Imperial Valley Press

Browns sign troubled running back Kareem Hunt

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CLEVELAND (AP) — The Cleveland Browns’ signing of Kareem Hunt once again shines a spotlight somewhere other than the team’s on-field performanc­e.

Hunt, who was released 2½ months ago by Kansas City after a video surfaced showing the star running back pushing and kicking a woman, signed with Cleveland on Monday.

Hunt was placed on the NFL’s commission­er’s exempt list hours before the Chiefs released him, a move that drew public support after he was seen in a physical altercatio­n with the woman last February during an argument in the lobby of a downtown hotel where he stayed.

He was in his second season with Kansas City and was one of the team’s best players. He led the NFL in rushing as a rookie in 2017.

The Browns are now giving the 23-year-old, who is from Cleveland, a chance to restart his career, though he still could be suspended by the league under its personal conduct policy for the incident and two others that surfaced after he was released by the Chiefs. Hunt has not been charged with a crime. An NFL investigat­ion is ongoing.

And the Browns, coming off a tumultuous 7-8-1 season that followed an 0-16 record in 2017 — with a new coach after Hue Jackson was fired midseason in 2018 — are creating headlines by giving a player a second chance even as the NFL has not yet decided Hunt’s status.

Browns general manager John Dorsey drafted Hunt while working for Kansas City and said their relationsh­ip was an “important part of this decision-making process.”

“But we then did extensive due diligence with many individual­s, including clinical profession­als, to have a better understand­ing of the person he is today and whether it was prudent to sign him,” said Dorsey, who was Kansas City’s GM from 2013-16. “There were two important factors: One is that Kareem took full responsibi­lity for his egregious actions and showed true remorse and secondly, just as importantl­y, he is undergoing and is committed to necessary profession­al treatment and a plan that has been clearly laid out.”

Dorsey went on to say the Browns “fully understand and respect the complexity of questions and issues in signing a player with Kareem’s history and do not condone his actions. Given what we know about Kareem through our extensive research, we believe he deserves a second chance but certainly with the understand­ing that he has to go through critical and essential steps to become a performing member of this organizati­on, aside from what the NFL determines from their ongoing investigat­ion.”

Dorsey added that the Browns have given Hunt “detailed plans with expectatio­ns laid out that he understand­s and must follow.”

He said any similar incident will not be tolerated.

In a statement released by the team, Hunt expressed remorse and thanked the Browns for giving him an opportunit­y.

“First off, I would like to once again apologize for my actions last year,” Hunt said. “What I did was wrong and inexcusabl­e. That is not the man I was raised to be, and I’ve learned a great deal from that experience and certainly should have been more truthful about it after the fact. I’m extremely grateful that John Dorsey, Dee and Jimmy Haslam and the Cleveland Browns organizati­on are granting me the opportunit­y to earn their trust and represent their organizati­on in the best way possible on and off the field.

Nike’s latest performanc­e basketball shoe, from concept to reality, took about three years to put together.

Or 30 years, depending on how you count.

The Nike Adapt BB — a self-lacing smart shoe that can be controlled by a smartphone — gets released to the public on Sunday, a date that just happens to coincide with the NBA All-Star Game in Charlotte. It has a motor embedded within the shoe, a hefty $350 pricetag and wearers will need to give them some time on a wireless charging pad every couple weeks or so.

But Nike also insists that this isn’t just a gadget or gizmo for the feet, something techies and sneakerhea­ds will get because of the coolness factor. It was also made with the baller — some of the world’s best ballers, to be precise — in mind. Even with the tech features, it weighs about as much as a more convention­al high-end basketball shoe does.

“The footwear component of the design, it is intended and it is designed in the same vein as our highest performing basketball products,” said Jordan Rice, part of Nike’s smart systems team that made the Adapt happen. “So higher ability, high life.”

A small number of NBA players are already in the Adapt, including Boston’s Jayson Tatum, Dallas

 ??  ?? In this 2018 file photo, Kansas City Chiefs running back Kareem Hunt warms up before an NFL football game against the Los Angeles Rams, in Los Angeles.AP PhoTo/KelVIn Kuo
In this 2018 file photo, Kansas City Chiefs running back Kareem Hunt warms up before an NFL football game against the Los Angeles Rams, in Los Angeles.AP PhoTo/KelVIn Kuo

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