During Saturday's Heisman Trophy presentation, ESPN college football analyst and former Ohio State quarterback Kirk Herbstreit took a rare public interest in one of his home state's pro football teams. The Browns, he told millions of nationwide viewers, would "be crazy" to pass on newly-minted Heisman winner Troy Smith if he is there when the Browns make their almost-certain Top 10 selection next spring. Papa Cass chimes in on the Troy to the Browns debate, making some great points as usual along the way.
During Saturday's Heisman Trophy presentation, ESPN college football
analyst and former Ohio State quarterback Kirk Herbstreit took a rare
public interest in one of his home state's pro football teams.
The Browns, he told millions of nationwide viewers, would "be crazy" to pass on newly-minted Heisman winner Troy Smith if he is there when the Browns make their almost-certain Top 10 selection next spring.
Smith
is a native of one of the poorest areas of Cleveland's near East Side.
Nothing would give him more satisfaction than to return home as a
conquering hero, Herbstreit reasoned.
Even a month ago, I would
have outright rejected the idea. Smith is a bit short, and has been
spoiled by playing behind one of the best offensive lines in the nation
the past three years. It would be way too easy for the undersized Smith
to come down with a chronic case of happy feet playing behind the
Browns' nightmare of trench warfare.
The "hometown boy made
good" angle is a bit overrated, too. When it works, as it has with
LeBron James, it gives everyone in town a warm, fuzzy feeling. When it
doesn't, as has been the case with LeCharles Bentley, Clevelanders jump
on the "You asked for it, wanting to come back here" bandwagon with
unmatched verve. Clevelanders will turn on their hometown boys too, if
they don't produce wins.
But even with all the reasons to be
skeptical of choosing Smith, I'm starting to find it more and more
difficult to make a case against it. Maybe it was all of the pre-award
hype surrounding Smith. Maybe it was the win over Michigan. Maybe it
was the Browns' blowout losses to the Bengals and Steelers.
Maybe
Smith is just winning me over with his play. But in Smith, I'm starting
to see a person and a player who exhibits a lot of the qualities the
Browns, as a team, are lacking.
The Browns need leadership. The
Browns need someone who has experienced greatness. The Browns need
someone who understands what football means to Clevelanders, and how we
take wins and losses to heart like few other cities.
The Browns
need someone who has been to the bottom and worked his way back up to
the top. The Browns need someone who is a model of perseverance. The
Browns need someone who really understands what winning is all about.
And, above all, the Browns need someone who has the talent to back it
all up.
Troy Smith is that person.
But
it isn't as simple as drafting Smith and watching wins sprout out of
the ground like Dutch tulips. We know better. The Browns have a long
history of damaging careers with their botched handling of players.
To
draft Smith is to commit to him. To draft the competent offensive
linemen that will protect him. To surround him with receivers that are
more interested in catching passes than talking trash. To put a
coaching staff in place that has a clue about offense, and has the
presence to deliver the necessary discipline to make their lessons
stick.
To draft Smith is to change how your organization
conducts itself. Otherwise, there is no point in drafting Smith or any
other difference-making player.
Smith has been meticulously
prepared for the NFL by a pair of top-notch coaches in Ted Ginn Sr. and
Jim Tressel. Over the past eight-plus years, by his own admission, he
has learned the lessons that turned him from a would-be street punk
into a potential NFL franchise cornerstone.
It has been an amazing metamorphosis to watch.
If
the Browns can match all of the hard work that has gone into making
Troy Smith the man he is today, I encourage Phil Savage to draft him.
If the Browns are going to keep conducting business as usual, they
should pass on him.
Smith, the man of perseverance, the national title contender, the Heisman Trophy winner, deserves better than that.