QB wants chance to start


BEREA

Quarterback Jake Delhomme completed his visit to Cleveland last week and drove to the airport for a flight to New Orleans.

He never made it.

Travel delays forced Delhomme to return to Charlotte, N.C., where he chose to sign with the Browns without visiting his hometown Saints. The chance to start was more important than being a backup in his home state.

“I had to decide if I wanted to still try to compete or if I wanted to hold a clipboard,” Delhomme said on Wednesday. “I just wasn’t ready for that.”

Delhomme, who grew up in Breaux Bridge, La., and spent his first five years with the Saints, would have been a backup to Drew Brees with the Super Bowl champions. In Cleveland, he is the favorite to win the starting job after the Browns parted ways with Derek Anderson and Brady Quinn.

Delhomme’s main competition will be Seneca Wallace, whom the Browns acquired in a trade with Seattle.

Delhomme, 35, struggled through his worst season last year with the Panthers, throwing eight touchdowns and 18 interceptions. His season ended with a broken finger after 11 games and he was released earlier this month.

He also acknowledges the five-interception performance in a playoff loss to Arizona in 2008 carried over to the start of last year, when he threw four interceptions in the opener.

“I didn’t play good football,” he said. “I’m not going to blame anybody else for anything. The 2009 year football-wise wasn’t fun. From January 10th, the playoff game, through when I broke my finger. I don’t think there’s any doubt I tried to do too much, and it didn’t work, obviously.”

Delhomme, who cried at his final press conference in Carolina, took a few days to get over the sting of being released. There were only two teams he wanted to visit — the Browns and Saints.

Cleveland went 5-11 last year, but won its final four games after a tough start. Delhomme was impressed by the resolve the players showed in fighting back to salvage the season and compared it to his situation.