals' case, that model is Tim Hightower.
"It's cool with me," James said Monday when told
Hightower could get more snaps. "That's the way it was
heading, anyway."
It's not cool with him.
He's a proud man who believes he still has a lot to
offer. He's knocking at the Hall of Fame's door but
could barrel through it by adding a pair of 1,000-yard
seasons. Today, he's already 13th overall on the NFL's
all-time rushing list with 11,987 yards. Two more
1,000-plus efforts would leapfrog him to seventh.
James, 30, caused a stir last week when he told The
Republic's Kent Somers that he was frustrated by his
role in the Cardinals offense. On Monday he added that
he feels like the team has "put me in a position to
fail."
Though it's tempting to lump James into the category of
disgruntled, disruptive athlete, it wouldn't be right.
He was asked fair questions and responded with honest
answers. He didn't call the organization cheap or
clueless or any other pejorative some past Cardinals
have flung the team's way. He believes he could be used
better and, although he might not be right, he's
entitled to his opinion. This is not divisive,
split-the-team stuff. He is well liked in that locker
room, and as Anquan Boldin has shown, if you have the
respect of your teammates, what you say doesn't matter
if they still believe you'll give your heart, your
right arm, your sinus membrane or anything else for the
team.
"(What James said) isn't even talked about in here,"
Boldin said Monday. "I would expect him to say that.
He's a playmaker, a competitor, and that's just him
being competitive. He wants the ball in his hands.
What's wrong with that?"
I get that. I also get James feeling uncomfortable
Monday when questions were asked about his playing
time.
"Perception never works in my favor," he said.
Labels are a tricky thing. Dreadlocks and a
since-removed grill are about appearance, not judgment.
They make him an individualist, not a separatist.
There's a difference.
Before we get too far ahead of ourselves, Cardinals
coach Ken Whisenhunt never said Hightower was
supplanting James. He simply said Monday, when asked,
that he is open to the possibility.
"I think we've shown we're going to play with the
players that we feel give us the best chance to win,"
he said. "We've done that with the quarterbacks, we've
done that with linebacker, with the offensive line.
"At a point we feel Tim gives us the best chance to
win, then absolutely. Just don't think we'll judge it
based on just yesterday's game. It's a process."
After averaging 20 carries in the Cardinals' first
three games, James has carried nine and seven times,
respectively, in the past two.
Hightower carried seven and six in those games but has
six touchdowns overall to James' three.
The scenario is complicated by a recent offensive shift
to a pass-heavy attack. Against Carolina, the Cardinals
had 14 carries to 51 pass attempts in part because the
Panthers frequently had seven or eight players in the
box, creating situations such as one of the touchdown
passes to Boldin, when he was covered by only a
linebacker.
James is no dummy. The Cardinals aren't announcing a
shift, but it sure feels like the beginning of a
transition, and although Hightower has looked
impressive, he's a rookie. Things change.
James needs to stay on top of his game and not let the
concern about his future dictate the present. I believe
he's bigger than that.
The Cardinals need him to be.
(azcentral.com)