
| Cleveland Browns P.M. links: Peyton Hillis was… | |
CLEVELAND, Ohio — The Cleveland Browns play the Seattle Seahawks on Sunday at Browns Stadium in a matchup of 2-3 teams. The Browns might be without running back Peyton Hillis, who injured his left hamstring in the first quarter of Cleveland’s 24-17 loss to the Raiders in Oakland last Sunday. Hillis’ career took a temporary turn when he tore his right hamstring three years ago, when he was a Denver Broncos rookie. He may well have been on his way to establishing himself as Denver’s long-term answer at tailback before the injury set in motion a set of circumstances that allowed the Browns to get him at moderate cost — trading quarterback Brady Quinn to Denver for Hillis and two late-round draft picks prior to the 2010 season. (A recent cleveland.com story detailed Hillis’ career since his college days at Arkansas, and how he has had to prove himself time and again) On Nov. 6, 2008 in Cleveland, Hillis got a chance to run with the football for Denver after four Broncos tailbacks had been injured. His numbers weren’tt spectacular– eight carries for 24 yards — but he picked up crucial first downs in short-yardage situations as the Broncos overcame a 23-10 Browns lead to win, 34-30. Steve Doerschuk of the Canton Repository writes about Hillis’ current injury, and that his injury in 2008 changed things for the Broncos and Hillis. Prior to the game against the Browns, writes Doerschuk, Hillis….:
Plain Dealer and cleveland.com Browns coverage includes Mary Kay Cabot’s story that Browns president Mike Holmgren says that contract talks with Peyton Hillis are at a standstill for now; Cabot’s update on the Browns’ injuries; the weekly video edition of the Browns Insider, with Cabot, Dennis Manoloff and Bud Shaw talking about the Browns; Plain Dealer Twitter updates from today when Mike Holmgren talked with the media; a Starting Blocks poll on the Browns-Seahawks game; Cabot’s Browns Insider; and, much more. Goal to goal Former Browns running back Jerome Harrison has been diagnosed with a brain tumor, though the long-term prognosis for his health and even his football career is good. By Adam Schefter, and according to sources, for ESPN.com. Concern about injuries among the Browns’ defensive backs, and Browns notes, by Fred Greetham for Scout.com’s Orange and Brown Report. Stop breaking down every word that Mike Holmgren says. By Criag Lyndall for Waiting For Next Year. AFC North teams are setting the NFL standard for defensive play this season, Jamison Hensley writes for ESPN.com. Browns notebook, highlighting running back Chris Ogbonnaya, by Steve Doerschuk of the Canton Repository. Mike Holmgren tries to defuse any drama surrounding the Browns, Daniel Wolf writes for the National Football Authority. Anthony Campomizzi, writing for Dawg Pound Daily, wonders if Browns quarterback Colt McCoy is regressing this season. The AFC North quarterback watch — including the Browns’ Colt McCoy — by Jamison Hensley on ESPN.com. Seattle Seahawks coverage on the Seattle Times. Comment Below!. Posted in 1, bengals-news, Brady Quinn, Cleveland Browns, Colt McCoy, Denver Broncos, Eric Mangini, Jerome Harrison, Peyton Hillis | Comments Off
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| Jerome Harrison, former Cleveland Browns running… | |
ESPN reports that the trade of Jerome Harrison from Detroit to the Philadelphia Eagles may have saved his life. Why? Because doctors discovered a brain tumor that nullified a trade with the Detroit Lions, according to two league sources.
Running low on time today, i’ll be back tomorrow hopefully with some more news. |
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| Cleveland Browns sit Peyton Hillis, Montario… | |
CLEVELAND, Ohio — Running back Peyton Hillis won’t play tonight, but neither will Montario Hardesty. Hillis tweaked a hamstring muscle at the conclusion of Wednesday’s practice and Hardesty is still being eased in after ACL surgery last year. That means the Browns’ running backs against the Detroit Lions will be Brandon Jackson, Quinn Porter and rookie Armond Smith. Also scratched from the game were safeties T.J. Ward (hamstring) and Usama Young (hamstring). The top backups are Ray Ventrone and Mike Adams. It’s possible rookie cornerback James Dockery also will see time at free safety. Other players declared out for the Browns: Left guard Eric Steinbach (back), wide receivers Mohamed Massaquoi (foot) and Carlton Mitchell (finger), linebackers Chris Gocong (neck) and Scott Fujita (thigh), and tight end Benjamin Watson (hamstring). Old home week: The Lions have a lot of former Browns on their training camp roster. • Eric Wright is the starting right cornerback and Brandon McDonald is third at the position. • Corey Williams is the starting right defensive tackle. • Running backs Mike Bell and Jerome Harrison are third and fifth, respectively, on the depth chart. • Kirk Chambers is listed third at left tackle and Isaac Sowells is fourth at right tackle. That’s all for today. Posted in bengals-news, Brandon McDonald, Chris Gocong, Detroit Lions, Eric Steinbach, Jerome Harrison, Mike Adams, mohamed massaquoi, Montario Hardesty, Peyton Hillis, Quinn Porter, t.j. ward | Comments Off
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| Vickers says he’d fit into Browns’ new offense if given chance | |
Free-agent fullback Lawrence Vickers can’t be sure of his future with the Cleveland Browns, not after they took Stanford’s Owen Marecic in the fourth round of April’s NFL draft, and not after general manager Tom Heckert’s comments following that. Vickers, who has played five seasons with the Browns since they selected him out of Colorado in the 2006 draft, recently told The Plain Dealer that he wasn’t disappointed when the team nabbed Marecic, apparently to replace him. Vickers was just perplexed. “I was like, ‘Wow,’ but at the same time, I laughed,” Vickers said. “I don’t know what their plans are.” The Browns have a new coach, Pat Shurmur, and a new offensive scheme, the West Coast, and they’re looking for the right fit at fullback. After drafting Marecic, Heckert said of Vickers’ future in Cleveland: “When the league starts (after the lockout), we’ll see.” Not exactly a ringing endorsement. Vickers fears his reputation as an explosive “knockout fullback,” won by opening holes for Jamal Lewis in successive 1,000-yard seasons and paving Jerome Harrison’s path to 561 yards in the final three games of 2009, has clouded respect for what he can do with the ball in his hands. Vickers played in a variation of the West Coast offense at Colorado, gaining more than 500 yards rushing and receiving in his college career. He has caught 41 passes with the Browns, 23 of them in two seasons (2007 and 2008) in former coordinator Rob Chudzinski’s offensive scheme. “I am a West Coast fullback. That’s what they don’t understand,” said Vickers, who didn’t receive a contract tender before the NFL lockout started and hasn’t spoken to Shurmur or Heckert about his standing with the team. “… Maybe if I wasn’t knocking people out, maybe I’d still be known as a versatile fullback. Anybody that watches football knows. “The last two years, I haven’t caught the ball. I wasn’t a part of the offense. So I made a way for me to be on the field. That’s what a football player does. Anybody that can make his presence on the field without the ball is a helluva guy. “I played in the West Coast offense at Colorado,” Vickers added. “When I first came to the NFL, my first carry was at tailback. In Chud’s offense, look at how many passes I caught. People have short-term memories. I forgive them for that. What I’ve done for you lately is knock people out. That’s only because that’s all that was left for me to do.” Vickers said the Browns under former coach Eric Mangini were “a team where they don’t even use a fullback. Mangini’s era wasn’t really a fullback era. I played just on (the belief that) ‘this person has to be on the field.’ Everything I got wasn’t given. I took it. Our offense was based on New England’s. They don’t even have a fullback.” Vickers understands that teams must make decisions, and he doesn’t begrudge the Browns their choice of fullbacks. “I’m not disappointed, because I understand business totally,” he said. “In business, you’ve got to make decisions that are for the business. If it is the end of me, kudos to Cleveland. I’m not angry. My own personal goal was to be in one spot for my whole career. I love Cleveland. I wanted to be like Kevin Mack, who spent his whole career there. “If it is my departure in Cleveland, I’m going out with a bang. The team is on the rise. Am I mad at Tom or even Mike (Holmgren)? No. I’ll see them. I’ll shake their hands.” Vickers hopes the team will want him back, even as he realizes it probably won’t. “I just hope I don’t have to come to Cleveland in a different uniform, because it’s gonna be bad (for the Browns),” he said. “Those (Browns linebackers) are my guys. They know they will come with it and I will come with it. It’s gonna be one of those all-time Cleveland games.” Thanks for visiting our blog =). Posted in 1, bengals-news, Cleveland Browns, Eric Mangini, Jerome Harrison, Lawrence Vickers | Comments Off
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| Fullback Lawrence Vickers bewildered by Cleveland Browns’ selection of Owen Marecic | |
CLEVELAND, Ohio — Free-agent fullback Lawrence Vickers isn’t angry about the Browns’ evident decision to replace him with fourth-round draft pick Owen Marecic of Stanford. He just doesn’t understand it. Vickers wasn’t given a contract tender by the Browns before the owners’ lockout. He hasn’t spoken to new coach Pat Shurmur or General Manager Tom Heckert about his future. When the team selected Marecic on the third day of the draft, “I was like, ‘Wow,’ but at the same time I laughed. I don’t know what their plans are,” Vickers said. He spoke publicly about his future for the first time in a phone interview. “I’m not disappointed because I understand business totally,” Vickers said. “In business, you’ve got to make decisions that are for the business. “If it is the end of me, kudos to Cleveland. I’m not angry. My own personal goal was to be in one spot for my whole career. I love Cleveland. I wanted to be like Kevin Mack, who spent his whole career there. “If it is my departure in Cleveland, I’m going out with a bang. The team is on the rise. “Am I mad at Tom or even Mike [Holmgren]? No. I’ll see them. I’ll shake their hands.” The Browns have never articulated their plans at fullback in their new West Coast offense. After drafting Marecic, Heckert said of Vickers, “When the league starts [after the lockout], we’ll see.” Shurmur has said that every back in his offense needs to be able to catch the ball. If Shurmur and his staff determined that Vickers was not a good fit in their offense, Vickers said they made a mistake. He said he was known as a versatile fullback as a rookie in 2006 coming out of Colorado, which ran an offense copied from Mike Shanahan’s West Coast system with the Denver Broncos at the time. Vickers had more than 500 yards rushing and receiving in his career at Colorado. “I am a West Coast fullback. That’s what they don’t understand,” he said. He said he became typecast as a “knockout fullback” the past two years because that’s how he earned playing time. “I was on a team where they don’t even use a fullback,” he said of the Browns’ offense under former coach Eric Mangini. “Mangini’s era wasn’t really a fullback era. I played just on [the belief that] ‘this person has to be on the field.’ Everything I got wasn’t given. I took it. Our offense was based on New England’s. They don’t even have a fullback.” Vickers’ reputation as an explosive lead-blocker actually began in Romeo Crennel’s last two seasons in 2007 and ’08. He paved the way for successive 1,000-yard rushing seasons by Jamal Lewis, who was running on bald tires and leaking oil. In 2009, when Lewis went down with concussion symptoms, Vickers’ crushing lead blocks helped Jerome Harrison amass 561 yards in the final three games. “Maybe if I wasn’t knocking people out, maybe I’d still be known as a versatile fullback,” Vickers said. “Anybody that watches football knows. The last two years, I haven’t caught the ball. I wasn’t a part of the offense. So I made a way for me to be on the field. That’s what a football player does. Anybody that can make his presence on the field without the ball is a helluva guy. “I played in the West Coast offense at Colorado. When I first came to the NFL, my first carry was at tailback. In [former coordinator Rob Chudzinski] Chud’s offense, look at how many passes I caught [23 in two seasons]. “People have short-term memories. I forgive them for that. What I’ve done for you lately is knock people out. That’s only because that’s all that was left for me to do.” Vickers is not worried that the traditional fullback position seems to be on the endangered list in the NFL as teams load up on multiple-receiver sets and spread the ball through the air. “I don’t care where you are, you can pass the ball all over the place. Come November and December, you’re going to have to run the ball eventually,” he said. “Green Bay ran the ball even in their pass offense. “I think people are getting away from the stud fullbacks because there aren’t too many left in the league. But if you have one, you keep him.” Vickers said he won’t give up hope of returning to the Browns until he is told, “Vickers, it’s over.” But he’s not blind to the obvious. “I just hope I don’t have to come to Cleveland in a different uniform because it’s gonna be bad [for the Browns],” he said. “Those [Browns linebackers] are my guys. They know they will come with it and I will come with it. It’s gonna be one of those all-time Cleveland games.” To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: tgrossi@plaind.com, 216-999-4670 There is the quick update of the day. Posted in 1, bengals-news, Denver Broncos, Eric Mangini, Jerome Harrison, Lawrence Vickers | Comments Off
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