The Oklahoman

Mayfield plans to stay quieter, ignore critics

- By Tom Withers

Baker Mayfield knows intercept ions weren' t his only mistakes during a terrible second season as Cleveland's quarterbac­k. He talked too much.

“I put my foot in my mouth a lot this past year ,” the former Oklahoma quarterbac­k said during an TV appearance ahead of the Super Bowl in Miami.

On Friday, Mayfield, who struggled from the outset while the Browns had a disappoint­ing 6-10 season, went face-toface with one one of his biggest critics former NFL coach Rex Ryan and current ESPN analyst. During the season, Ryan called the former No. 1 overall pick “overrated as hell” and said he regressed after a roaring first year, when Mayfield broke the league rookie record for touch down passes.

May field and Ryan jabbed at each other through the media several times during the season, and on Friday they shared

the stage and a handshake while appearing on ESPN's “Get Up.”

May field ac kn owledged he paid too much attention to Ryan and other detractors.

“It comes back on doing my job the best I can, not worrying about the outside stuff, not replying to you,” Mayfield told Ryan. “Just doing my job and doing what really matters being a quarterbac­k.”

Although he had wide receivers Odell Beckham Jr. and Jarvis Landry to throw to, Mayfield never got comfortabl­e with them and his statistics

plummeted in 2019. May field threw 22 TD passes and 21 intercepti­on ( he had 27 and 14, respective­ly, as a rookie) and his 78.8 passer rating was the league's second worst.

But May field had other issues, including a sometimes contentiou­s relationsh­ip with reporters, and he often let his emotions get the best of him. The 24- year-old believes he'll learn from his mistakes.

“It's a humbling experience,” Mayfield said. “It' s a different ballgame. I mean, let's just be honest, I put my foot in my mouth a lot this past year. And I'm going to internaliz­e that, and I think that's the way I need to handle it. I mean, rest in peace, Kobe ( Bryant), but that's the way he did it.

“He motivated himself. He didn't talk a lot. He talked to his teammates, drove them to be better people, better men, and so that's the way I need to handle it. I don't need to respond to the things that don't matter, things that don't help us win.”

Mayfield accepted his share of the burden for Cleveland's down season, which began with playoff expectatio­ns following a 7-8-1 record in 2018 and Beckham's arrival via trade.

“None of the stuff that happens the year prior carries over,” he said. “It comes down to me doing my job. I've never turned the ball over so many times. That might have been the most combined over my whole career, and you can't win like that. So that falls back on me. I'll take all the blame for that.”

 ?? [AP PHOTO/BRYAN WOOLSTON] ?? Browns quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield answers questions during a news conference after the Bengals defeated his team Dec. 29 in Cincinnati.
[AP PHOTO/BRYAN WOOLSTON] Browns quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield answers questions during a news conference after the Bengals defeated his team Dec. 29 in Cincinnati.

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