USA TODAY US Edition

Don’t read too much into Browns’ QB situation

Osweiler gets nod to start preseason

- Jarrett Bell jbell@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports

BEREA, OHIO Brock Osweiler will get the start when the Cleveland Browns open the preseason on Thursday night, but … It’s preseason. Way too early to cast anything in stone. Especially when it comes to Browns quarterbac­ks. It’s possible that impressive second-round pick DeShone Kizer — who sparkled in Monday’s practice with a nice touch on a few deep throws — could wind up as a rookie starter.

Returning starter Cody Kessler? After working with the first team throughout camp, the shuffling Monday represente­d a demotion, but he can’t be counted out.

“It’s not over,” Browns coach Hue Jackson said.

No, it can’t be over when Jackson, during an interview with USA TODAY Sports, referred to Osweiler as “a good bridge for our team for right now, unless these guys go and catch him. That’s where we are.”

In other words, for the moment it’s Osweiler. That’s significan­t in itself. Remember when the Browns traded for Osweiler from the Houston Texans in March? His presence in the deal seemed like the B-side of a Moneyball exchange. Cleve-

land was more excited about the second-round pick it received and gladly absorbed Osweiler’s fat contract to get it.

Now look at him. Reportedly, the Browns even rejected interest in Osweiler shown by the Miami Dolphins, desperate for options after Ryan Tannehill’s knee injury.

“This league gives you opportunit­ies,” Osweiler told reporters Monday. “Sometimes you don’t know when they are going to come. The key is making the most of that opportunit­y.”

The last opportunit­y, with the Texans, didn’t quite work out, as Osweiler was benched on the way to the NFL’s second-lowest passer rating (72.2) in 2016.

This opportunit­y might be affected by how fast Kizer develops. The rookie has drawn praise for his mental game, and he’s hardly lacking physical skills. He needs to demonstrat­e more accuracy and, naturally, handle the twists that pro defenses will throw at him.

Jackson knows. Kizer will get a crack at becoming the franchise quarterbac­k the Browns have lacked for years. The shortterm prospect of winning a summer camp competitio­n is really a blip in the big picture for the long haul, which is why you’d hardly expect to see him starting in Week 1.

“You stick him out there at the right time, not the wrong time,” Jackson told USA TODAY Sports. “Hopefully the young man will keep working. He has a chance to be the future of the organizati­on.”

Kizer seemed to take the news in stride that Osweiler would line up first against the New Orleans Saints.

“Everything that I have been doing up until now is to try to develop and become the best quarterbac­k I can,” said Kizer, who started two seasons at Notre Dame. “Whenever my number is called, I will go out there and perform the way I know how to.”

For now, Jackson wouldn’t mind seeing Osweiler seize control of the job, which would allow Kizer time to develop while giving the Browns a reprieve from the quarterbac­k questions that traditiona­lly hover above the team.

“I think it’s good for our locker room, the players,” Jackson said. “They want to feel good about their opportunit­ies.”

“Stability” would be too strong of a word in this case, with Jackson — forced to use three quarterbac­ks as starters last season, because of injuries — seeing Osweiler as a bridge.

Besides, you’ll have to see it to believe it when considerin­g Browns quarterbac­ks. In each of the three years before Jackson arrived, Cleveland started three quarterbac­ks.

Since 2013, the Browns have used nine starting quarterbac­ks. Since the franchise was revived in 1999, the tally is 26.

Osweiler (or Kizer) is pegged to become No. 27. But first things first.

Osweiler, practicing this week with the first team, for the first time all summer, will likely play a limited number of snaps Thursday night. Kessler will be the second thrower in the rotation, followed by Kizer.

“My mind-set and how I approach things isn’t going to change,” Osweiler said. “There was once a coach that told me, ‘Be the same guy every day.’ That is what I have always tried to do, whether I was the backup or the starter. That is what I’m going to continue to do. Nothing is going to change, just the group I’m working with.”

He’d better be careful in declaring that nothing will change. When it comes to Browns quarterbac­ks, things always change.

 ?? SCOTT R. GALVIN, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? DeShone Kizer, a secondroun­d pick, has impressed.
SCOTT R. GALVIN, USA TODAY SPORTS DeShone Kizer, a secondroun­d pick, has impressed.
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