Dayton Daily News

SUNDAY’S GAME

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Mike McCarthy’s BEREA — connection­s with the Browns could land him his next job.

Dumped by Green Bay on Sunday after 13 seasons, a Super Bowl win and amid a seemingly growing rift with quarterbac­k Aaron Rodg- ers, McCarthy’s candidacy to become Cleveland’s next coach has gotten more legit- imate.

The 55-year-old McCar- thy was already being men- tioned as a possibilit­y for the Browns, who dismissed Hue Jackson last month and will wait until after the season before hiring his full-time replacemen­t.

As far as center JC Tretter is concerned, the Browns couldn’t go wrong with McCa- rthy.

ve always enjoyed work- ing with Mike McCarthy,” said Tretter, who played four seasons under McCar- thy before signing as a free agent with Cleveland in 2017. “I think what he has done in his career in Green Bay has been extraordin­ary. I think he’s a great man, too. I don’t have a bad thing to say about Mike McCarthy. He was really an awesome leader and an awesome coach.”

McCarthy is no stranger to the Browns.

General manager John Dorsey, who has revamped Cleveland’s roster and is leading the team’s coaching search, spent 21 years as an executive in Green Bay and helped hire McCarthy. Browns assistant GM Eliot Wolf, son of former Pack- ers GM Ron Wolf, worked in Green Bay’s scouting department for 14 years, and vice president of player per- sonnel Alonzo Highsmith was with the Packers for 19 years before he was hired by Dorsey.

Tretter said he can’t provide any more informatio­n to Cleveland’s executives about McCarthy than they have already.

“They know enough upstairs,” Tretter said. “They got Eliot and Alonzo and they’ve got other guys from the Green Bay organizati­on. I don’t think I can bring anything more to the table than they already know. They were with him longer than I was and they were upstairs with him more than I was downstairs with him, so I think they know everything they need to know. I’m just looking forward to seeing the direction we go with this team.”

Dorsey hasn’t revealed much about his plans to hire Panthers at Browns, 1 p.m., FOX, 95.3, 101.1 Cleveland’s 17th full-time coach — and sixth in the past 10 years.

Interim coach Gregg Williams, who took over for Jack- son, will be interviewe­d; Dorsey has not disclosed who else is on his list. Okla- homa coach Lincoln Riley has been mentioned as a possible candidate along with Kansas City offensive coor- dinator Eric Bieniemy, Minnesota offensive coordinato­r John DeFilippo, and New England offensive coordi- nator Josh McDaniels among the most prominent names being mentioned.

It will be tough for any candidate to have a resume as impressive as McCarthy’s.

He went 125-77-2 in 13 seasons with the Packers, lead- ing them to a Super Bowl title in 2010. However, Green Bay has struggled the past two seasons, missing the playoffs last year for the first time since 2008.

The Packers are 4-7-1 this season, with McCarthy’s relationsh­ip with Rodgers becoming a weekly drama around the team.

Tretter knows both men well, and said any of difference­s have been exaggerate­d.

“That whole story line gets a little overblown,” Tretter said. “They are just two competitiv­e people and I think they are both competitiv­e in the same direction in that they both want the team to win. They just are very confident in what they think is best for the team to win, so I never really interprete­d it as a bad thing.”

Cleveland’s coaching gig has never looked so attractive.

Rookie quarterbac­k Baker

field has shown signs of being the franchise QB the Browns have coveted for years, and any coach who comes to Cleveland will be required to further develop him.

Tretter feels McCarthy would be ideal for Mayfield.

“They would do great, he said. “He started work- ing with Aaron when Aaron was a rookie, too, and Aar- on’s developed into a hell of a player, so I think that rela- tionship would be fine. I see a lot of similariti­es between Aaron and Baker personalit­y-wise, competitiv­eness, and that’s all the things that Aaron came in with, too, when he was a young player.”

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