
| Browns counting on Colt | |
BEREA(AP) — Colt McCoy wears No. 12. For the Cleveland Browns, he’s also No. 10. It’s a number they’d like to stay stuck on. On Sunday against Cincinnati, McCoy will become the 10th different quarterback to start a season opener for the Browns since 1999, an astonishing statistic and perhaps the single biggest reason the franchise has failed miserably during an expansion era of losses. McCoy follows Ty Detmer, Tim Couch, Kelly Holcomb, Jeff Garcia, Trent Dilfer, Charlie Frye, Derek Anderson, Brady Quinn and Jake Delhomme as quarterbacks to begin the year as Cleveland’s starter. “I hope it stays like this for a while,” McCoy said Wednesday. In the NFL, quarterback consistency is vital to success. With a revolving door at the game’s most important position, it’s no wonder the Browns have only made the playoffs once and lost at least 10 games nine times in 12 years. Cleveland has been searching for a leader to guide them from the dismal darkness and back to respectability. McCoy, who showed grit and toughness in eight starts in 2010, just might be the one. And this season, anyway, he’ll get the chance to succeed or fail. McCoy’s rise from third-round draft pick to starter happened quickly. Rewind to last season’s opener. The former Texas star was a raw, out-of-sight, out-of-mind rookie running Cleveland’s scout team in practice. While Delhomme and backup Seneca Wallace took all the snaps, McCoy stood to the side waiting and wondering if his time would ever come. Buried on the depth chart, McCoy was inactive when the Browns traveled to Tampa Bay in Week 1. But things changed in a hurry. Delhomme severely sprained his ankle against the Buccaneers, Wallace went down with same injury in Week 5, and suddenly McCoy was thrust into a starting role few believed he was ready to handle. “He was kind of thrown into the fire,” Browns first-year coach Pat Shurmur said. His personal inferno began in Pittsburgh, where McCoy made his first career start against the Steelers and in front of their Terrible Towel-waving fans. The night before the game, McCoy stood up at a meeting and told his teammates not to worry, he was ready to handle the job. Browns cornerback Sheldon Brown feared for McCoy. “I thought, this poor kid,” Brown said. “I hope he’s praying.” But McCoy proved he belonged, completing 23 of 33 passes for 281 yards despite being sacked five times and pressured numerous others. It was there, at the confluence of Pittsburgh’s three rivers that many of Cleveland’s players became convinced they had found their leader. “He wasn’t scared,” Brown said. “That’s one of the toughest defenses in the National Football League and he went in there and he held his own.” Then we put him in there against New Orleans, New England. Go back to some of the games he played and you look at his aura on the field and his demeanor, you just know that if you surround him with the players that can make plays for him — he’s not going to turn the ball over, he’s going to make the correct reads and the better part is, if he makes those mistakes, he’ll work his tail off to fix it. “That’s when you know you have a guy.” Shurmur thinks so, too. Cleveland’s fifth coach since ’99, Shurmur has been impressed with everything about McCoy. During the labor lockout, it was McCoy who organized practices in Austin, Texas. At those workouts, dubbed “Camp Colts” by his teammates, McCoy and the Browns took their first initial steps in learning Shurmur’s West Coast offense, a passer friendly system the team feels perfectly suits McCoy’s accurate — if not strong — right arm. McCoy also took it upon himself to visit Brett Favre, hoping a few days in Mississippi picking the brain of the former league MVP would help him better understand the new offense. McCoy came to camp prepared and then played extremely well in Cleveland’s three exhibition games. “He basically did what we wanted and now the next step is to do it for 60 minutes in a regular-season game,” Shurmur said. “He has been passing the tests as we’ve gone along, and Sunday will be the next test.” McCoy has done his homework. “Now is where it counts,” he said. Composed whether he’s calling a play in the huddle, facing a blitz or surrounded by cameras at his locker, McCoy insists he’s not feeling any added pressure as he embarks on his second season as a pro. A coach’s son, this is what he’s been groomed to do since he was a kid. Now is when the fun starts. “I’ve come a long ways,” McCoy said. “But I’ve still got plenty of work to do, no question. This team is ready to start, ready for the regular season. This is where it starts counting. For us, we’ve put in a lot of hours, a lot of time. We’ve worked hard together, now I think we kind of know some of the things we’re good at, some of the things we’re not as good at. Those things we’ll keep working on. But I think we’re ready to put a plan together and go see what happens.” Notes: The Browns have some offensive line issues to resolve in the next few days. Starting right tackle Tony Pashos didn’t practice and still has a walking boot on his left foot. Also, Shurmur hasn’t decided whether he’ll start rookie Jason Pinkston at left guard. … TE Ben Watson, LB Chris Gocong and S Usama Young returned to practice on a limited basis. … WR Greg Little was chosen winner of the Maurice Bassett Award, given annually by the media to the top first-year player in training camp. … On Sunday, McCoy will square off with Bengals rookie QB Andy Dalton. They played each other in college when McCoy was at Texas and Dalton at TCU. McCoy only remembered a few details of their previous meeting. “They came to us,” McCoy said, “and we beat ’em pretty bad.”
Leave your comments on the news below. Posted in 1, bengals-news, Brady Quinn, Brett Favre, Charlie Frye, Chris Gocong, Cleveland Browns, Colt McCoy, Derek Anderson, Jake Delhomme, Seneca Wallace, Sheldon Brown, Tony Pashos | Comments Off
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| Browns counting on quarterback Colt McCoy to build… | |
BEREA, Ohio – Colt McCoy wears No. 12. For the Cleveland Browns, he’s also No. 10. It’s a number they’d like to stay stuck on. On Sunday against Cincinnati, McCoy will become the 10th different quarterback to start a season opener for the Browns since 1999, an astonishing statistic and perhaps the single biggest reason the franchise has failed miserably during an expansion era of losses. McCoy follows Ty Detmer, Tim Couch, Kelly Holcomb, Jeff Garcia, Trent Dilfer, Charlie Frye, Derek Anderson, Brady Quinn and Jake Delhomme as quarterbacks to begin the year as Cleveland’s starter. “I hope it stays like this for a while,” McCoy said Wednesday. In the NFL, quarterback consistency is vital to success. With a revolving door at the game’s most important position, it’s no wonder the Browns have only made the playoffs once and lost at least 10 games nine times in 12 years. Cleveland has been searching for a leader to guide them from the dismal darkness and back to respectability. McCoy, who showed grit and toughness in eight starts in 2010, just might be the one. And this season, anyway, he’ll get the chance to succeed or fail. McCoy’s rise from third-round draft pick to starter happened quickly. Rewind to last season’s opener. The former Texas star was a raw, out-of-sight, out-of-mind rookie running Cleveland’s scout team in practice. While Delhomme and backup Seneca Wallace took all the snaps, McCoy stood to the side waiting and wondering if his time would ever come. Buried on the depth chart, McCoy was inactive when the Browns travelled to Tampa Bay in Week 1. But things changed in a hurry. Delhomme severely sprained his ankle against the Buccaneers, Wallace went down with same injury in Week 5, and suddenly McCoy was thrust into a starting role few believed he was ready to handle. “He was kind of thrown into the fire,” Browns first-year coach Pat Shurmur said. His personal inferno began in Pittsburgh, where McCoy made his first career start against the Steelers and in front of their Terrible Towel-waving fans. The night before the game, McCoy stood up at a meeting and told his teammates not to worry, he was ready to handle the job. Browns cornerback Sheldon Brown feared for McCoy. “I thought, this poor kid,” Brown said. “I hope he’s praying.” But McCoy proved he belonged, completing 23 of 33 passes for 281 yards despite being sacked five times and pressured numerous others. It was there, at the confluence of Pittsburgh’s three rivers that many of Cleveland’s players became convinced they had found their leader — at last. “He wasn’t scared,” Brown said. “That’s one of the toughest defences in the National Football League and he went in there and he held his own. Then we put him in there against New Orleans, New England. Go back to some of the games he played and you look at his aura on the field and his demeanour, you just know that if you surround him with the players that can make plays for him — he’s not going to turn the ball over, he’s going to make the correct reads and the better part is, if he makes those mistakes, he’ll work his tail off to fix it. “That’s when you know you have a guy.” Shurmur thinks so, too. Cleveland’s fifth coach since ’99, Shurmur has been impressed with everything about McCoy. During the labour lockout, it was McCoy who organized practices in Austin, Texas. At those workouts, dubbed “Camp Colts” by his teammates, McCoy and the Browns took their first initial steps in learning Shurmur’s West Coast offence, a passer friendly system the team feels perfectly suits McCoy’s accurate — if not strong — right arm. McCoy also took it upon himself to visit Brett Favre, hoping a few days in Mississippi picking the brain of the former league MVP would help him better understand the new offence. McCoy came to camp prepared and then played extremely well in Cleveland’s three exhibition games. “He basically did what we wanted and now the next step is to do it for 60 minutes in a regular-season game,” Shurmur said. “He has been passing the tests as we’ve gone along, and Sunday will be the next test.” McCoy has done his homework. “Now is where it counts,” he said. Composed whether he’s calling a play in the huddle, facing a blitz or surrounded by cameras at his locker, McCoy insists he’s not feeling any added pressure as he embarks on his second season as a pro. A coach’s son, this is what he’s been groomed to do since he was a kid. Now is when the fun starts. “I’ve come a long ways,” McCoy said. “But I’ve still got plenty of work to do, no question. This team is ready to start, ready for the regular season. This is where it starts counting. For us, we’ve put in a lot of hours, a lot of time. We’ve worked hard together, now I think we kind of know some of the things we’re good at, some of the things we’re not as good at. Those things we’ll keep working on. But I think we’re ready to put a plan together and go see what happens.” Notes: The Browns have some offensive line issues to resolve in the next few days. Starting right tackle Tony Pashos didn’t practice and still has a walking boot on his left foot. Also, Shurmur hasn’t decided whether he’ll start rookie Jason Pinkston at left guard. … TE Ben Watson, LB Chris Gocong and S Usama Young returned to practice on a limited basis. … WR Greg Little was chosen winner of the Maurice Bassett Award, given annually by the media to the top first-year player in training camp. … On Sunday, McCoy will square off with Bengals rookie QB Andy Dalton. They played each other in college when McCoy was at Texas and Dalton at TCU. McCoy only remembered a few details of their previous meeting. “They came to us,” McCoy said, “and we beat ‘em pretty bad.” Thanks for visiting our blog =). Posted in 1, bengals-news, Brady Quinn, Brett Favre, Charlie Frye, Chris Gocong, Cleveland Browns, Colt McCoy, Derek Anderson, Jake Delhomme, Seneca Wallace, Sheldon Brown, Tony Pashos | Comments Off
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| National Sports More>> | |
By TOM WITHERS
AP Sports Writer BEREA, Ohio (AP) – Colt McCoy wears No. 12. For the Cleveland Browns, he’s also No. 10. It’s a number they’d like to stay stuck on. On Sunday against Cincinnati, McCoy will become the 10th different quarterback to start a season opener for the Browns since 1999, an astonishing statistic and perhaps the single biggest reason the franchise has failed miserably during an expansion era of losses. McCoy follows Ty Detmer, Tim Couch, Kelly Holcomb, Jeff Garcia, Trent Dilfer, Charlie Frye, Derek Anderson, Brady Quinn and Jake Delhomme as quarterbacks to begin the year as Cleveland’s starter. “I hope it stays like this for a while,” McCoy said Wednesday. In the NFL, quarterback consistency is vital to success. With a revolving door at the game’s most important position, it’s no wonder the Browns have only made the playoffs once and lost at least 10 games nine times in 12 years. Cleveland has been searching for a leader to guide them from the dismal darkness and back to respectability. McCoy, who showed grit and toughness in eight starts in 2010, just might be the one. And this season, anyway, he’ll get the chance to succeed or fail. McCoy’s rise from third-round draft pick to starter happened quickly. Rewind to last season’s opener. The former Texas star was a raw, out-of-sight, out-of-mind rookie running Cleveland’s scout team in practice. While Delhomme and backup Seneca Wallace took all the snaps, McCoy stood to the side waiting and wondering if his time would ever come. Buried on the depth chart, McCoy was inactive when the Browns traveled to Tampa Bay in Week 1. But things changed in a hurry. Delhomme severely sprained his ankle against the Buccaneers, Wallace went down with same injury in Week 5, and suddenly McCoy was thrust into a starting role few believed he was ready to handle. “He was kind of thrown into the fire,” Browns first-year coach Pat Shurmur said. His personal inferno began in Pittsburgh, where McCoy made his first career start against the Steelers and in front of their Terrible Towel-waving fans. The night before the game, McCoy stood up at a meeting and told his teammates not to worry, he was ready to handle the job. Browns cornerback Sheldon Brown feared for McCoy. “I thought, this poor kid,” Brown said. “I hope he’s praying.” But McCoy proved he belonged, completing 23 of 33 passes for 281 yards despite being sacked five times and pressured numerous others. It was there, at the confluence of Pittsburgh’s three rivers that many of Cleveland’s players became convinced they had found their leader – at last. “He wasn’t scared,” Brown said. “That’s one of the toughest defenses in the National Football League and he went in there and he held his own. Then we put him in there against New Orleans, New England. Go back to some of the games he played and you look at his aura on the field and his demeanor, you just know that if you surround him with the players that can make plays for him – he’s not going to turn the ball over, he’s going to make the correct reads and the better part is, if he makes those mistakes, he’ll work his tail off to fix it. “That’s when you know you have a guy.” Shurmur thinks so, too. Cleveland’s fifth coach since ’99, Shurmur has been impressed with everything about McCoy. During the labor lockout, it was McCoy who organized practices in Austin, Texas. At those workouts, dubbed “Camp Colts” by his teammates, McCoy and the Browns took their first initial steps in learning Shurmur’s West Coast offense, a passer friendly system the team feels perfectly suits McCoy’s accurate – if not strong – right arm. McCoy also took it upon himself to visit Brett Favre, hoping a few days in Mississippi picking the brain of the former league MVP would help him better understand the new offense. McCoy came to camp prepared and then played extremely well in Cleveland’s three exhibition games. “He basically did what we wanted and now the next step is to do it for 60 minutes in a regular-season game,” Shurmur said. “He has been passing the tests as we’ve gone along, and Sunday will be the next test.” McCoy has done his homework. “Now is where it counts,” he said. Composed whether he’s calling a play in the huddle, facing a blitz or surrounded by cameras at his locker, McCoy insists he’s not feeling any added pressure as he embarks on his second season as a pro. A coach’s son, this is what he’s been groomed to do since he was a kid. Now is when the fun starts. “I’ve come a long ways,” McCoy said. “But I’ve still got plenty of work to do, no question. This team is ready to start, ready for the regular season. This is where it starts counting. For us, we’ve put in a lot of hours, a lot of time. We’ve worked hard together, now I think we kind of know some of the things we’re good at, some of the things we’re not as good at. Those things we’ll keep working on. But I think we’re ready to put a plan together and go see what happens.” Notes: The Browns have some offensive line issues to resolve in the next few days. Starting right tackle Tony Pashos didn’t practice and still has a walking boot on his left foot. Also, Shurmur hasn’t decided whether he’ll start rookie Jason Pinkston at left guard. … TE Ben Watson, LB Chris Gocong and S Usama Young returned to practice on a limited basis. … WR Greg Little was chosen winner of the Maurice Bassett Award, given annually by the media to the top first-year player in training camp. … On Sunday, McCoy will square off with Bengals rookie QB Andy Dalton. They played each other in college when McCoy was at Texas and Dalton at TCU. McCoy only remembered a few details of their previous meeting. “They came to us,” McCoy said, “and we beat ‘em pretty bad.” Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Feel free to leave your comments below. Posted in 1, bengals-news, Brady Quinn, Brett Favre, Charlie Frye, Chris Gocong, Cleveland Browns, Colt McCoy, Derek Anderson, Jake Delhomme, Seneca Wallace, Sheldon Brown, Tony Pashos | Comments Off
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| Browns counting on QB Colt McCoy | |
BEREA, Ohio (AP) — Colt McCoy wears No. 12. For the Cleveland Browns, he’s also No. 10. It’s a number they’d like to stay stuck on. On Sunday against Cincinnati, McCoy will become the 10th different quarterback to start a season opener for the Browns since 1999, an astonishing statistic and perhaps the single biggest reason the franchise has failed miserably during an expansion era of losses. McCoy follows Ty Detmer, Tim Couch, Kelly Holcomb, Jeff Garcia, Trent Dilfer, Charlie Frye, Derek Anderson, Brady Quinn and Jake Delhomme as quarterbacks to begin the year as Cleveland’s starter. “I hope it stays like this for a while,” McCoy said Wednesday. In the NFL, quarterback consistency is vital to success. With a revolving door at the game’s most important position, it’s no wonder the Browns have only made the playoffs once and lost at least 10 games nine times in 12 years. Cleveland has been searching for a leader to guide them from the dismal darkness and back to respectability. McCoy, who showed grit and toughness in eight starts in 2010, just might be the one. And this season, anyway, he’ll get the chance to succeed or fail. McCoy’s rise from third-round draft pick to starter happened quickly. Rewind to last season’s opener. The former Texas star was a raw, out-of-sight, out-of-mind rookie running Cleveland’s scout team in practice. While Delhomme and backup Seneca Wallace took all the snaps, McCoy stood to the side waiting and wondering if his time would ever come. Buried on the depth chart, McCoy was inactive when the Browns traveled to Tampa Bay in Week 1. But things changed in a hurry. Delhomme severely sprained his ankle against the Buccaneers, Wallace went down with same injury in Week 5, and suddenly McCoy was thrust into a starting role few believed he was ready to handle. “He was kind of thrown into the fire,” Browns first-year coach Pat Shurmur said. His personal inferno began in Pittsburgh, where McCoy made his first career start against the Steelers and in front of their Terrible Towel-waving fans. The night before the game, McCoy stood up at a meeting and told his teammates not to worry, he was ready to handle the job. Browns cornerback Sheldon Brown feared for McCoy. “I thought, this poor kid,” Brown said. “I hope he’s praying.” But McCoy proved he belonged, completing 23 of 33 passes for 281 yards despite being sacked five times and pressured numerous others. It was there, at the confluence of Pittsburgh’s three rivers that many of Cleveland’s players became convinced they had found their leader — at last. “He wasn’t scared,” Brown said. “That’s one of the toughest defenses in the National Football League and he went in there and he held his own. Then we put him in there against New Orleans, New England. Go back to some of the games he played and you look at his aura on the field and his demeanor, you just know that if you surround him with the players that can make plays for him — he’s not going to turn the ball over, he’s going to make the correct reads and the better part is, if he makes those mistakes, he’ll work his tail off to fix it. “That’s when you know you have a guy.” Shurmur thinks so, too. Cleveland’s fifth coach since ’99, Shurmur has been impressed with everything about McCoy. During the labor lockout, it was McCoy who organized practices in Austin, Texas. At those workouts, dubbed “Camp Colts” by his teammates, McCoy and the Browns took their first initial steps in learning Shurmur’s West Coast offense, a passer friendly system the team feels perfectly suits McCoy’s accurate — if not strong — right arm. McCoy also took it upon himself to visit Brett Favre, hoping a few days in Mississippi picking the brain of the former league MVP would help him better understand the new offense. McCoy came to camp prepared and then played extremely well in Cleveland’s three exhibition games. “He basically did what we wanted and now the next step is to do it for 60 minutes in a regular-season game,” Shurmur said. “He has been passing the tests as we’ve gone along, and Sunday will be the next test.” McCoy has done his homework. “Now is where it counts,” he said. Composed whether he’s calling a play in the huddle, facing a blitz or surrounded by cameras at his locker, McCoy insists he’s not feeling any added pressure as he embarks on his second season as a pro. A coach’s son, this is what he’s been groomed to do since he was a kid. Now is when the fun starts. “I’ve come a long ways,” McCoy said. “But I’ve still got plenty of work to do, no question. This team is ready to start, ready for the regular season. This is where it starts counting. For us, we’ve put in a lot of hours, a lot of time. We’ve worked hard together, now I think we kind of know some of the things we’re good at, some of the things we’re not as good at. Those things we’ll keep working on. But I think we’re ready to put a plan together and go see what happens.” Notes: The Browns have some offensive line issues to resolve in the next few days. Starting right tackle Tony Pashos didn’t practice and still has a walking boot on his left foot. Also, Shurmur hasn’t decided whether he’ll start rookie Jason Pinkston at left guard. … TE Ben Watson, LB Chris Gocong and S Usama Young returned to practice on a limited basis. … WR Greg Little was chosen winner of the Maurice Bassett Award, given annually by the media to the top first-year player in training camp. … On Sunday, McCoy will square off with Bengals rookie QB Andy Dalton. They played each other in college when McCoy was at Texas and Dalton at TCU. McCoy only remembered a few details of their previous meeting. “They came to us,” McCoy said, “and we beat ‘em pretty bad.” That’s all for today. Posted in 1, bengals-news, Brady Quinn, Brett Favre, Charlie Frye, Chris Gocong, Cleveland Browns, Colt McCoy, Derek Anderson, Jake Delhomme, Seneca Wallace, Sheldon Brown, Tony Pashos | Comments Off
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| Browns say so long to Delhomme | |
BEREA — Quarterback Jake Delhomme has been unceremoniously released by the Cleveland Browns. A one-sentence statement by the team on Thursday announcing the expected move was quite a contrast to how Delhomme came to town a year ago. Then, the Browns welcomed Delhomme with open arms and an open bank book, giving him a two-year contract. They hoped he could help Cleveland construct its first winning season since 2007. Instead, a severely sprained right ankle in the season opener limited him to five games. He lost his starting job to rookie Colt McCoy. Delhomme became McCoy’s mentor, tutoring him in an unofficial player-coach capacity. He almost created the role, often driving the precocious passer from Texas to practice, trying to impart wisdom gained as a former Super Bowl and Pro Bowl quarterback. McCoy’s rapid development and the signing this spring of backup Seneca Wallace to a three-year deal signaled that the Browns would save paying Delhomme’s base salary of $5.4 million in 2011. Delhomme went 2-2 as Cleveland’s starter, completing 93 of 149 passes for 872 yards and two touchdowns with seven interceptions. In seven years with Carolina, he led the Panthers to the Super Bowl in 2004 and was named to the Pro Bowl in 2005. The Panthers released him after a 2009 season in which he tossed 18 interceptions and only eight touchdown passes. The 36-year-old from Louisiana could return home to play for the New Orleans Saints, who showed interest in him a year ago as a backup to Drew Brees. The Browns are more focused at the moment on signing draft picks than spending on free agents. They are expected to announce the signings of second-round picks Jabaal Sheard and Greg Little. Sheard, a defensive end from Pittsburgh, is nearing a $2.2 million bonus and a $5.09 million deal, while Little, a wide receiver from North Carolina, will get $3.32 million with a $920,000 bonus. It is all part of the Browns’ change of course under new coach Pat Shurmur, who replaced the fired Eric Mangini after Cleveland went 5-11. Shurmur, the sixth coach since the Browns returned to the NFL in 1999, is installing a West Coast offense and changing the defense from a 3-4 to a 4-3 set. Delhomme was not invited back for the changeover, though tight end Evan Moore said he is eager to jump back on board. “Yes, I plan on doing so,” Moore said when asked if he will be re-signing with the Browns when NFL teams are allowed to announce free-agent signings Friday at 6 p.m. Moore emphasized that the new agreement had taken away the word “unrestricted” in front of free agent in his case, but that he never wanted to leave Cleveland anyway. “My comfort level here with the direction of the team since coach (team president Mike) Holmgren and (general manager) Tom Heckert came aboard is great. There was no place I wanted to be but here. It was a no-brainer,” he said. “This is a great place with great fans.” Kicker Phil Dawson, who had announced retirement plans at the end of last season, is expected to report Friday. The Browns designated him as a their franchise player in February. “I had a very good conversation with Phil,” Heckert had said Wednesday. “And we’ll see what happens.” Linebacker D’Qwell Jackson, who missed all of last season with a torn pectoral muscle, said he is healthy and excited to play in a revamped defensive alignment. “The 4-3 is a blessing to me,” Jackson said. “There’s less battles with those 330-pound linemen. I like seeing four big guys in front of me. I’ll have a little less movement, but a lot more fun.” Cleveland also is expected to add safety Usama Young, whose agent tweeted he had a done deal with the Browns. Young played four years for the New Orleans Saints. Both he and Browns free agent Abram Elam played at nearby Kent State. Elam tweeted that he hopes to sign: “Been contacted by a few teams; just patiently waiting,” texted Elam, who played in all 16 games a year ago. The Browns also announced they had terminated the contract of linebacker Eric Alexander and waived tight end Tyson DeVree. What do you guys think about this. Posted in 1, Abram Elam, bengals-news, Cleveland Browns, Colt McCoy, D'Qwell Jackson, Drew Brees, Eric Alexander, Eric Mangini, Evan Moore, Jake Delhomme, New Orleans Saints, Phil Dawson, Seneca Wallace | Comments Off
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