Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mayfield’s progress pleasing for Browns

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CLEVELAND — The Cleveland Browns won’t be chasing a quarterbac­k in free agency. They aren’t stressing over which one to take in the NFL Draft or looking to make a trade.

For once, they appear to be set at QB.

Baker Mayfield has brought wins, change and calm to Cleveland.

Coming off a solid third season and playoff appearance, Mayfield has brought much-needed comfort to the Browns, who entered 2020 still unsure whether the

No. 1 overall pick in 2018 was the answer but now feel confident they’ve got their guy.

“Baker is the first quarterbac­k that has led this organizati­on, led this team to the playoffs, a playoff victory,” said Andrew Berry, the team’s executive vice president and general manager, Wednesday on a Zoom call. “He has endured an enormous amount of adversity in his young career. Just quite honestly, with the changes he has gone through with coaching staffs, front offices and offensive systems. “He has risen above it all.” And, the Browns don’t think Mayfield’s done climbing.

The team is expected to exercise his fifth-year contract option this offseason, and it’s possible the Browns will discuss a long-term extension with the 25-year-old Mayfield, who threw 30 touchdown passes and 9 intercepti­ons in 18 games last season.

Berry wouldn’t comment on the team’s plans with Mayfield, but made it clear the team is more than pleased with his progress.

“We think he had a really strong season for us,” Berry said. “We like the maturation and the growth, both on and off the field, and we are looking forward to him continuing to take strides in his second year in the offense.”

At a time when franchise quarterbac­ks are demanding trades (Deshaun Watson), at odds with their team (Russell Wilson) or on the go (Carson Wentz, Matthew Stafford, Jared Goff), Mayfield has brought the Browns long-awaited peace.

Spinning uncontroll­ably for years, the quarterbac­k carousel in Cleveland has stalled.

Berry doesn’t take that lightly.

“The quarterbac­k position is, in my mind, the most important position in profession­al sports,” he said. “Until you have a baseline of any level of quarterbac­k play, I think it is really difficult to win and make progress in the NFL. Oftentimes if that position is not productive or it is not solidified, it can feel a lot like operating in neutral.

“That is something that is certainly not lost on us, and it is definitely not lost on us as an organizati­on.”

As the Browns decide whether to offer Mayfield a long-term deal, Berry said the team won’t be influenced by situations elsewhere. There’s always a risk in investing in any player for multiple years, and just because other teams have had things backfire, it isn’t going to dissuade Cleveland’s front office from what it thinks is right.

“I don’t know that anything that has happened to any of the other 31 teams has a major bearing, in terms of how we are going to address the quarterbac­k situation here,’” Berry said. “To me, we’ll evaluate that internally and make a decision we think is best for our team and our organizati­on.”

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