An out-of-town view

An out-of-town viewCLEVELAND, OH - SEPTEMBER 8: Chris Hubbard #74 of the Cleveland Browns helps Baker Mayfield #6 up after Mayfield was pressured by Harold Landry III #58 of the Tennessee Titans and sacked by Cameron Wake #91 during the fourth quarter at FirstEnergy Stadium on September 8, 2019 in Cleveland, Ohio. Tennessee defeated Cleveland 43-13. (Photo by Kirk Irwin/Getty Images)

AN OUT-OF-TOWN VIEW

By STEVE KING

OK, so Browns quarterback Baker Mayfield did not play well last season.

Wow, news flash, huh?

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Anyway, part of that is, of course, his own fault. Overall, he just didn’t look like the guy who performed so well in 2019.

So, then, he needs to get his own act together.

But as I’ve said over and over and over, the bigger part of why Mayfield struggled is because of the play – or lack thereof, as it were – of his offensive line.

To say it was terrible is being kind.

I made a point of revisiting that opinion in my last post, about the Browns – for some crazy reason – deciding to keep last year’s right tackle, Chris Hubbard, as a swing tackle for next season.

To piggyback onto that, I want to relate what I heard on the radio the other day. It is something I’ve heard a number of times nationally, including from this one guy several times. He’s Mike Valenti, the No. 1-rated – by far – sports talk show host in Detroit. He works at 97.1 FM The Fan and gives me the opportunity to hear an out-of-town view.

I really respect what Valenti says. He calls them as he sees them, as they say, and that’s especially the case when it comes to the NFL.

Valenti said – again – the other day that Mayfield played poorly in 2019 in large part because he couldn’t trust the line. He was bailing out and escaping the pocket to avoid getting crushed – yet another time.

No quarterback – not even the best ones, let alone a second-year player who came into the season still needing to learn about himself, his receivers and the league — can play well in a situation like that.

I’m hoping Mayfield enters the 2020 season with the eye of the tiger, and that his linemen – new and old, especially Chris Hubbard – do exactly the same thing, because they’re on the spot, too.

And everybody – near and far – can see that.

An out-of-town view by Steve King

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2 Comments on "An out-of-town view"

  1. BrownsForever | March 31, 2020 at 2:31 pm |

    Scary featured pic

  2. Eric Preston | March 31, 2020 at 2:33 pm |

    Hubbard looking down at Baker flat on his back is hard to look at.

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