The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

DE Garrett expects to play vs. Chargers

- By Tom Withers

Browns star defensive end and NFL sacks leader Myles Garrett expects to play Oct. 10 against the Chargers despite missing his second practice of the week Oct. 8 due to soreness.

“I’m confident I’m going to play,” he said.

Garrett is listed as questionab­le — 50/50 chance of playing — by the Browns (3-1), who are dealing with numerous injuries across their second-ranked defense and continue to downplay quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield’s shoulder injury.

While his teammates went through the portion of practice open to media members, Garrett worked on his conditioni­ng to the side with starting rookie cornerback Greg Newsome, who will miss his second straight game with a calf injury.

Afterward, Garrett, who was rested Oct. 6 and was limited in the Oct. 7 practice, said he’s been dealing with “nagging pain” for several weeks, but wouldn’t specify his injuries.

“I’m fully expecting to go,” he said. “It’s been bothering me since last week. I had some pain then, even the week before. Nobody’s 100% across the league. So I’ve just got to make sure I’m as close to there as possible and make sure I can be a positive force when I’m out there.”

Garrett leads the league with six sacks and is tied for the lead with seven tackles for loss.

Pressed about what’s bothering him, Garrett said: “I can’t tell you that.”

The 2020 All-Pro said his injuries bother him most before kickoff.

“When the adrenaline gets flowing, it starts to go away, but at the beginning, before the game, that’s when I’m really trying to work on it as much as I can to make sure it doesn’t hold me back,” he said.

Garrett may be the most prominent Browns defensive player dealing with an injury, but he’s not alone.

Ends Jadeveon Clowney (elbow) and Takk McKinley (ankle/knee), cornerback Denzel Ward (neck), nickel back Troy Hill (toe) and linebacker Malcolm Smith (abdomen) all missed time this week and are questionab­le.

On the offensive side, starting left tackle Jedrick Wills Jr. (ankle), center JC Tretter (knee/back) and tight end David Njoku (knee) are questionab­le.

Wills’ injury is the most significan­t. The first-round draft pick in 2020 has played the past three weeks despite not practicing due to a severe sprain suffered in Week 1 at Kansas City.

Coach Kevin Stefanski said Wills’ “has a chance to play, but we will continue to evaluate him, and again, use the next 48 hours to make that determinat­ion.”

If Wills can’t play, rookie James Hudson will likely make his first career start. Hudson replaced Wills against the Vikings in the second half for 21 plays.

Browns line coach Bill Callahan said that while Hudson may lack game experience, going against Garrett and Clowney in practice helps.

“He’s still young and he’s still learning, but at least he has exposure to it and he’s seen it, so it doesn’t freak him out in the middle of a game: ‘I haven’t seen this move. I haven’t seen that,’” Callahan said. “He’s seen the full repertoire.”

As for Mayfield, who has played the past three weeks with a torn labrum in his left, non-throwing shoulder, Stefanski said there is nothing in particular that worries him about the quarterbac­k continuing to play.

“I can’t speculate about what the concern would be,” he said. “I would just tell you, he has told you guys that it is not a concern of his, and I have watched him practice, and he has done a nice job.”

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