Friday, February 5, 2016

Browns and Johnny Manziel: which one will rebound faster? -- Bud Shaw's Spinoffs

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Browns weren't the only ones to put a high draft grade on Johnny Manziel two years ago despite his issues.
One report the night of the draft claimed the Minnesota Vikings tried to trade up for Manziel at No. 22 (losing that bid to the Browns) before regrouping and moving up to pick Teddy Bridgewater.
Dallas owner Jerry Jones admitted he had to be talked out of Manziel with the Cowboys instead making offensive tackle Zack Martin their choice at No. 16.
And we remember the wide variety of opinion on Manziel expressed by NFL analysts before and after the draft.
Not all takes were as damning as Merrill Hoge's claim that Manziel should've been a mid-round pick.So now that the Browns are expected to release Manziel in March, how many teams will be interested?
Will the latest allegations in Texas make Manziel unemployable in the short term? Common sense says yes. But this is the NFL.
A year off might be best for him. In denying the allegations from former girlfriendColleen Crowley that he threatened to kill them both and that he may have been using drugs, Manziel told TMZ Sports he was "stable" and "100 percent committed to football."
The claim of total dedication to football, we know, is a lie. Is the rest? How much of it?

Johnny Manziel denies allegations by former girlfriend
Johnny Manziel denies allegations by former girlfriend
Johnny Manziel denies to TMZ Sports a report that he threatened to kill Colleen Crowley and himself or that he struck her.

The Browns won't waive Manziel until March 9 for procedural reasons. Some NFL investigations have dragged.
In the short term, other NFL teams may not have the benefit of the NFL's findings to help them sort it out. They'd be wise to wait until they do.
Mike Freeman of Bleacher Report tweeted about Manziel's future after Browns' VP of Football Operations Sashi Brown's statement last Tuesday, and before the latest incident.
Freeman quoted two GMs anonymously.
So, one said Manziel would be out of the league.
And the other said he'd get claimed immediately.
Hopefully that clears things up.
• You don't need Harvard smarts – thank goodness – to understand the numbers favoring the opinion of the second GM quoted by Bleacher Report.
There are 32 NFL teams.
One -- the Cowboys -- is being urged by a former star player to pick up Manziel.Michael Irvin said Thursday afternoon Jerry Jones could salvage Manziel's career (at least he said that before details of the allegations became public).
How many other owner would want an affiliation with Manziel? Not many. I'm not even sure Jones would at at this point.
But is Manziel a Top 64 quarterback?
Based on his improvement on the field in 2015, that's not even debatable.
Based solely on that, some team would consider him worth the risk – at least until Manziel becomes a problem.
It's a much different question to ask if he'll dedicate himself, change his lifestyle, and become a reliable starter.
I've learned never to say never.
 (I think I learned that when I heard Manziel skipped the final game to show up in Vegas, reportedly in disguise and calling himself "Billy.")
But my answer is I doubt it.
• Manziel may have divided the Browns internally. He may have become a huge distraction.
But he was the best thing to ever happen to Justin Gilbert.
If not for Manziel there would've been much more attention paid a No. 8 overall pick who sleeps harder than he applies press coverage.
• Can Andrew Berry, another Harvard grad, help the Browns crawl out from under the rubble of draft mistakes?
Since 2011 the Browns have made six first-round picks: Phil Taylor,Barkevious MingoTrent Richardson, Brandon Weeden, Manziel and Gilbert.
Think about this: the Browns not only liked all those players in the first round, they traded up for most of them.
Berry is obviously bright. The surprise isn't that the Browns are hiring a 28-year-old guy who had pro personnel experience in Indianapolis but not draft prep experience.
The surprise is they reviewed that list of first-round draft picks and didn't go straight to Stephen Hawking with an offer.
• Kansas coach Bill Self ripped into one of his players after the JayhawksBrannen Greene drove to the basket for an uncontested dunk in a 77-59 win over Kansas State.
Players from both teams had stopped, waiting for the final four or five seconds to elapse.
Self called it "totally classless."
It's one thing for a coach to feel that way about an opposing player.
It's another for a player's own coach to say that.
But Ricky Davis would think it was bush.
So that really settles it.

 Shavar Manuel, a top high school defensive end, flipped from a verbal commitment with Florida to sign a letter of intent with Florida State.
Manuel committed to the Gators on Feb. 5 but expressed uncertainty about his decision.
FSU defensive ends coach Brad Lawing counseled him by telling the high schooler to "play the game" and "tell the damn Gators anything they want to hear."
Translation: honesty is always the best policy, son, starting right after you sign with us.
• Lawing had talked with Manuel the night before he committed to Florida. According to espn.com, Manuel told the coach, "I'm just getting pressure from people."
That clearly bothered FSU, which preferred its brand of pressure.

• National signing day is a little sketchy, what with kids being pulled in different directions by outside forces.
It's greatly overblown, too. Whomever said recruiting classes would be far more accurately measured when their time is up  than when they enter college had a good point.
But it's a big occasion for high school kids who've worked so hard to earn scholarships. You can't blame kids for wanting to be the star of their own shows
But you can blame any media people who build kids up, then wonder why some get caught up in their own celebrity.
• Ohio State once again had a tremendous recruiting class. Michigan probably made the biggest jump, from a Top 50 ranked class in Jim Harbaugh's first year to Top 10 in his second.
The Wolverines landed No. 1 overall prospect Rashan Gary (DT).
Recruiting under Harbaugh, who slept over a recruit's house and climbed a tree on another visit for no apparent reason, is as effective as it is weird.
And that's not easy.
 Bubba Watson isn't a fan of the new design at TPC Scottsdale where the Phoenix Open is played, calling it "goofier and tougher."
Watson said, "I don't like it at all" and added that he was only in attendance because he has "three beautiful sponsors who love it here."
And who no doubt appreciate sarcasm.
• The San Francisco 49ers cancelled a scheduled event for 1,200 girl scouts in favor of making a deal to host a concert.
The Niners then answered criticism by rescheduling the girl scouts  for a week later and offering to pick up the tab.
Good move.
You don't want to be seen as being on the wrong side of nuns, puppies or Girl Scouts.
• NFL owners apparently want commissioner Roger Goodell to present himself as more relaxed and less evasive at press conferences.
There is an easy fix for that.
Decisions that make some sense and are easier to defend.
• Asked if he's the LeBron of NFL quarterbacks, Cam Newton said, "Why can't LeBron be the Cam Newton of power forwards?"
The easiest answer: he's a small forward.
• The second easiest answer: He's an all-timer. Newton hasn't won anything yet.
But just to be safe check back Sunday night.
• Pittsburgh wide receiver Antonio Brown has a name for his curious hairstyle. He calls it "The Lego."

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