LE'VEON BELL'S
PLOY WITH STEELERS DIDN'T PAY OFF IN RB'S CONTRACT WITH JETS
Maybe Le'Veon Bell should reference that line from Harvey
MacKay whenever he's asked about his self-imposed 2018 NFL sabbatical.
Otherwise?
It certainly appears the former Steelers star wasted a prime
season of precious earning power while dragging his reputation and Pittsburgh's
Super Bowl hopes into a blast furnace.
Several Media Outlets reported early Wednesday that Bell has
agreed to join the Jets, who offered the multi-dimensional Pro
Bowler a four-year, $52.5 million deal.
So what did Bell accomplish after getting the
opportunity he'd so desperately sought to shop his wares unfettered in the free
agent market, a place where box safeties
command pacts averaging $14 million?
·
The $35 million in guarantees Bell secured
establishes a record at the running back position.
·
Relocating to a media market like the Big Apple
could be a boon to his nascent rap career.
·
And ... well ... hmmm.
·
And what did Bell sacrifice in the name of
football capitalism?
·
$14.54 million — guaranteed — to play
another season in Pittsburgh.
·
A legit shot at a Super Bowl ring ... one he'll
probably never get with the Jets, who are cap-flush but perpetually rebuilding
and still mired in a division owned by Tom Brady.
·
The goodwill of Steelers teammates, several who
clearly felt betrayed when he didn't show up last season. NFL players almost
never criticize a colleague, especially one in their own locker room, whenever
it comes to business matters. But Bell's egomania proved too much in Pittsburgh
... and don't think his new J-E-T-S teammates D-O-N-T K-N-O-W I-T.
A buzzing demand for his services. As good as Bell is —
and 129 yards per game from scrimmage for the duration of his career is historically
good — a lengthy line didn't form for a financially
obsessed 27-year-old saddled with multiple suspensions for violating the
substance-abuse policy.
And, ultimately, Bell's selfishness undermined his
self-perceived worth. His $13.1 average annual salary barely moves him ahead of
Arizona's David Johnson, who signed a new contract in 2018, and leaves him more
than $1 million shy of what Todd Gurley, who also earned an extension last
summer, is pulling down yearly.
This is the same Bell who was apparently seeking a payday in
line with wideout and former teammate Antonio Brown (speaking of hubris),
when he was raking in $17 million per season before the Raiders
agreed to sweeten the pot.
And it was just a year ago, according to NFL Network,
when Bell declined
a five-year, $70 million offer from Pittsburgh that would have
paid $30 million in the first two seasons while stripping away the uncertainty
of the franchise tag.
Now?
Bell has forfeited a generous salary, one hard to come by at
a position especially susceptible to the NFL meat grinder. He took a stand ...
to eventually accept a marginally better arrangement in terms of guarantees,
yet inferior in terms of average salary and total compensation — and worse
still when factoring inflation and time value of money.
And now Bell is teamed up with Sam Darnold, Jamison
Crowder and Robby Anderson instead of Ben Roethlisberger, (maybe)
Brown, JuJu Smith-Schuster and James Conner, who could have spared him
those harder yards ... which is to say Bell will get the opportunity to
get close and personal with those extra defenders packed into the
box whenever he crashes into the line or takes a pass in the flat.
It's probably appropriate here to cite another memorable
quote.
"Be careful what you wish for — you just might get
it."
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