The Morning Call

OBJ’s season over due to torn ACL

- By Tom Withers

CLEVELAND — Odell Beckham Jr. was in a much better place emotionall­y and physically. This was going to be the season he changed minds.

He was determined to make 2020 — and its many obstacles — a special year, re-establish himself as one of the NFL’s best players and lead the Browns back to the playoffs, along with with best friend and teammate Jarvis Landry.

Beckham won’t get the chance.

The star receiver’s second season with the Browns ended Monday after an MRI confirmed he sustained a torn left knee ligament in the opening minutes of Sunday’s 37-34 win over the Bengals.

Beckham’s injury is a devastatin­g personal blow and a potentiall­y major setback to the Browns, who are off to their best start since 1994 and eyeing their first postseason appearance in 18 years. They’ll have to get there without Beckham. “Obviously, it’s a big loss,” coach Kevin Stefanski said. “He’s a huge part of what we do, so now we just have to huddle up and find some different ways and find some different people and put them in that role. ... I’m sick for Odell.”

The three-time Pro Bowler got hurt when his left leg buckled while he was trying to make a tackle after Baker Mayfield’s first pass was intercepte­d by Bengals cornerback Darius Phillips.

An MRI taken Monday in Cleveland confirmed the diagnosis of the torn ACL, an injury that typically requires nine months to one year of recovery time. The team said Beckham will be placed on injured reserve, but Stefanski didn’t have a timetable on when he will have surgery.

On what became his final play of 2020, Beckham, who was slowed last season by a core muscle injury, was chasing Phillips down the sideline when his leg got twisted awkwardly. He immediatel­y grabbed it, was taken directly to the locker room and didn’t return.

The Browns (5-2) played well without Beckham, whofor all his talent hasn’t been able to make a strong connection with Mayfield since arriving in a blockbuste­r trade from the Giants before last season. Beckham played most of 2019 with an injury that required offseason surgery.

After Beckham went out Sunday, Mayfield completed 21 consecutiv­e passes and threw five TD passes — matching a franchise record — as the Browns outlasted Joe Burrow and the Bengals.

Mayfield was also without injured running back Nick Chubb, tight end Austin Hooper and Landry played with a broken rib. But the third-year QB had one of his best games by making plays with rookie tight end Harrison Bryant (two TDs), Rashard Higgins (six catches) and rookie receiver Donovan Peoples-Jones, who entered the game without a catch and grabbed Mayfield’s winning TD pass with 11 seconds left

The Browns, who haven’t made the postseason since 2002, will have to go the rest of the way without Beckham, who turns 28 on Nov. 5. He had 23 catches for 319 yards and three touchdowns this season and scored on a 50-yard touchdown run.

Beckham’s presence alone made defenses account for him on every snap.

“Odell, the energy he brings to practice, the energy he brings to games. No one else is going to be able to bring that type of juice,” Stefanski said. “But it’s our job to find the guys that can go compete and we’ll put them in spots where they can succeed and think we’ll be able to do that.

“It’s not easy. I don’t want to have to do it and I’m very disappoint­ed for Odell, but that’s the nature of this beast. Injuries are part of this thing and that doesn’t mean any of us have to like it, but we do have to deal with it.”

The torn ACL is the latest injury for Beckham, who was the offensive rookie of the year in 2014.

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