Beanie Wells more Mr. Hyde than Dr. Jekyll

Arizona Cardinals running back Beanie Wells (26) runs past Oakland Raiders cornerback DeMarcus Van Dyke (38) in the first quarter of an NFL preseason football game in Oakland, Calif., Thursday, Aug. 11, 2011. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)
Arizona Cardinals running back Beanie Wells (26) runs past Oakland Raiders cornerback DeMarcus Van Dyke (38) in the first quarter of an NFL preseason football game in Oakland, Calif., Thursday, Aug. 11, 2011. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)
Beanie Wells is close to becoming a monster. Watching him run last week in Green Bay made me think of Mr. Hyde, not the benevolent Dr. Jekyll. Beanie ran with bad intentions, dare I say malice. AJ Hawk found that out the hard way and so did some other unsuspecting Packers defenders.

I want to see more. I want to see Beanie paint his face, scream and drive a metaphorical spear through open-field tacklers. I want to see Beanie lower the pads and lower the boom. I want to see Beanie get his pad-level down and force tacklers to dig in or suffer the consequences for their insolence. I want to see Beanie become a "Bad Man," as my mother would say, a man that smoked filterless cigarettes and bloodied his knuckles on the faces of all that would oppose him. I want to see Beanie Wells accept what he must become in order to realize all that God has given him. I want Beanie Wells to mature and accept the mantle of responsibility his talents demand.

And the best thing is Beanie Wells seems to want this too.

Ryan Williams seemed to be "pushing" Beanie, spurring him on in pursuit of fulfilling the potential that oozes from his pores. But Ryan Williams will not be around in 2011 to dig the spurs in Beanie's ribs. And truth be told, I don't think Beanie had to be spurred. I think Beanie understood what was going to be expected from him this fall; I think he used these expectations to fuel his constitution the way a bull laps at a spring of running water. Beanie Wells came to camp heavier (230) than he has ever been when wearing Big Red; yet many of us, including myself, believed he looked lighter, more explosive, quicker.

Beanie trained like a Bad Man, minus the smokes. He knows this is his third-season and running backs come with an expiration date. The clock is ticking on Beanie and if he's ever going to be what the Cards, NFL and Wells Clan thought he was going to be the time is now.

Beanie showed great promise his rookie season. He carried the ball 176 times, averaged 4.5-yards/carry and hit paydirt 7 times. These were impressive numbers but the number that stood out to me most was 16: he played in every game his rookie season. And that number silenced a lot of Beanie Wells' critics.

His second-year would be very different from his first. He missed three-games, fought injuries, averaged 3.4-yards/carry, scored twice and looked like a man that wasn't ready for prime-time. The whispers started and some of the pundits pointed their spiny, ruddy finger an howled, "I told you so."

This is the end. From where I'm sitting, this is the year Beanie exerts his dominance over the running-back position within the organization and turns the rest of the league into his personal playground.

Or he doesn't...

The early returns look promising. Beanie is running the football with authority, ownership and authenticity. The "Authentic Beanie" must continue to show this kind of passion and consistency. He must make its essence part of who he is and what he must become on Sunday. Beanie must acknowledge what he is: a rare back with size, strength, speed and a passion that must come from a spring as rare as his talent. As Edgar Allen Poe would write in his classic poem, Alone:

From childhood's hour I have not been
As others were; I have not seen
As others saw; I could not bring
My passions from a common spring.

Beanie's the only one that can change the way he approaches the game. He must go through this transformation Alone.

Let's hope "Beanie's Spring" is the same stuff in Dr. Jekyll's beaker.

Ron Wolfley co-hosts Doug & Wolf, 2-6 p.m. weekdays on Arizona Sports 620. He can be reached with your questions and comments by e-mail here and can follow him on Twitter @Wolf620. All of Ron Wolfley's past columns.

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  • Beanie Wells
    Heat City Trailer Trash (August 24, 2011 11:24 am)
    He needs to lower the pads at the point of impact. It's obvious that he is standing up, especially at the goal line. I have never been impressed by him, but let's see what happens. I admit I was a fan of Hightower.
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  • Injury prone
    sundevil7901 (August 24, 2011 12:52 pm)
    Because of his injuries, and perhaps to an extent the Cardinals being very careful with how they use him, I feel like we still haven't seen Beanie unleashed.If it doesn't happen this year, it's never going to happen. Still, I am optimistic.
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  • Nice article
    JPY19 (August 24, 2011 3:16 pm)
    Ron I must admit I like your articles more than your show, but the show is great. I think that this is a make or break year for Beanie. I would like to see him run like he did in New York and Chicago his rookie year.
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  • Beans
    Patrick Peterson's Talent (August 24, 2011 4:43 pm)
    I'm tired of people saying Beanie is injury prone. He missed 3 games in college and played in all his games his rookie year! Anyone who is a true fan and has watched Beanie this year, they know to buckle up because this is going to be one fun ride. Did you see him wave his finger in Nick Collins' face when he ran him over last week?? He looked absolutely nasty, and if he had kept playing, he would have worn that defense down to a pulp. So, hop on in everyone, there's plenty of room on The Bandwagon. If you aren't on now, I'll save you a spot.
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  • I concur
    FitzIsMyHero (August 24, 2011 7:57 pm)
    But he needs to protect himself. He's a battering RAM. Beanie needs some support now that Williams is out. Who's gna step up??????
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  • You're not alone Wolf
    Think4URself (August 25, 2011 9:45 am)
    Well said. I too, have been waiting for this kid to mature and become a beast. The transformation may have taken place in his body (gaining wieght - losing baby fat) but is his mind right? With maturity comes actualization. If and when Beanie understands that it is his mindset that seperates him from greatness and he performs as a self-actualized alpha - will his game be elevated. Without it, he will continue to be mediocre (in NFL terms). But, only time will tell.
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  • who's next
    Thomas S. (August 25, 2011 5:09 pm)
    Its too early to know what will happen this year...sure beanie is running good but against vanilla defenses afterall its only preseason. Prior to his season ending injury, I predicted ryan williams being the featured back by week six. You said it right the clock is ticking and it may not be long til we say "who's next ??"
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  • Miss you already!
    chrisly (August 29, 2011 8:09 am)
    1st Monday morning with no Wolf & Cardinals talk. Super bummed. Not sure how the move to the afternoon drive time suits you but the morning is worse for it. Need Cardinals talk on Monday mornings!
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  • Power backs need the ball
    Elvis13 (August 30, 2011 10:11 pm)
    Beanie needs the ball. Whiz held him back too much as a rookie (as did Beanie's blocking and fumbling), and last year he lived up to the "injury-prone" tag. He needs the ball 20-25 times; all dependent on the Cards line to not suck again, the Cards not getting down by 2 TD's before half time, and Beannie to run with disregard for human life. Earl Campbell and Eddie George (not fair to those guys, as Beanie is not in their league) killed teams in the second half on carries #16-25. Beanie needs those first 15 as well before we will REALLY know what he can do.
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