A day after rookie Tim
Hightower ran for 109 yards in his first NFL start
and former Pro Bowl running back Edgerrin James
was relegated to the bench without playing a down,
Cardinals coach Ken Whisenhunt emphasized James
“is a valuable part of this team.”
Left unsaid was what that means on a tangible level.
Not surprisingly, most of the questions to start off
Whisenhunt’s Monday press conference were about
the status of the veteran James after his benching in a
34-13 win in St. Louis.
Whisenhunt said James will get chances to carry the
ball and “we are going to need Edge.”
It was clear, however, that James’ most important
role at this point will be insurance in case of any
injury to Hightower. James does not play special teams,
so when he doesn’t play running back – as
in Sunday’s game – he takes up a valuable
roster spot.
But even with J.J. Arrington making plays as a runner
himself (62 yards on six carries against the Rams), the
Cards will need James should Hightower go down. For
that reason, Whisenhunt said he doesn’t see a
reason James would be made inactive on game days.
Bigger picture, Whisenhunt said it’s up to the
player to handle such a demotion and not let it affect
the team. He pointed to the way veteran Jerome Bettis
dealt with his lesser role in Pittsburgh while
Whisenhunt coached there, at the point where Willie
Parker became the featured back.
“A lot of that is the responsibility of the
player and how he deals with it,” Whisenhunt
said. “Edge has tremendous credentials,
he’s been an important part of this team and he
still is.
“For us to win … the thing that has to be
the most important in our players’ minds is the
team. I’ve seen tremendous signs of that. They
understand we will need everybody.”
Of course, by the time Parker burst on the scene,
Bettis was already thinking retirement and dearly
wanted a Super Bowl ring first. Bettis had also been
losing carries to Duce Staley or Amos Zeroue the
previous few seasons.
James wants a ring, but he clearly does not see himself
as at the end of his career and has been the workhorse
back every year since arriving in the NFL. At the same
time, James – who, like all players was off
Monday and unavailable – did not sound like he
was looking to undermine the team even after watching
healthy from the sideline for the first time in his
career.
“They can sit me down for the rest of the
year,” James said after the Rams’ game.
“I’ll (still) come out and go to
work.”
Whisenhunt repeated a couple of times there are
situations for which James would be the best player
– the coach was not specific what those would be
– and cautioned Hightower had not yet
“arrived.”
Offensive coordinator Todd Haley pointed out that
Hightower had too many negative runs. Hightower had
four such runs against the Rams for a total of 14 yards
in losses.
But Hightower also had four runs of at least 15 yards
(and one wiped out because of a penalty). In his 2? seasons in Arizona, James had just 14 runs of at least
15 yards (in 769 rushing attempts). Ultimately, that
bigger-play ability put Hightower into the lineup
– and got James removed.
“I believe guys are given opportunities when they
earn it and you’re judging it on how they do on
the field,” Whisenhunt said. “If you hold
true to those decisions, by and large you will make the
right decisions. That is what has guided me, guided us,
since we have been here.”
(azcardinals.com)