The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Season getting short as team seeks turnaround

Mayfield says Browns will need to have a ‘single-week focus’ to start winning again

- By Tom Withers

Baker Mayfield completed his media session without incident and even sported the same mustache he woke up wearing.

At this point, those two things are considered progress for the Browns’ struggling second-year quarterbac­k.

With Cleveland mired in a four-game losing streak inside a season unexpected­ly unraveling, Mayfield projected a buttoned-down image on Nov. 6 as the Browns (2-6) prepared to host the Bills (6-2) on Nov. 10.

Following practice, Mayfield spoke deliberate­ly and objectivel­y while discussing the team’s struggles, his own performanc­e

and his hopes of salvaging the season.

No swagger. No sarcasm. Humility.

“We have to stay the course,” he said.

It was a contrast to last week, when a perturbed Mayfield objected to a question and stomped away from his weekly news conference in Cleveland’s locker room.

That was followed by a strange sequence in Denver when he curiously shaved before and after a 24-19 loss to the Broncos.

Mayfield started Nov. 3 with a beard, wore a Fu Manchu mustache during the game and then showed up to his postgame news conference with only a mustache.

On Nov. 6, he explained his grooming habits.

“The original thought for me, do handlebars,” said Mayfield, who has maintained the postgame look, which went viral on social media. “I was undefeated before Sunday with the handlebar mustache. So I shaved it off because I didn’t deserve it.”

It’s been that kind of season for Mayfield.

Nothing is going his — or the Browns’ — way.

Although he didn’t throw an intercepti­on Nov. 3, Mayfield remains tied for the

league lead with 12 picks. He’s also last among qualifying QBs in completion percentage (58.7) and touchdown-to-intercepti­on rate (0.58).

His frustratio­n has been building, and he acknowledg­ed being exasperate­d in a Twitter posting following his touchy exchange last week with a reporter, who had asked him about a lack of urgency during the previous week’s loss at New England.

The Browns outgained the Broncos, controlled time of possession, cut down on penalties, didn’t commit a turnover and still lost.

Mayfield said there’s only one way to straighten out the season.

“Stay the course,” he said. “I think no matter what’s going on, we’ve made strides in certain areas that we needed to, but now we just have to make the plays when they’re there. We have to execute when it’s in the red zone. We have to do those obvious things and improve each week because we know that right now

with eight games left in the season we have to have a single-week focus coming into it and do our job.” Browns coach Freddie Kitchens, whose job will be in jeopardy if the losing persists, said Mayfield can’t let the losing affect him.

That’s easier said than done, but Kitchens is confident his 24-year-old quarterbac­k will grow from the experience.

“The game of football is tough, and it is a tough game played by tough people,” said Kitchens, who has been quick to defend Mayfield. “Baker is a tough individual mentally and physically. Baker will be fine. He just has to understand to stay in the moment, and I think he does. You come out of bad situations a lot of times better off personally and profession­ally. He just has to keep his focus on the day and what he is doing in that day.”

One of Mayfield’s biggest issues — and a recurring problem for Cleveland’s offense — has been an inability to consistent­ly connect

with star wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr.

The speedy Beckham caught his only touchdown pass in Week 2, and the Browns have not gone to him nearly enough in the red zone. Last week in Denver, Cleveland made five trips inside the Broncos 20 but came away with just one TD.

Mayfield said the expectatio­n that he and Beckham would have instant chemistry was presumptuo­us.

“People had this pictureper­fect thing that it was going to be sunshine and rainbows and he was going to have a whole lot of 1-on-1s,” Mayfield said. “It’s Odell Beckham. He’s going to have double coverage. We have to find ways to format things to get him the ball and force-feed him early on to where he can make an impact before we can have the perfect look to give him a shot play. That’s something that we learned the hard way, but I think as the weeks have gone by, we’ll continue to improve on how to get the ball to him.”

 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Baker Mayfield (6) looks at the scoreboard during a coach’s challenge in the second half against the Broncos on Nov. 3in Denver.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Baker Mayfield (6) looks at the scoreboard during a coach’s challenge in the second half against the Broncos on Nov. 3in Denver.
 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Baker Mayfield makes a call against the Broncos on Nov. 3in Denver.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Baker Mayfield makes a call against the Broncos on Nov. 3in Denver.

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