National Post

Browns already in usual lurch

- John Kryk JoKryk@ postmedia. com Twitter: @ JohnKryk

How about this new motto for the Cleveland Browns: “Where curses go to refuel.”

Since t he Browns’ rebirth in 1999 as an expansion franchise, l i ttle has gone right. Head coach and quarterbac­k turnstiles dually spin so fast as to make electric fans redundant in Northeast Ohio.

And just when you think maybe they’re turning a corner this year and maybe halting all those turnstiles and hexes, Wednesday happened. Then Thursday happened.

Committing more than US$ 100 million to their offensive line in the off-season and drafting potentiall­y four instant impact players in April — including overachiev­ing second- round quarterbac­k DeShone Kizer, the new starter — apparently didn’t turn the trick.

On Wednesday, No. 1 overall draft pick Myles Garrett — the most popular pre-season choice for NFL rookie of the year — came up hobbling and failed to finish practice. The diagnosis? High ankle sprain.

The club said it will provide an update on Garrett’s injury “in a couple of weeks.”

Then on Thursday the Browns released safety Calvin Pryor — three months and a week after acquiring him in a trade with the New York Jets, and just hours after Pryor reportedly instigated a pre- practice fight with teammate Ricardo Louis, a receiver.

No coach or player would discuss details of the incident after practice, but head coach Hue Jackson said: “It was an internal matter. I am not going to go into any details or specifics. We did release the player, and we are moving on … I just made a decision which we thought was best for our football team and we moved on. That’s it.” BENNETT UPDATE: In a letter to NFL commission­er Roger Goodell on Thursday, the Las Vegas police union denounced Michael Bennett in denying the Seattle Seahawk defensive end’s claim of abuse at the hands of sincity police on Labour Day weekend. Bennett said he was physically mistreated for racial reasons.

“I request that you conduct an investigat­ion and take appropriat­e action into Michael Bennett’s obvious false allegation­s against our officers,” the union’s president wrote Goodell.

“While the NFL may condone Bennett’s disrespect for our American flag, and everything it symbolizes, we hope the league will not ignore Bennett’s false accusation­s against our police officers.”

The NFL responded with only this short statement: “There is no allegation of a violation of the league’s personal conduct policy and therefore there is no basis for an NFL investigat­ion.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada