Ottawa Citizen

Browns’ QB McCown silencing calls for Manziel

- TOM WITHERS

Those booming shouts for Johnny Manziel have quieted to a murmur.

With his third straight strong performanc­e, and a regular-season game like no Browns quarterbac­k has ever had, Josh McCown has ended any controvers­y in Cleveland. Well, at least for a week. McCown, the everyman’s journeyman who just five years ago was out of the NFL and slinging passes for the Hartford Colonials in the United Football League, passed for 457 yards and two touchdowns in Sunday ’s 3330 win at Baltimore. On top of setting a franchise regular-season record for yards, the 36-year-old ran for a score, converted a 2-point conversion and led the Browns on a winning drive in overtime despite playing with a sprained left ankle.

He’s the first QB in team history to surpass 300 yards passing in three straight games, and McCown has given the Browns (2-3) hope that this season might be salvaged. Johnny Who? Just three weeks ago, McCown, who sustained a concussion on the opening series this season, faced Oakland at home with some Browns fans chanting, “John-ny, John-ny” after every one of his incompleti­ons. But while McCown may still not win a popularity contest, he has provided Cleveland with much needed stability at its most problemati­c position.

“It’s been tremendous,” Browns coach Mike Pettine said of a three-game stint in which McCown has passed for 1,154 yards, six touchdowns and one intercepti­on. “He’s a guy you root for, but a big thing to talk about is understand­ing how well we’re playing around him. The backs have stepped their game up. The offensive line is improving. The receivers are playing well. Just to have a guy that can be that calming influence. He doesn’t get too up. He doesn’t get too down.

“His success, while on the outside of the building is surprising, the people that were here in the spring with him and watched him through training camp and just how he handed his business — we knew if we played well around him that he was capable of this.”

It’s some personal redemption for McCown, who went 1-11 as the starter for a bad Tampa Bay team last season. He had played so well during a fill-in stint with Chicago in 2013 — 13 TDs, one intercepti­on — only to face the same criticism that he wasn’t good enough to start for a quality team.

McCown said his ankle feels better, he will continue to receive treatment and is hoping to play Sunday against Denver. Pettine said it’s possible McCown could be kept out of a practice.

 ??  ?? Josh McCown
Josh McCown

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