Imperial Valley Press

Armed, dangerous: Browns’ Mayfield flexing rocket arm

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BEREA, Ohio (AP) — As Baker Mayfield threw long passes to his wide receivers and short ones to backs before Sunday’s game against Carolina, Browns interim coach Gregg Williams knew his rookie quarterbac­k was going to have a good game. It wasn’t any sight.

It was a sound.

“You can hear the ball come out of the quarterbac­k’s hand with a ‘ssssssst’ and you can hear how tight the ball was coming out of his hand,” Williams said. “It was bringing a smile to my face when I saw him warm up and really the entire game he was zipping it.”

Mayfield zipped it all day long, completing a 66-yard pass on Cleveland’s first play and whipping several passes into tight coverage during a 26-20 win that gave the Browns their fifth win and kept their faint playoff hopes flickering.

Mayfield’s arm strength isn’t usually the first thing mentioned when discussing the No. 1 overall pick’s top attributes. More often his accuracy, leadership and, of course, abundant confidence are brought up first. But Mayfield, whose “I woke up feeling dangerous” has become a catch phrase around Cleveland, has shown he can rear back and fire the ball with any quarterbac­k.

After the Browns fell behind the Panthers 7-0, Mayfield quickly stripped Carolina of momentum by stepping up and throwing a laser down the field — the ball traveled more than 60 yards — to receiver Breshad Perriman, who hauled in the deep pass to set up Cleveland’s first TD.

The play exemplifie­d Mayfield’s confidence, and the trust he has built with Cleveland’s coaching staff.

“That was a rocket and that was a long throw, and it is a long throw on the money,” Williams said. “In practices, we have seen longer throws and we have seen even more accurate throws that other people have not seen yet.”

Mayfield showed off his arm — and accuracy — a little later with a 51-yard TD toss to receiver Jarvis Landry, who appeared to be well-covered on the play. Mayfield, though, squeezed his throw between two defenders, showing both fearlessne­ss and faith.

“It was where it needed to be,” Landry said. “The guy’s back was turned. The corner that was coming from the outside was trying to squeeze it, and the ball literally went between both of them. It was a hell of a throw.”

Mayfield is bringing the heat.

The Browns (5-7-1) have won three of four going into this week’s game in Denver, and in those victories, he has completed 79 percent of his passes (54 of 68) for 712 yards with eight TDs and no intercepti­ons. Mayfield has also shown remarkable resiliency by shaking off a threepick performanc­e in the first half at Houston to pass for 351 yards in the second half while standing in the face of the Texans’ tenacious pass rush led by J.J. Watt.

Williams has been cautious to heap too much praise on the 23-year-old, but lately he has gone out of his way to compliment his young QB.

Following Wednesday’s practice, Williams said Mayfield’s arm was “off the charts” in terms of its liveliness.

“He had a live day on Sunday, but (snaps fingers) came back today and it looked like it was even more live today,” Williams said. “The first thing I thought was ‘young’.”

But beyond Mayfield’s youth and the life in his high-velocity arm, Williams sees something special.

“The good quarterbac­ks, some of the times when some of us may judge a throw that, ‘Wow, that was not a very good throw.’ Why? Because it was on his back shoulder?” Williams said.

“It was on his back shoulder because that is the way that the guy throws the player open. Drew Brees and some of those guys — Joe Montana, Warren Moon, Peyton Manning — and all of the guys that I have been with or gone against — will throw the guy open.

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 ??  ?? In this Dec. 9 file photo, Cleveland Browns quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield warms up before an NFL football game against the Carolina Panthers, in Cleveland. AP Photo/ron schWAne
In this Dec. 9 file photo, Cleveland Browns quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield warms up before an NFL football game against the Carolina Panthers, in Cleveland. AP Photo/ron schWAne

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