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Mangini says it's 'special' to be back with Browns

By Tom Withers

Associated Press

Thursday, January 08, 2009

BEREA — Eric Mangini is starting over where he started out.

Mangini, who began his NFL career as a ballboy for the Browns, was introduced as Cleveland's 12th full-time coach on Thursday, Jan. 8, less than two weeks after he was fired by the New York Jets.

The 37-year-old Mangini signed a four-year deal with the Browns, who are rebuilding once again following a 4-12 season that ended with the firings of coach Romeo Crennel and general manager Phil Savage.

Browns owner Randy Lerner hasn't decided on a GM yet, but the frontrunner is George Kokinis, Baltimore's director of player personnel and a longtime friend of Mangini's.

Mangini began shagging balls with the Browns in 1994 under then-coach Bill Belichick, who liked the kid's work ethic and quickly promoted him to a public relations assistant before adding him to the scouting department. Now Mangini's taking over the job from Crennel, one of his best friends in the game who may be on his staff in Cleveland.

"It is really special to be back here, where I got my first opportunity," said Mangini, who opened his news conference by joking that he should be getting coffee or food for the media. "I have a very distinct vision of what I want to build. Having talented players with character, players selflessly driving toward the same goal. I'm going to be vigilant about that."

When he arrived in New York, Mangini inherited a 4-12 team and led them to 10 wins in his first season, prompting the tabloids to dub him "Mangenius." By the end of his run in the NFL's largest market, he was being called moody, dour and controlling — like Belichick.

Mangini went 23-25 with one playoff loss in three seasons with the Jets, who started 8-3 this season but lost four of their last five games and missed the playoffs.

He took the fall after the Jets finished a disastrous stretch where they lost to Denver, San Francisco and Seattle — three non-playoff teams — in the final month behind 39-year-old quarterback Brett Favre's injured arm and questionable play calling by the coach.

Mangini acknowledged mistakes were made with the Jets, but said he enjoyed his time there.

"You learn so much from your experiences," he said. "I tell players, win or lose, be honest. I ask myself that all the time. Nobody stops improving. I learned so many things over three years. There's no Dummies guide to head coaching."

Mangini didn't point any fingers and said he had no problem with the Jets' acquistion of Favre, a trade that pushed starter Chad Pennington out the door.

"I really enjoyed my time with Brett," he said. "He's a Hall of Fame quarterback and came into a challenging situation. I respected how important it was for him to be one of the guys and fit into the team. I liked him as a person."

Mangini and Crennel both lost their jobs on Dec. 29, although Lerner was not aware of Mangini's dismissal when he met with the media to discuss Crennel's firing.

Rejected a few days earlier by his first choice, former Steelers coach Bill Cowher, Lerner's eyes lit up when he learned Mangini was available. The owner wasted no time in going after him and interviewed Mangini the following night in the New York area.

"It was a long week," Mangini said.

Despite the Jets' meltdown, Lerner is enamored with Mangini's potential and believes he will bring discipline to the underachieving Browns, whose disastrous season was marked by injuries, ugly losses and a 1-7 home record. Lerner believes Mangini, who will be 38 on Jan. 19, learned from his mistakes in New York.

Jets running back Leon Washington said in an e-mail to The Associated Press that he was pleased to see Mangini land another head coaching job.

"I am really happy for Coach Mangini," Washington said in the e-mail. "I learned so much from him while he had his tenure with the Jets. His hardworking, selfless and competitive approach really helped me. ... The Browns got themselves a really good coach."

Mangini has not hired any assistants and plans to meet with the coaches currently under contract with the Browns before making any changes. He has spoken with Crennel about staying with the team, but did not get into specifics about a possible role.

Mangini was one of four candidates interviewed by Lerner, but the only one with NFL head coaching experience — a prerequisite for the Browns owner, who also spoke with New York Giants defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo, New England offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels and Browns defensive coordinator Mel Tucker.

Lerner, who did not appear at the press conference, fired Savage after a 31-0 loss at Pittsburgh in the season finale. He then interviewed Scott Pioli, New England's director of player personnel, and had hoped to pair him with Mangini in Cleveland. The two began their pro careers together with the Browns, but their relationship may have been strained when Mangini reported the Patriots to the NFL for videotaping New York's defensive signals during a game.

During his interview, Mangini mentioned Kokinis as his preference as GM. Kokinis is expected to interview with Lerner on Sunday. The Browns also intend to interview Philadelphia GM Tom Heckert.

Comment: How do you think Mangini will do in his first year?

Comments

By r.e.c.

February 7, 2009 11:17 PM | Link to this

I think the new coach will do good,if the organization will back him up.I hope he can get our receivers back to catching the ball!

By redzfan

January 13, 2009 7:39 AM | Link to this

Hey benjamin…”Reality Check”

By benjamin

January 11, 2009 4:57 PM | Link to this

DONT JUMP BACK ON OUR WAGON YOUR NOT WELCOME I LOVE YAAA CLEAVELAND

By benjamin

January 11, 2009 4:56 PM | Link to this

well as far as mangini goes not a bad pick up and if its true that beanie is coming out to play on the browns hell yes i love that hope holds out and goes to a free agent (unlikely) and we pick him up and maybe laurnitis or jenkins sweet lets just get our stuff together guys i believe and so does a whole bungh of dogs lets strive for a winning season or 2 then lets do th esuperbowl thing and YES THOSE OF YOU WHO TURN AND TUCK TAIL GO WE DONT NEED ANY FAKEASS FANS STINKING UP OHIO RUN HIDE AND

By John C

January 11, 2009 11:48 AM | Link to this

It is a very good hire because the lack of discipline was a huge problem on the Browns last year. What I am worried about is the firing of Savage. He is exactly what they need right now, a player evaluator who will be active in the free agent market. It sounds like Kokinis might fit the bill there though so we might be ok. First order of business should be to draft a pass rusher. If not, it wont matter who the coach or GM is…

By Craig Robinson

January 10, 2009 1:03 AM | Link to this

Mangini is an excellent hire because he is young, hungry & has experience! I think the Browns made a great choice here. Am I concerned about the GM hire? Yes, but let’s wait till the final verdict is in. For those of you who commented your done with the Browns, good riddens because your not a REAL Browns fan to begin with! I’ve been bleeding orange & brown since the early sixties (born in the mid fifties) & will never quit! A true die-hard will never die! Go Browns. LOL, Jason Dawg

By Vince P

January 9, 2009 10:42 AM | Link to this

Look everyone can whine and cry, mostly because you didn’t get cower. So lets have another losing season and wait. are you insane. Mangini is a displinarian, exactly what Cleveland needs. I say give him a chance and stop your whining. We haven’t had a coach with NFL head coaching expierience since god knows when. On top of the fact that the 1-4 record was Mddens man crush not Mangenius. Stop throwing stones.

By john c.

January 9, 2009 12:49 AM | Link to this

PLEASE BROWN’S OWNER RANDY LERNER, GO AWAY….YOU SOLD MBNA, YOU LOVE YOUR SOCCER TEAM, JUST GO AWAY…ERIC MANGINI?…DOES EVERYONE HAVE A LOVE AFFAIR WITH BILL BELICHICK’S ASSISTANTS?….I AM OUT AS A BROWN’S FAN…DONE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

By john c.

January 9, 2009 12:45 AM | Link to this

ARE YOU KIDDING ME?….WELL, THIS IS IT FOR ME…I AM DONE WITH THE BROWNS FOREVER!……DONE!DONE!DONE!DONE!….THE BROWNS WILL NEVER WIN!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

By Randy

January 9, 2009 12:16 AM | Link to this

I think Mangini’s hiring helped Chris Wells come out of OSU. Wells wants to be a Brown, Jim Brown wants Wells to be a Brown. Seems like a perfect fit to me.

By Emmett Thornton Beaver

January 8, 2009 11:42 PM | Link to this

Nostrodomis predicted Browns next losing season 2009

By gary porter

January 8, 2009 9:37 PM | Link to this

i think he is a big help to the browns. and i believe he will do a better job with the browns than romeo crennel. Mangini is a knoledgable coach with a lot of experiance. he is by far going to put the browns in the playoffs next yar and maybe i would love to go the superbowl.

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