The Columbus Dispatch

Browns’ Kitchens, Dorsey surprise Hunt at his baptism

- By Tom Withers

ROCKY RIVER, Ohio — Cleveland Browns coach Freddie Kitchens Freddie Kitchens has been watching Kareem Hunt work toward redemption.

On Sunday, he showed the running back that he’s got his full support.

Kitchens and general manager John Dorsey surprised Hunt by attending his baptism at True Vine Missionary Baptist Church on Cleveland’s east side. Hunt, who was suspended eight games by the NFL for two physical altercatio­ns, including one where he shoved and kicked a woman, said last week he wanted “to feel reborn.”

Kitchens said Hunt was stunned to see him and Dorsey.

“Just wondering what the hell we were doing there,” Kitchens said of Hunt’s reaction on Monday while speaking at the Browns’ 20th annual golf outing at Westwood Country Club. “I think he was pretty surprised . ... We care about Kareem as a person. We went there for Kareem Hunt as the person and not the football player. The thing we did yesterday was not about football at all.”

Hunt was not available for comment, but he was one of several current and former Browns players to take part in the event, which raises money for education initiative­s supported by the Cleveland Browns Foundation. Quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield, who recently shaved off his thick beard for his upcoming wedding, also played.

The Browns were criticized for signing Hunt to a one-year contract as a free agent in February following his release by the Kansas City Chiefs, who said the 23-year-old lied to them about his actions during an altercatio­n with a woman in a Cleveland hotel hallway early last year.

Since coming home, Hunt has been speaking to high school students and other troubled youth in the Cleveland area. He told reporters last week that his main message to youngsters is to make better decisions.

Kitchens is impressed with Hunt’s willingnes­s to be vulnerable and use his mistakes as a teaching tool.

“They’re going to make bad decisions, but the key is to learn from those decisions,” he said. “One of the most truest forms of bravery is showing your scars. You show your scars so people don’t make the same mistakes that you make. And Kareem has done an exceptiona­l job of showing his scars out in the public, and some of these schools and things he’s visited without any advertisem­ent at all. He’s chosen to do that to show his scars so maybe the kids in his surroundin­gs don’t make the same mistake.”

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