By Steve Doerschuk
CantonRep.com staff report
Posted Aug 06, 2009 @ 07:46 PM
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BEREA — .Now that Browns X-factor Joshua Cribbs has decided against holding out and is in camp, what has he been up to?
Plenty.
Cribbs was one of the busiest men in Berea during Thursday’s lone practice.
No. 16 got more action with the No. 1 offense than in any of the previous five days of training camp. It appeared the new regime has begun in earnest its version of experimentation that, under the previous command, showed promise but never quite came to fruition.
“I think I’m being integrated into the base offense more than I was,” Cribbs said. “I’m not always the guy running reverses. Today’s practice was the first time I ran a reverse in a while.
“And I’m not the screen guy so often. Today was the first time I ran a screen since OTAs.”
Cribbs ran with both the No. 1 offense directed by quarterback Brady Quinn on this day, and the No. 2s under Derek Anderson. At times in the past, Anderson has seemed to avoid Cribbs, but in Thursday’s session, the two hooked up nicely on a downfield throw.
Cribbs is listed at wide receiver, but he caught only two passes last year. He ran the ball 29 times, gaining 167 yards. Often, he would line up at quarterback and take a direct snap. Often, everybody in the house knew Cribbs hitting the field meant that Cribbs would run the ball.
“They’re integrating me in the base offense right now,” Cribbs said. “That’s important, because once I get the base offense down, I can just hop in there any time. I don’t have to be just a gadget.
“Even when we were predictable last year, we still gained a lot of yards (5.8 per carry). I don’t have any thought in my mind that we’re gonna be predictable this year.”
Cribbs, 26, had one of the NFL’s best special-teams seasons ever in 2007, averaging more than 30 yards as a kick returner, scoring on a punt return and striking fear into opposing return men as a tackler.
His production slipped in 2008, but he remains a feared special-teams man whose potential on offense, under new Coordinator Brian Daboll, is intriguing.
The predictability factor could be the key. What if opponents can’t assume Cribbs will get the ball when he’s in?
“I think it’s gonna be difficult,” he said, “because whether it’s coming or not, they still have to think about stopping it. They must cover, because they can’t just leave the door open.
“If I can get in once or twice, three or four times, on some gadget plays, and move the chains, I’ll take it ... as well as getting on the base offense.”
Cribbs is eager to show his wares in Sunday’s intrasquad game at Cleveland Browns Stadium. He seems encouraged about things in general.
“I feel I’m having a good camp,” he said.
http://www.cantonrep.com/sports/x1701871371/Cribbs-finding-his-place-in-offense