Johnny Manziel must accept responsibility

Posted by Carrie White
2
Oct 19, 2015
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The Cleveland Browns have adopted a four-word mantra Bud Dupree Jerseyin the Ray Farmer-Mike Pettine era: “Play like a Brown.” Naturally, with the way the team has played in recent years, that mantra drew snickers. But the point is well taken. To Farmer http://www.steelersnflofficialonline.com/Authentic-Bud-Dupree-Jerseyand Pettine it means to be tough, committed, passionate, professional. It might be time, though, to add a corollary. Act like a Brown. Act like a professional, like what you do matters, like you represent a team and a city in addition to yourself, like there is a community out there rooting for you. Most importantly, act like what you do means more than simple personal celebrity or financial gain. And for the team, act like what players do matters. Hold them accountable when they don’t live up to standards. This season there have been two incidents with Browns players Joseph Randle Jerseydriving cars. They did not lead to criminal charges, but things happened nonetheless that are head-scratching at the least and downright troubling at the worst. Criminal or not, they were worthy of league and team attention and disciplinary steps. Both involved players driving cars so recklessly that 911 calls were placed concerning their driving. Some called http://www.officialcowboysnflstore.com/WOMENS_YOUTH_JOSEPH_RANDLE_JERSEY.htmlthem minor, “kids-will-be-kids" happenings. Except that they’re not kids; they’re young adults willing to take the money, the fame and the benefits of being an NFL player, but in these cases shirking the everyday responsibility that goes with it. The signing bonus is welcomed, but when things go wrong it suddenly becomes, "They’re kids." They can't have it both ways. Justin Gilbert was involved in the first. His was a road rage incident that, according to the police report, started when Gilbert cut another driver off and ended with a high-speed chase in and out of traffic. Several 911 calls were placed about both drivers. It ended with Gilbert getting off the highway and driving into a ditch. The latest involved Johnny Manziel getting into a fight with his girlfriend while driving from downtown to his home in suburban Avon, Ohio. According to the police report, it led to Manziel passing another car going what the witness estimated to be 90 mph on the shoulder of the highway. It continued when Manziel crossed several lanes to exit the highway. It ended when he pulled over on a side street and police arrived to question him -- and didn’t give him a field sobriety test (though police said Saturday they saw no factors that would warrant one).
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