Where will the Cleveland Browns first address roster moves? Hey, Tony!
Published: Saturday, January 15, 2011, 11:30 PM
By Tony Grossi, The Plain Dealer
Hey, Tony: If the new coaching regime decides to switch the defense to the 4-3, do you see Matt Roth and/or Marcus Benard converting to defensive end? Could it possibly improve their game or are they players best suited as tweeners? -- Peter D, EC, Wis
Hey, Peter: I could see Roth converting. He may be too slow at linebacker as it is and has the size for a 4-3 end. Benard does not, but he could still be utilized as a situational edge rusher, as he is now.
Hey, Tony: I think once again this year the Browns proved that they are one of the slowest teams in the league. We also have a severe weakness on the right side of our offensive line and in our front seven on defense. If you had to put one as your No. 1 priority to fix this off-season, would you chose to add team speed or build up in the trenches? -- Chris Mangosh, Willoughby
Hey, Chris: Probably defensive line. Speed is lacking everywhere, too. Eric Mangini preferred size over speed. We'll see if the coaching change results in a change of size-speed preference.
Hey, Tony: There's a lot of talk here and everywhere about Colt McCoy's arm strength and how it might be a concern during our wonderful winter months. Is it possible that he can increase arm strength through working out/conditioning? -- Chris McGurr, Garfield Heights
Hey, Chris: Possible? I suppose. Mike Holmgren has said he believes McCoy's arm strength will improve as his body matures.
Hey, Tony: Do you foresee the Browns signing any of their free agents -- Abe Elam, Lawrence Vickers, Matt Roth, etc., -- before a collective bargaining is reached? -- Paul Thiel, Crescent Springs, Ky.
Hey, Paul: No. If there is no CBA settlement, it's possible there would be no free agency in 2011 and players whose contracts expired would have them roll over another year, with modest salary increases. That would be chaotic, but I've heard it as a possibility.
Hey, Tony: You're flat out wrong about Colt McCoy's arm strength being an issue, citing his poor play in bad weather. What bad weather? Yes, it was cold the final two games, but there wasn't rain or snow and it wasn't that windy. His throws weren't getting caught in the wind either. The first INT against Baltimore was Mohamed Massaquoi failing to beat 1-on-1 coverage, the weather had nothing to do with it. The next two throws were forced but again had nothing to do with the weather.
Against Pittsburgh, the first INT bounced off Ben Watson's hands, that's not on Colt and again zero to do with the weather. The second one was a miscommunication between him and Massaquoi and the third Colt got blasted from behind by James Harrison. Once again, absolutely nothing to do with the weather. Arm strength is flat out a non-issue with him.
Does he have a cannon? No, we all know that. However, the top quarterbacks in Browns history have a common denominator (among others such as intelligence and resourcefulness, two things Colt has a ton of): Less than ideal arm strength -- Otto Graham, Bernie Kosar, Brian Sipe, Frank Ryan. Your assessment of Colt struggling due to arm strength issues is lazy and inaccurate. -- Kevin S, Arlington, Va.
Hey, Kevin: Even McCoy agreed that the ball is "heavier" in cold weather -- regardless of wind, snow, locust plagues, whatever -- and requires more experience to maintain accuracy under those conditions. The examples you cite above are only the interceptions. I saw a lot of his passes over the past month that did not have enough zip on them, whether they were completed or not. I've also talked to a number of NFL insiders -- GMs, coaches, scouts, and others -- who say that McCoy lasted until the third round, despite having the most wins of any QB in college football history, because of his arm strength.
Finally, you can not name a single quarterback with a northern, outdoor-based NFL team that won anything of note in the past 30 years. Not one. And that includes Kosar and Sipe. Don't take it personally. McCoy's arm strength is a question mark in this location. It wouldn't be if he played in a dome or in the South or West. Even Mike Holmgren admits that.
Hey, Tony: I've just heard you saying we need two legitimate receivers: a No. 1 and a slot. I couldn't agree more. But what about Josh Cribbs? Can he be the slot guy? I believe he's got the physical skills. I can imagine him tearing up defenses with long runs after short passes. Can you, too, or is it just another Browns fan's wishful thinking? -- Miroslav Stefanovic, Serbia
Hey, Miroslav: I'm interested in seeing Cribbs in a well-coordinated, West Coast offense. I'm thinking he'd be more productive.
Hey, Tony: I respectfully have to disagree with your SBTV comment that only strong-armed QBs can be successful in northern cities. I don't think anyone will put Bernie Kosar in the (cannon-arm QB club) and he should have played in two Browns Super Bowls. -- Howard Boles, Peyton, Colo.
Hey, Howard: Another myth. Kosar's arm strength was above average when he entered the NFL and had his best years in 1986 and 1987. I recall him winning a Quarterback Challenge in the off-season because of his accuracy over all depths on the field. He could make any throw. Heck, he invented new throws. But after his elbow injury in the 1988 season opener, Kosar's arm was never the same. All of his other superb traits helped get the Browns to the AFC Championship Game in 1989, but his decline was swift thereafter. Brian Sipe, the Browns' poster boy of below-average arm strength, never won a playoff game. Look it up.
Hey, Tony: Obviously, Troy Polamalu is a very good player. Just curious how his per season stats for eight seasons translates into possible Hall of Fame career -- 3.5 INT, 63 total tackles, 1 sack, 1 force fumble, 10 passes defensed -- your thoughts? -- Robert Burke, Austintown, Ohio
Hey, Robert: Barring unforeseen circumstances, Polamalu is on the fast track to the Hall of Fame. He and Ed Reed easily are two of the best safeties in the history of the NFL. Not even debatable.
Hey, Tony: How was it determined that the Cardinals would pick before the Browns even though they had the same record? -- Jerry J., North Olmsted
Hey, Jerry: The only tiebreaker for draft order is strength of schedule. Arizona's opponents were 119-137 (.465). The Browns' opponents were 146-110 (.570). The team with the weaker schedule gets the higher draft pick because it is judged to have been the worse team.
Hey, Tony: What do you see in your crystal ball for off-season moves? Someone like Shaun Rogers, who seems to have given up on the Browns and is still young enough to make an impact on a contender's defense, could realistically return a third-round pick. Let's be honest, the Browns need all the picks they can get for the upcoming draft. Or, do you think nothing will happen personnel-wise (besides the draft) until a new CBA is hammered out? -- Tim, Winter Haven, Fla.
Hey, Tim: As I understand it, trades involving players are prohibited until a new CBA is resolved. Teams may trade draft picks.
Hey, Tony: Since we have the sixth pick in this year's draft, if there were a lockout throughout the entire 2011 NFL season and there was no record to determine the draft order, would the order be determined by the record of the previous year? Thus, if we pick sixth this year and don't play a single game all of the 2011 season, will we be awarded the sixth pick in the 2012 NFL Draft or will they come up with a new system to determine the order? -- Levi Mendenhall, Springfield, Ohio
Hey, Levi: To my knowledge, the scenario has not been fully analyzed by the NFL because nobody -- nobody -- expects a work stoppage to wipe out the entire 2011 season. Nobody.
Hey, Tony: How come you make excuses for the shortcomings of the coaches you like, for example you used the laughable excuse that "Jon Gruden fell into the veteran trap." Kinda makes you sound like a shill for some coaches. -- Michael B, Dover, Ohio
Hey, Michael: Call it what you will. I think there are two types of coaches -- winners and losers. Winners are the coaches with winning records. Losers are coaches with losing records. It is not complicated. I believe there are underlying reasons why certain coaches win and others don't. I'm talking about career records, not just one or two seasons affected by injuries. Jon Gruden: winner. John Fox: winner. Bill Parcells: winner. I frown at excuses like, "Well, he played a tough schedule." Or, "He didn't have the players." Over the course of a coach's career, those excuses don't wash. Gruden was fired after consecutive seasons of 9-7. Winner.
View full sizeJoshua Gunter / The Plain DealerGeneral Manager Tom Heckert should be more accessible to Browns fans in explaining personnel decisions, says Tony Grossi.
Hey, Tony: Of the Ten Great Browns Mysteries you mentioned regarding last year's dismal season, I think half of them (only three cornerbacks, trading Jerome Harrison, only two running backs, John St Clair, and trading for Jayme Mitchell) came under the responsibility of Tom Heckert since they were personnel decisions. Do you agree and are these questions that Browns fans deserve an answer to, especially since almost all of the blame went to Eric Mangini? -- Bob Ruple, Newbury
Hey, Bob: Technically, you are correct. Heckert was the authority over all personnel decisions. My hunch is that Heckert deferred to Mangini on many in-season personnel decisions. (I don't think Mangini had anything to do with the trade for Mitchell.) But, yes, fans and media deserve answers to these questions. I believe Heckert should be more accessible to answer such questions.
Hey, Tony: If the Browns are going to go with the West Coast offense, don't you think that Brady Quinn would have been a better fit than Colt McCoy? Quinn is bigger and has a better arm for Cleveland weather. He can throw long, proven in the Detroit game. Who made the decision to trade Quinn? Holmgren or Mangini? -- Ernie, Columbus, Ohio
Hey, Ernie: I don't agree at all. McCoy is a better fit than Quinn in the West Coast offense -- or any system. To me, Quinn was too obsessed with body building and appeared too tight to make all the throws. It was strictly Holmgren's call to trade Quinn.
Hey, Tony: If the Browns do switch to the 4-3 defense, wouldn't Shaun Rogers be an absolute beast as a 4-3 defensive end? -- Mark Cesarik, Chicago
Hey, Mark: Rogers has the most ability of any player on the Browns' roster. But he does not dedicate himself completely to being the best possible player he can be. His best position probably is as a penetrating, one-gap tackle in a 4-3 -- not as an end.
Hey, Tony: Everyone is talking about Colt McCoy's arm strength as if it is a unchangeable handicap. Is it possible for a QB, like Colt McCoy, to hit the weights and suddenly have that condition reversed? -- Andy Frecka, Moscow, Russia
Hey, Andy: Improved? Possibly. Reversed? Not likely.
Hey, Tony: You've said that neither Mohamed Massaquoi nor Brian Robiskie is a good fit as a slot receiver. Is Josh Cribbs good in this role? It seems that it's always a positive for the Browns to get the ball to Cribbs when he has running room. -- David Skeen, Cedar Park, Texas
Hey, David: I would think that Cribbs would benefit greatly from a switch to a well-coordinated, West Coast offense.
Hey, Tony: Do you think that it would be worth it to take a flier on Matt Flynn, Green Bay's backup? He runs the West Coast offense and seems to have the arm strength to play in the cold/wind. -- Mike T, Eastlake
Hey, Mike: Many in the NFL feel Flynn could be a very tradeable commodity for Green Bay. His name has been mentioned to me as a possibility that might interest the Browns, but that was before the team fell in love with Colt McCoy. I don't see it happening now.
Hey, Tony: I know our offense has been bad for a long time. With that said the local media and many fans have been obsessed with ... the West Coast offense coming to town, and lots of throwing for Colt McCoy, and we need an offensive head coach ... and finally the oddest one to me "you can't win in the modern NFL without a prolific passsing attack." Then I watch the Ravens and Jets play with killer defense, run-first offense with an OK passing game dominate other teams. The Steelers, too, have made defense their primary strength for the past four decades.
We finally are getting a tough-nosed defense in Cleveland and with another good draft we could have a good to great defense. My fear is all the focus on a pass-first offense in this town will not go well against the rough and tumble AFC North. Defense never goes out of style! -- Michael Spitale, Galena, Ohio
Hey, Michael: That said, the Browns' offense must come out of the dark ages for the team to be considered a playoff contender. The Ravens won a Super Bowl in 2000 with defense and running, but they realize that 10 years later, the game has changed to the point they must upgrade their passing offense. Same with Pittsburgh. The Steelers won the Super Bowl two years ago with the most prolific passing attack in their history. Defense never goes out of style, but it alone does not win championships anymore.
Hey, Tony: How many draft picks do the Browns have in the 2011 draft? -- George Grace, Austintown, Ohio
Hey, George: I believe they have their picks in every round but the seventh (for Seneca Wallace) and also own Denver's pick in the sixth round (for Brady Quinn).
Hey, Tony: Has there been any report on the rehabilitation progress of Montario Hardesty? -- Dave, St. Simons Island, Ga.
Hey, Dave: He is rehabbing well, looks good and is expected to be ready for the start of training camp.
Hey, Tony: In your end of season player rankings, how could you put Mike Bell -- who did nothing for the Browns -- ahead of Blake Costanzo, who was one of our best special teamers. -- Angelo Costanzo, Cleveland
Hey, Angelo: I must have had bad pizza the night before and had a brain cramp. Or was it too much red wine?
Hey, Tony: I know the Browns have many needs. No. 1 need being wide receiver. Do you think Chris Chambers could be a help and a possible mentor to our wide receivers? The guy has always been a class act. -- Tim Brehm, Strongsville
Hey, Tim: I would bring in as many receivers as possible and have them compete. Guys like Mohamed Massaquoi and Brian Robiskie need competition to get better. No more entitlements.
Hey, Tony: If Mike Tomlin or John Harbaugh were hypothetically hired a few years ago as the Browns' head coach, do you think they would have taken the team to the playoffs or suffered the same fate as Eric Mangini? -- Steve Cornelius, Avon Lake
Hey, Steve: What you're asking is if I think Tomlin and Harbaugh are better coaches than Mangini. My answer is yes and yes. Truthfully, I don't think it's close.
Hey, Tony: Any word on the leading candidates for head coach of the 2013 Cleveland Browns, after the 2011-2012 head coach is fired? -- Andrew Steckler, Beachwood
Hey, Andrew: Bill Cowher and Jon Gruden.
Hey, Tony: I have noticed that you and other reporters have commented a lot on the fact that all of the high-level guys in the Browns' organization are represented by Bob LaMonte. The coaching search also seemed somewhat limited to his clients. Is this strange to you? Have you heard of any other organizations partially basing their most important positions on representation? I can't imagine top-level teams doing this. -- Ananth Thyagarajan, Richmond, Va.
Hey, Ananth: Well, I was the first media member in the Cleveland market to point out the immense influence LaMonte has on the current Browns organization. Is it strange? No. LaMonte is controlling the front office in Denver in similar fashion. This is the way business is done in the NFL, in many cases. It doesn't mean it's the right way to do business, but it's not particularly uncommon. I think it's up to the owner to avoid these situations.
-- Tony
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