Dayton Daily News

Berry returns to Browns as league’s youngest GM

Decision-makers form young duo that Browns hope will grow together.

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As Andrew Berry waited BEREA — to be welcomed back as Cleveland’s new general manager, his baby son, Kairo, let out a couple of cranky cries before settling down for a nap.

Later, his 2-year-old son, Zion, asked Berry if he could wear a helmet.

The Browns have turned to youth in their front office. Maybe this will work.

At just 32, Berry is believed to be the youngest GM in NFL history and he’s returned to Cleveland after one season in Philadelph­ia to encounter some familiar problems with the Browns, who remain unstable, underachie­ving despite a talented roster and without a playoff appearance since 2002.

Berry said he returned to the team in part for a chance to work with new coach Kevin Stefanski, who was hired last month after 13 seasons in Minnesota. Stefanski’s only 37, giving Cleveland afresh, young duo of decision-makers the Browns hope can grow and thrive together for years.

“I am much older than Andrew,” Stefanski quipped, adding he missed his own kids after seeing Berry’s.

Berry joked he didn’t receive an upgraded parking space upon his return to Cleveland, where he was vice president of player personnel from 2016-18 under GM Sashi Brown. During that span, the Browns went 1-15, 0-16 and only made minimal improvemen­t because of some poor drafts.

The team was often accused of “tanking” to get high draft picks and they used the No. 1 overall selections in 2017 and 2018 on star defensive end Myles Garrett and quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield, respective­ly.

Berry isn’t hiding from his role in not making the Browns much better, but he’s determined to get things right this time around.

“That stretch is a very painful period for our fans, for the city and for everybody internally in the organizati­on,” he said. “I can assure you that all of us that were there during that time period were equally disappoint­ed with the results during that time. Now, the one thing I can say is that the team and the organizati­on is at a much different state than it was heading into that 2016 season, whether it was the foundation of the roster or the overall strategy.

“There is no secret that the strategy at the time was to accumulate assets, whether it was cap space, picks and players, that would lead to a foundation of long-term success, but I can assure you that winning is at the forefront of everyone’s minds in the organizati­on.”

Berry is just the second current African-American GM in the NFL, joining Miami’s Chris Grier. He’s proud to follow in the footsteps of black executives like Ozzie Newsome. Berry’s sensitive to the league’s poor track record with minority hiring, and remains hopeful others will get the same opportunit­y he’s been given by the Browns.

“Part of this is exposure,” said Berry, who was joined at the news conference by his wife, Brittan, his parents and brother. “There are tons of talented executives across the NFL that fit different demographi­c profiles, whether it is age or race or quite honestly even for gender at this point in time. I think certainly part of it is just increasing awareness because listen, there are a ton of talented executives across the league already.”

Berry’s first week on the job has been focused on getting aligned with Stefanski on their vision for the Browns before digging into other areas. Berry did address some other key issues:

■ He’s confident Mayfield will rebound after struggling in his second season. Berry had a hand in drafting the 2018 Heisman Trophy winner and his view of him hasn’t wavered.

“Still have a lot of belief in Baker as a quarterbac­k, his talent and what we think he can become in the NFL,” he said. “Looking forward to seeing what Kevin, (offensive coordinato­r) Alex (Van Pelt) and his staff do with Baker this spring and into the fall. We are really excited about his future, and I am really excited about the work that

Kevin is going to do with him.”

■ Berry eased the concerns of some Browns fans who worried the team was going to become more reliant upon analytics as the basis for decisions.

“We will be a scouting-centered front office because I have always believed and I continue to believe scouting to be the lifeblood of roster building in the NFL,” he said.

■ He’s hopeful Garrett will be reinstated by Commission­er Roger Goodell, who suspended the sack specialist indefinite­ly after he struck Pittsburgh quarterbac­k Mason Rudolph with a swung helmet in the final seconds of a game on Nov. 14.

 ?? TONY DEJAK / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Head coach Kevin Stefanski, 37, and general manager Andrew Berry, 32, give Cleveland a fresh, young duo of decision-makers the Browns hope can grow and
thrive together foryears. Berry was introduced Wednesday.
TONY DEJAK / ASSOCIATED PRESS Head coach Kevin Stefanski, 37, and general manager Andrew Berry, 32, give Cleveland a fresh, young duo of decision-makers the Browns hope can grow and thrive together foryears. Berry was introduced Wednesday.

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