Windsor Star

BROWNS TAKING A FLYER ON KIZER

Rookie quarterbac­k tabbed to get Week 3 pre-season start against Tampa Bay

- JOHN KRYK JoKryk@postmedia.com @JohnKryk blogs.canoe.com/ krykslants/

DeShone Kizer will helm the Browns’ ship, for sure this week, perhaps beyond.

The Cleveland Browns did indeed decide Wednesday on a starting quarterbac­k, as promised, but just for Saturday night’s pre-season game at Tampa Bay, and not to open the regular season, as expected.

It’s rookie Kizer, the Browns’ fourth draft pick last April, taken in the second round, 52nd overall.

In consultati­on with team executives, Browns head coach Hue Jackson chose Kizer over sixth-year veteran Brock Osweiler. Jackson made the announceme­nt in a statement released early Wednesday morning.

The Week 1 regular-season starter for the Browns remains undecided.

“This is awesome,” the 21-yearold Kizer said. “I obviously know there’s a lot of responsibi­lity (on the field and off ). But as awesome as it is, it just means I have to work harder and try to do whatever I can to continue to have some success out on the field, and hold onto this position as tight as I can.”

Osweiler started Cleveland’s first two pre-season games.

The NFL’s Week 3 pre-season games — Thursday to Sunday this week — traditiona­lly mean most. Teams usually play their starters for 2-3 quarters, before resting all impact players in the final pre-season game in Week 4, in which all games are played on the Thursday before Labour Day weekend.

The choice of Kizer as Cleveland’s starting QB this week is no surprise. He has performed well for a rookie in extended stints against both the New Orleans Saints and New York Giants. He not only has flashed the impressive throwing skills he was known to possess, but has shown better feel and comfort than expected as a pro pocket passer, after having played in a pure shotgun spread attack at Notre Dame.

“He has made a lot of progress by investing the time necessary to learn our offence, working hard to improve on his fundamenta­ls while also effectivel­y moving the offence in pre-season games,’’ said Jackson in his statement. “Developmen­t is so important for a young quarterbac­k. This is the next step he needs to take and he deserves this opportunit­y.

“(He) is certainly positionin­g himself well to earn the starting job heading into the regular season.”

That’s as far as Jackson or the Browns would extrapolat­e from Saturday’s start. The easy takeaway is that the regular-season starting job is Kizer’s, unless he falls apart on Saturday night.

Kizer began training camp as the third-string QB, behind last year’s rookie starter Cody Kessler (who’s now the No. 3) and Osweiler. Kevin Hogan, another 2016 Browns rookie, has been fourth-stringer all along.

All four looked dreadful on the day I visited Browns training camp on July 29. But Kizer completed the sweetest passes that afternoon. It took no great insight to conclude, as I did, that if neither Osweiler nor Kessler separated themselves from the pack, the Browns might as well start Kizer.

That Kizer has grown so much in the nearly four weeks since that assessment all the more justifies Jackson’s decision.

“I don’t want to compare it to the other guys. I don’t think that would be fair,” Jackson said at an afternoon news conference. “My job is to make sure that I put the best players out there that give us a chance to win. That is what I’m trying to do.”

Osweiler, whom the Browns took off the disappoint­ed Houston Texans’ hands via a creative trade in March, did not stand out in either pre-season start. If he was dishearten­ed or distraught upon learning the bad news Wednesday morning, you’d never know it from the upbeat news conference he held with Browns beat reporters shortly afterward.

“I think it’s a great opportunit­y for DeShone,” Osweiler said. “He’s a great quarterbac­k with a lot of talent, and I’m looking forward to seeing what he can do against the Bucs.

“To be completely honest with you, I have absolutely no regret on anything. From the day I arrived in April, I was working extremely hard. I felt like I had a great training camp. I definitely left it all out there on the table.”

And Osweiler, to his further credit, said he still thinks he has a chance to start for Cleveland against the visiting Pittsburgh Steelers on Sept. 10.

“I do. Until we have an official Day 1 starter, I feel like I have a great opportunit­y here,” Osweiler said. “As far as I know it’s still wide open, but I’m given the same informatio­n you guys are.

“I love being a Cleveland Brown. I think this is a great organizati­on, I think we have a tremendous head coach.”

If only Osweiler did the right things on the field, just as he says the right things off it, Kizer wouldn’t be in his newly elevated position.

GIANT WORD GAMES FROM MCADOO: The most annoying example of coach-speak in the NFL is when a head coach — the only man entrusted by teams nowadays to disclose any and all injury informatio­n — says Player X “has a knee” to describe without detail a knee injury, or “has a foot” for a foot injury, etc.

Giants head coach Ben McAdoo, for the second straight day, would say little of substance Wednesday beyond the fact that star wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. has “got an ankle” after landing awkwardly early in Monday night’s game at Cleveland.

No! Really? He does? Hey, this just in: Beckham has not one but TWO ankles!

Is there concern at Giants HQ that Beckham won’t be ready for the Sept. 10 prime-time opener at Dallas?

“We are just taking it day by day,” McAdoo said.

But what did you learn from his MRI?

“I didn’t learn anything from the MRI. He’s got an ankle. He is in there getting treatment. We are taking it day by day. The medical staff reads the MRIs.”

But can you at least disclose if Beckham is wearing a walking boot?

“He’s in there. He’s got an ankle. He is getting some treatment.”

But if Beckham was injured that badly (ESPN reported Tuesday night that he could potentiall­y miss the season opener), why was he even on the sideline during the second half of Monday’s game, after which he was seen walking quite normally, without crutches or aid?

“He’s got an ankle,” McAdoo said. “He’s getting treatment. He is doing what he can to get ready to go.”

An ankle, folks. He’s got an ankle. And it kept him out of Wednesday’s practice.

My job is to make sure that I put the best players out there that give us a chance to win. That is what I’m trying to do

 ?? JOE ROBBINS/GETTY IMAGES ?? Rookie Cleveland Browns quarterbac­k DeShone Kizer, with head coach Hue Jackson during Monday’s pre-season game against the New York Giants, is excited to start Saturday’s game against Tampa Bay. “This is awesome,” the 21-year-old Kizer said.
JOE ROBBINS/GETTY IMAGES Rookie Cleveland Browns quarterbac­k DeShone Kizer, with head coach Hue Jackson during Monday’s pre-season game against the New York Giants, is excited to start Saturday’s game against Tampa Bay. “This is awesome,” the 21-year-old Kizer said.

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