BROWNS A change in Policy: Collins takes charge



Cleveland owner Randy Lerner said Butch Davis' job is safe.
BEREA (AP) -- In a few weeks, the Cleveland Browns will have a new team president and chief executive officer.
Their coach isn't changing.
Carmen Policy announced Wednesday that he is stepping down after five years as the club's top executive on May 1. He will be replaced by John Collins, an NFL senior vice president of marketing and sales.
Policy will remain with the club through the 2004 season as an adviser.
"That means I will get paid and that means I really won't have to work that hard," he quipped.
Cleveland's front-office restructuring came as a surprise to some, but not to owner Randy Lerner. With Policy's help, the 41-year-old Lerner had been planning to bring in someone closer to his age to run the business side of the Browns almost since the day he inherited ownership from his late father, Al.
"This was the plan from the beginning," Lerner said.
Davis will stay
With one-half of the organization undergoing a facelift, Lerner said he has no intention of messing with the football operations side -- the one belonging to coach Butch Davis.
Lerner insists Davis has no job worries despite the Browns going 5-11 last season.
"I would not fire Butch right now under any circumstances," Lerner said. "It makes absolutely no sense to me. I think Butch is a winner."
Lerner was asked what will happen if the Browns have another subpar season in 2004.
"What happens is we have a big problem on our hands, because you have to win," Lerner said.
Policy's decision to give up his control of the Browns was made nearly two years ago.
On the day following Al Lerner's death, Policy arrived at work and was overwhelmed by the magnitude of losing his close friend and business partner.
"It was surreal," Policy said. "I had a feeling it would be different from that day on."
Policy was hand-picked by Al Lerner when Cleveland was awarded an expansion franchise and returned to the league in 1999 following a three-year absence.
Good opportunity
Collins, who has worked in the league office since 1989, is intrigued by working for one of the 32 teams he represented while brokering deals across boardroom conference tables.
"It's pretty hard not to get excited about the opportunity to come to Cleveland and join the Browns," Collins said. "This is a team environment and that feels really good to me."
At Randy Lerner's request, Policy signed a contract extension last season through 2008.
The deal was structured so Policy could slowly turn over more responsibility to Lerner, who said he'll be more visible but will maintain a low-profile.
"My role models are the Packers under Lombardi, the Browns under Brown, the Cowboys under Landry, the Steelers under Noll, and the 49ers under Walsh," Lerner said. "I don't know who owned those teams unless I do big-time research. It seems to me it's about the coach and organization and it's about total support.
"Those are the role models. Those are the ones that win."
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