NFL dreams | Browns won’t play QB McCoy in 2010


Browns won’t play QB McCoy in 2010

Associated Press

BEREA

The Colt McCoy Show won’t be opening anytime soon in Cleveland.

With Browns fans already fired up over McCoy’s selection by Cleveland in the third round of the NFL draft, team president and in-house quarterback savant Mike Holmgren said Saturday that there are no plans to play the Texas quarterback as a rookie.

Despite his pedigree, McCoy just isn’t ready and Holmgren won’t force him on coach Eric Mangini.

Not yet, at least.

“He’s not going to play this year,” Holmgren said as the Browns wrapped up a successful first draft under his watch. “Things could change, but I don’t expect him to play. We have three quarterbacks already here that we feel very good about. The best thing that might be able to happen to him is that he just sits, watches, learns and make the transition into the pro game.”

McCoy may have other ideas, but the Browns, who scooped him up with the No. 85 pick, don’t want to make a mistake with their potential franchise quarterback. Too often, Holmgren has seen rookie QBs suffer irreparable damage because they were shoved onto the field prematurely.

“You really run the risk of scarring the kid a little bit,” he said.

Cleveland’s quarterback carousel spun throughout the offseason. The Browns traded Brady Quinn, once viewed as the franchise’s savior, to Denver. Derek Anderson, a Pro Bowler in 2007, was released. Jake Delhomme was signed as a free agent after a dismal season in Carolina, and Seneca Wallace was acquired from Seattle in a trade. Brett Ratliff remained on the roster as third-stringer.

The Browns entered the draft intent on adding a young QB and tried to go all the way to the top to get one.

Holmgren made a last-ditch effort to pry the No. 1 overall pick away from St. Louis and draft Oklahoma quarterback Sam Bradford. When the Rams, who were noncommittal in preliminary talks with the Browns, didn’t sign Bradford before the draft, Holmgren took one last shot.

He called Rams general manager Billy Devaney 20 minutes before Thursday’s first round began with “an offer at the limits of what I was willing to do.”

Holmgren did not give specifics of his offer.

“I thought it was a pretty good deal based on what’s been done historically in the last few years,” said Holmgren, adding it was not the Browns’ entire cache of picks like New Orleans coach Mike Ditka once did to get Ricky Williams. “He (Devaney) said just ’Mike, we’re going to take him.’ He probably got tired of us. It was getting close, he had to decide.”

On the draft’s third day, the Browns addressed some depth issues by taking Nebraska safety Larry Asante, South Florida wide receiver Carlton Mitchell and defensive end Clifton Geathers, whose brother, Robert, plays for the Cincinnati Bengals and whose uncle, Jumpy Geathers, also played in the NFL.

“He’s a monster,” Heckert said of the 6-foot-8, 300-pounder who has the reach of a 7-footer.

He’s not bashful, either.

“I’m a freaky guy,” said Geathers. “With a little polishing and coaching I’ll be the best person probably in the league.”

Cleveland’s first draft under Holmgren and Heckert was split, with the Browns selecting four defensive players and four on offense. The team patched up a major weakness in its secondary by taking Florida cornerback Joe Haden with the No. 7 pick and Oregon safety T.J. Ward, a punishing hitter and one of several players Heckert called “tough.”

“I enjoy whenever you can describe a player that way, it’s much better than the alternative,” Mangini said. “It’s tough to coach soft.”

But the biggest selection, the one that will be scrutinized for years and the one who could eventually define Holmgren’s tenure, is McCoy, who will be motivated by being passed over by 31 teams.

The plan is to bring him along slowly, but as been shown in the past, plans can easily get wrecked by injuries, impatience or outside pressure. McCoy will arrive in Cleveland believing he can step in and lead the Browns, and he won’t be the only who thinks that.

Holmgren, though, who helped groom Joe Montana, Steve Young and Brett Favre, knows better.

“He’s going to say ’I’m going to go in and I’m going to start’ because he’s been told that since he was a little guy,” Holmgren said. “The truth is, that doesn’t happen at that position, usually. He strikes me as the type of kid, I don’t know how much you have to nurture him.”

At that point, Mangini, criticized for being too harsh on his players, jumped in, leading to an amusing exchange.

“And I’m known for my nurturing,” he said.

“You are, you’re very nurturing,” said Holmgren.

“I am,” Mangini said. “That’s my reputation.”