The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Mack heading back to where it all began

- By Matt Winkeljohn For the AJC

FLOWERY BRANCH — Upon talking to Alex Mack about anything football, one may walk away feeling like a witness to a metronome click, as the Falcons center approaches and speaks about his craft as a machine might if it were to play the game – methodical­ly, without deviation.

But even he acknowledg­ed Sunday’s game against the Browns likely will trigger a different kind of vibe when he returns to Cleveland for the first time in the regular season after spending the first seven years of his NFL career there.

Yeah, Mack said, it’ll be a little different, even if he also thinks, “It shouldn’t be. You should be able to treat it just like another opponent and everything else. I know it’s going to be a familiar city that I’m used to and stuff, and it will be weird seeing the other opposing jerseys, but I’ve been on this team for a while now and I think I can handle it.”

Mack earned Pro Bowl honors three times after Cleveland drafted him in the first round out of California in 2009. He started all 16 games in six seasons, missing 11 with a broken leg in 2014.

He even finished a game against the Titans in 2011 while battling appendicit­is, and then had an appendecto­my during the team’s bye week and started and played against the Raiders after the bye.

The Browns went 29-72 during his stay, which had four coaches and 13 starting quarterbac­ks.

After voiding his contract following the 2015 season to become a free agent, he signed a five-year, $45 million contract with the Falcons because was drawn to first-year coach Dan Quinn and his hire of Kyle Shanahan as offensive coordinato­r.

The business of football was brutal during his time with the Browns, yet he maintains relationsh­ips with former teammates.

So, OK, he’s kind of looking forward to returning to Cleveland, although this won’t be the first time. The Falcons played an exhibition game at First Energy Stadium in 2016, when his new teammates teased him after the Browns played a video tribute for him that night.

“I have some friends who still live in town. There’s one guy on the team, Joel Bitonio, a guard, so it will be cool to see them,” he said. “I know a lot of the equipment staff and trainers and stuff, so it will be cool to see the faces and some people I haven’t seen in a while, but beyond that it should be a business trip and I should be focused on football.”

A lifelong California­n, Mack’s move brought challenges that went beyond the football field. After growing up outside Los Angeles, and attending college in Berkeley, he found difference­s in menus and in winters.

He’s quite content to now be based in Atlanta, where he’s been a Pro Bowler in his first two seasons with just as many postseason trips and bonuses, but that doesn’t mean he would trade his time in Cleveland.

“I remember going into the city and liking it a lot. Moved from the Bay Area to the Midwest and the people I met and just how passionate everyone was about football was a really cool experience,” Mack said. “It was a part of the country I probably never would have lived in otherwise. I think it was a very valuable life experience.”

Yeah, so going back will be different for Mack, who went to a wedding in Cleveland last summer. He stays in touch with several teammates from Cleveland, including future Hall of Fame left tackle Joe Thomas, who retired after last season.

“We were together for a while, we went through a lot of ups and downs,” he said. “Some of my best friends now are definitely former Browns teammates.”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? “I think it was a very valuable life experience,” says Falcons center Alex Mack about his time with the Browns.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM “I think it was a very valuable life experience,” says Falcons center Alex Mack about his time with the Browns.

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