For more debate:
Link to RMN article today on Bell
Boastful Bell backs up talk
After saying he'll win No. 1 job, back has breakout game
By Lee Rasizer, Rocky Mountain News
October 11, 2005
ENGLEWOOD - Tatum Bell was standing by his locker at Dove Valley talking with a reporter last week when he uttered a pronouncement off the cuff, but no less heartfelt: Give him a couple weeks and he would be the starting running back for the Denver Broncos.
Bell might prove prescient soon enough.
The speedy second-year pro's 127-yard performance on 12 carries against the Washington Redskins on Sunday included nifty touchdown runs of 34 and 55 yards.
The effort might not yet be enough to displace Mike Anderson, but it's difficult to ignore the fact that Bell's 6.2-yards-a-carry average is the league's best among running backs with more than 15 carries.
That big-play dimension has been lacking for the Broncos' 21st-ranked offense during their 4-1 start.
Bell wasn't about to back off his pregame prediction Monday.
"What week is this coming up?" he asked. "Week 6? Like I said, by Week 6, 7, or at the latest Week 8, I'll be the starter."
It isn't bragging if it can't be backed up.
........
"Give me at least 10 carries and I'll be happy," Bell said. "As long as I get 60, 70 or 80 yards or the long touchdowns and get 10 carries and can be productive, that's cool with me - and do what I've got to do on special teams. As long as I help either way, I ain't trippin'. "
That shouldn't be construed as meaning the starting job is unimportant to Bell. He ranked fourth in the NFL among rookies with 396 yards on 75 attempts last season but hasn't started in the Broncos backfield. Reuben Droughns was the starter for most of last season, and Anderson's strong off-season kept him atop that perch in 2005.
"I don't think he has anything against Mike or anything because Mike's shown each and every one of those guys the ropes. It's just Tatum's confidence," Broncos right tackle George Foster said.
"And he should have that kind of confidence."
The public pronouncement won't come as a surprise to Anderson because he repeatedly has been told by Bell he's angling to take his job.
The veteran merely laughed off Bell's boasts and has been able to answer every one of the young player's challenges on the field.
"He's like, 'Whatever. Same old. Same old,' " Bell said. "I tell all the backs the same thing. They know. It just makes us work harder."