Call & Times

Mayfield isn’t changing approach

- By TOM WITHERS

BEREA, Ohio — Baker Mayfield went from scowling at Hue Jackson to glaring at critics.

Three days after he tried to embarrass his former coach with a prolonged stare down in the closing minutes of Cleveland’s win over Cincinnati, Mayfield owned up to his actions and then said he doesn’t regret them.

“I don’t get why people have a problem with football being a competitiv­e sport,” Mayfield said Wednesday as the Browns (7-7-1) prepared for their season finale in Baltimore. “You’re supposed to play with emotion. You’re supposed to play with passion. Quite honestly, if you don’t like it, whatever. Football is not meant to be a soft game. I could care less.”

With the Browns clinging to an eightpoint lead Sunday, Mayfield connected with tight end David Njoku for a game-sealing 66yard gain. As he ran past Cincinnati’s sideline, the rookie quarterbac­k looked directly at Jackson, who was fired earlier this season by the Browns. Mayfield then kept his eyes trained on Jackson as he shuffled and backpedale­d his way down the field.

Following the game, the No. 1 overall pick, who has guided the Browns to the biggest one-season turnaround in franchise history, said “No idea what you’re talking about” when asked about his antics, which came a few weeks after he gave Jackson the cold shoulder following a game in Cincinnati and called his former coach “fake” on social media.

The glowering gaze — and an earlier crude gesture he performed on the sideline after throwing a touchdown pass — drew criticism that Mayfield simply dismissed. He’s not going to change his act. “I’ve said it, I’m not a cookie-cutter quarterbac­k, but everybody is different,” Mayfield said. “Everybody leads a different way. Everybody is competitiv­e in a different way. I’m not trying to be anybody else. I’ve been who I am and that’s gotten me here. I’m going to continue to do that because I try to improve every week. I’m not trying to get anybody’s approval. I’m trying to win football games and do this for as long as I can. That’s the goal.

“And the guys inside this locker room know that. They know I’ll fight for them. They know I’ll take a bullet for them, and to me that’s what matters. I don’t have to make any friends outside this locker room. I’m not trying to do that. Once they’re in there, they know exactly what they’re going to get and that’s what really matters.”

Of course, Mayfield’s on-field behavior is nothing new.

He earned something of a bad-boy reputation while at Oklahoma, where among other things, he grabbed his crotch while taunting Kansas players; tried to plant a Sooners flag in the middle of Ohio State’s field after a win; and got arrested for public intoxicati­on and disorderly conduct during the offseason in Arkansas.

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