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USA Today Sports Media Group
USA Today Sports Media Group
Sport
Curt Popejoy

Steelers RB Najee Harris likes the idea of a running back union

In recent years, the running back position has become seriously devalued in the NFL. With the push toward more passing in the league and the success of late-round and undrafted players, the market for marquee running backs has nosedived.

This is something Pittsburgh Steelers running back Najee Harris recognizes and seems willing to take some radical measures to fix. Fellow RB Mark Ingram suggested that NFL running backs should consider forming their own union in order to secure better contracts and make the money they believe they deserve. That’s a move Harris is on board with.

“I mean, I’m open to it,” Harris said. “I’m not trying to go into the details of what to do. I’m just saying I understand what they’re saying.”

While I can appreciate what Ingram, Harris and others are saying, it’s hard to imagine anything like this ever happening. The reality is the NFL is a league driven by money and people tune in to see 35-28 games with lots of offense, no 10-7 slugfests.

Harris’ situation in Pittsburgh is a perfect example of why backs are not getting the same amount of attention and money they feel they deserve. Harris’ backup is Jaylen Warren, an undrafted player who has proved to be starter-quality. Harris’ salary cap hit in 2023 is $3.56 million, and Warren’s is $870,000. If a team can make that swap every few years without a significant drop in production, they will continue to do it.

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