BEREA, Ohio (AP) – His back should be sore. Same goes for his head, shoulders, biceps, forearms, hips, knees, calves and every other part of Peyton Hillis’ muscle-bound body.
Carrying the Cleveland Browns hasn’t been easy.
Hillis, though, insists he’s not hurting.
“I’m fine,” he said. “I feel great. It is a long season and it’s tough on your body, but I think my body’s holding up well.”
You’d like to believe Hillis. After all, he’s a straight shooter, never one to exaggerate or make excuses. But his extra workload this season appears to have taken a toll on the 24-year-old workhorse, who missed practice Wednesday to rest an unspecified injury.
Hillis has been the Browns’ runaway MVP. There’s no one even in the conversation to challenge Cleveland’s hard-charging back. He leads the team in rushing and receiving, and among the league’s top running backs he’s ranked in the top 5 in points, first downs, receptions, rushing touchdowns and yards from scrimmage.
He’s been a workhorse. But maybe an overworked horse.
Hillis has had the ball 311 times, with 252 rushing attempts and 59 receptions. However, those statistics don’t reflect the punishment he has absorbed over 14 games as Cleveland’s primary back. He’s on the field all the time, rarely getting a break.
Before this season, he had just 88 career carries and 19 catches in two years with Denver.
If he’s worn out, it would be understandable.
“I don’t get the sense that that’s the case,” Browns coach Eric Mangini said. “I’m sure it’s totally different for him to have this kind of work but he’s one of the most well conditioned guys that I’ve been around. I think he relishes every chance he gets.”
On Sunday, Hillis will get his second crack at Baltimore’s vaunted defense. He ran for 144 yards and caught seven passes against the Ravens earlier this season, a performance that began his rise to cult status with Browns fans and exposed him to a league that knew little about him.
“I never heard of him before he went for 140,” said Ravens linebacker Terrell Suggs. “He broke a couple of runs. He had a great day on us.”
He’ll likely need another one for the Browns (5-9) to have any shot at upsetting the Ravens (10-4), who can clinch an AFC playoff berth with a win. Hillis has become a marked man, with opposing defenses stacking eight and nine players near the line of scrimmage to stop him.
Baltimore’s seven-man front is as good as they come, and Hillis knows he made a lasting impression on the Ravens in their first meeting. They may have underestimated Hillis once. Ray Lewis and crew don’t usually make the same mistake twice.
“No one has run the ball on us like that, not to that extent,” Ravens coach John Harbaugh said. “I just think he’s really good. They have a very physical offensive line, it’s a downhill running attack that complements Peyton very well, and that’s going to be tough for anybody to handle. We certainly didn’t handle it very well the last time we played.”
One of Cleveland’s biggest issues – and the Browns have had a long list of them – in losing at Buffalo and Cincinnati the past two weeks has been an inability to convert in short-yardage situations.
On their opening drive against the Bills, the Browns ran Hillis all the way down field, but couldn’t score from inside the 5-yard line and had to settle for a field goal. Last week against the Bengals, the Browns couldn’t punch it in from close in the fourth quarter and again had to take three points instead of six.
Part of the problem is that teams know what’s coming. The Browns have become predictable. If Hillis is in the backfield, he’s probably getting the ball.
No excuse, said Hillis.
“No matter what play it is, we should get one yard,” he said. “It doesn’t matter what play we run, and we run different plays, we should get that yard.”
Refreshingly humble, Hillis, who came over in a one-sided trade from Denver, never puts himself above his teammates. However, this might be the time to get a little selfish since this week’s game will be his last opportunity to impress Pro Bowl voters.
Balloting ends next week, and Hillis was asked to calculate his chances.
“Slim to none,” he said. “There’s a lot of good backs out there that have done just as good or better than I have.”
But there may not be one who has meant as much to his team.
Hillis has the bruises to prove it.
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