Broncos, Browns on playoff fringe ahead of matchup
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[December 12, 2018]
The Denver Broncos were high on
quarterback Baker Mayfield long before he was taken first overall in
the NFL draft in April.
They plan to keep him from beating them on Saturday night.
Mayfield, the brash, outspoken Cleveland Browns rookie, visits
Denver for a Week 15 showdown with both teams clinging to their slim
postseason hopes. The Browns (5-7-1) are having their best season in
years and are coming off a 26-20 win over Carolina.
The Broncos (6-7) had their three-game winning streak ended at San
Francisco on Sunday in a game they desperately needed. Denver was
feeling good after getting back to .500 and into the thick of the
wild-card race, but as has been the case this season, it struggled
against a young quarterback.
The Broncos have lost to rookies Sam Darnold (New York Jets), Nick
Mullens (49ers) and second-year star Patrick Mahomes (Kansas City).
They did they beat Josh Rosen of Arizona and Jeff Driskel of
Cincinnati, and they have another chance against Mayfield on
Saturday.
"He's got a neat personality," Denver coach Vance Joseph said after
practice Tuesday. "It's kind of a -- it's loose, but it's tight.
Very, very intelligent, but a very, very confident person."
Mayfield could find success against a banged-up secondary that will
be without Pro Bowl cornerback Chris Harris Jr., who suffered a
fractured left fibula against the Bengals on Dec. 2. Harris said he
is improving, but he won't be ready for Saturday.
Without him, and the status of Tramaine Brock (ribs) and Isaac
Yiadom (separated right shoulder) in question, Denver is vulnerable
on the back end. The Broncos signed rookie safety Trey Marshall off
the practice squad Tuesday to add to the depth.
The Browns have the weapons to take advantage, with Mayfield showing
plenty of poise and wide receiver Jarvis Landry running routes. They
can mix things up with running back Nick Chubb.
The biggest turnaround for Cleveland has come after the firings of
head coach Hue Jackson and offensive coordinator Todd Haley. Gregg
Williams is now the interim head coach, and Freddie Kitchens was
promoted to offensive coordinator.
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Cleveland Browns quarterback Baker Mayfield (6) takes a ball to a
fan after a game against the Carolina Panthers at FirstEnergy
Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Scott R. Galvin-USA TODAY Sports
With Kitchens calling plays, Mayfield has thrown 11 touchdown passes
in five games, and his quarterback rating is 114.4 compared to from
78.9 under Haley.
With the short week, both teams practiced Tuesday instead of having
a regular day off. For Denver, linebacker Shaquil Barrett (hip),
Harris, wide receiver Courtland Sutton (quadriceps), Yiadom and
defensive tackle Derek Wolfe (concussion) did not practice.
Joseph said Sutton should play Saturday but didn't have an update on
Wolfe.
Tight end Orson Charles (ankle), tackle Austin Corbett (foot),
defensive tackle Larry Ogunjobi (biceps), cornerback Denzel Ward
(concussion) and center J.C. Tretter (ankle) did not practice for
Cleveland. Tretter has been dealing with the ankle injury for two
months but has battled through the last seven games. He is normally
held out of practice to stay ready for games.
"From a guy who barely practices all week to have the game plan down
and then fight through it on Sundays for everybody else, it is great
to have," Mayfield told The Cleveland Plain Dealer after Sunday's
game. "He is a very, very important piece out there to have to be
able to make calls and direct guys the right way and lead."
--Field Level Media
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