One day after his anti-Mangini rant, Lewis was being cheered by his teammates.
Maybe because he stood up to his coach.
On Friday, Mangini defended the length and intensity of his practices after Lewis had complained that Cleveland's players are being worked too hard.
Lewis asserted on Thursday that Mangini was wearing out his players during the week with 2 1/2- to 3-hour workouts, and that by the time kickoff rolls around on Sunday, they have nothing left. Mangini maintains his practices are not any longer or more physical than ones he's conducted in the past.
"I feel good about the way we practice, the time we practice," said Mangini, 1-7 in his first season with Cleveland. "Two hours of work on the field is a very reasonable time. The only time that practices are extended is if we don't execute something the right way."
Mangini said that he and Lewis, a team captain, had a "good conversation" on Thursday and discussed their differences. Mangini did not provide any details of their meeting and said he does not view Lewis' comments as detrimental conduct.
"Like with any conversation, sometimes you agree on things, sometimes you change some things, sometimes you agree to disagree," he said. "You appreciate everybody's perspective and input and then you make the decision that you think is best for the team."
Mangini stressed that his workouts are rarely longer than two hours - with a 30-minute walkthrough.
"For the record, it's two hours," he said with emphasis. "That's the facts. That's the reality of it. It's two hours a day. Less on Friday."
Following Friday's workout, Lewis said he appreciated the chance to meet with Mangini. Then, as he has done in the past, Lewis said the media had twisted his comments.
"We got a chance to talk and exchange ideas and everything and get a view of what he's trying to accomplish and what's going on," the 10-year veteran said. "Basically got a chance to talk and settle things out. I let him know that your guys' story was kind of blown out of proportion and it was worded and went in a certain way. But that's how the media is."
Browns tight end Robert Royal said the spontaneous cheering for Lewis had nothing to do with Thursday's events.
"Naw," he said. "We pick on each other all the time. At the end of the day, I think we had a good practice and guys were having a little fun messing around with him."
Royal also said Mangini has been portrayed unfairly as a tyrant.
"He's a likeable guy," Royal said. "If he wasn't, you'd see a whole bunch of guys in the locker room divided. But I think for the most part guys still believe in what he's trying to teach, his philosophy. He's a good guy."
During his rant on Thursday, Lewis said Mangini was pushing his players too hard.
"You can work as hard as you want," he said. "You can work all day, seven days a week all the way up to Sunday in practice. But at the same time, if you're going to work like that, then maybe on Sunday you're probably not going to get what you want out of your players."