Browns’ Lewis going ahead with retirement plans

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BEREA, Ohio (AP)—Jamal Lewis(notes) can see the goal line to his career. It’s just eight games away.

Cleveland’s durable running back said Wednesday that he hasn’t changed his mind about retiring after this season, his 10th in the NFL. Lewis announced the decision following the Browns’ 30-6 loss Sunday in Chicago, leading to speculation he was speaking from emotion.

Surely he would change his mind.

Not Lewis. Just as he runs with the football, he’s churning his legs and trying not to let anyone bring him down.

“I don’t talk just to talk,” he said. “I mean what I say.”

The 30-year-old Lewis, who moved into 21st place on the league’s career rushing list last week, hinted that he may have decided to retire long before the Browns’ 1-7 start. Lewis paused when he was asked if he came into the season knowing it would be his last one.

“I’d rather not answer that question,” he said. “I just wanted to come out here and give it a shot—check out the new system, the new coaches and give it another shot with my teammates. That’s really all I said I would do this season is hopefully go out and have a winning season.”

It hasn’t worked out that way. To this point, the Browns have shown little progress under first-year coach Eric Mangini. And beyond the losses, the club is still plagued by turmoil. Just this week general manager George Kokinis, who worked with Lewis in Baltimore, was relieved of his duties.

Lewis is disappointed with the Browns’ continuous slide, but said the team’s performance through eight gams had no bearing on his decision to retire.

“They didn’t sour me,” he said of the losses. “I just expected better. I expected more. I expected to win. I was excited to start off the season with the attitude Mangini and his staff instilled in us. At the same time, when you work as hard as we did you want to see results.

“I’m still looking for them.”

Lewis may have lost a step or two since rushing for 2,066 yards for the Ravens in 2003. But his stature hasn’t changed inside Cleveland’s locker room. The Browns elected him as a captain before the season and the team’s younger players look up to him as an all-around role model.

“I’ve took a lot from him,” running back Jerome Harrison(notes) said. “He’s been a great mentor to me. I just keep learning from him. He’s still going to be my friend.”

Few players work harder than Lewis, whose grueling offseason conditioning regime is legendary. He had a 60-yard-long sand pit installed at the high school near his home in Atlanta and invited some of his teammate to join him during torturous training sessions.

Beginning next year, the only sweating he’ll do will be running his trucking company, All-American Xpress, and other business ventures.

Lewis has achieved everything he set out to do since being drafted with the fifth overall pick by the Ravens in 2000. Last week, he passed Eddie George (10,441) and Tiki Barber(notes) (10,449) on the career list with Ricky Waters (10,643), Warrick Dunn(notes) (10,967) and O.J. Simpson (11,236) all within reach before season’s end.

The numbers aren’t important. Lewis takes pride in the satisfaction of breaking away on his own terms.

“When I first came into this league, one of my main goals was to leave when I wanted to and not on somebody else’s discretion,” said Lewis, who won a Super Bowl title as a rookie in 2000. “That’s how I want to go out. My plans pretty much worked out the way I planned them 10 years ago. I’m happy with my goals I set, because I’ve reached those goals.”

Lewis said making the Hall of Fame has never been on his to-do list, but his impressive statistics and longevity seem to have him pointed toward enshrinement. He’s just not sure if he’s worthy of a bronze bust.

“It doesn’t really matter to me as long as I can leave this game healthy and with the numbers I have and the things that I’ve done,” he said. “I have a Super Bowl ring and I’m happy.”

He’s got eight more games to add to his legacy. Lewis laughed when asked if he would pull a Brett Favre(notes) and change his mind.

“Nah,” he said. “I wouldn’t do that.”

Lewis isn’t the sentimental type. He said he won’t be emotional when he takes off his helmet and shoulder pads for the final time.

“It will be on to the next chapter, which I’ve already started years ago,” he said. “You just got to keep on moving and keep going.”

One of Lewis’ long-term goals is to get involved in NFL ownership, and he won’t be choosy over which team.

So, what would he change about the Browns?

“The carpet,” he cracked, looking at the locker room floor.

Years from now, Lewis will be recalled for busting tackles, breaking off long runs and his incredible consistency. A four-month prison stay in 2005 for cocaine conspiracy has faded. He hopes to be remembered for something else.

“As a hard worker,” Lewis said. “That’s it. I brought my hard hat every time I stepped on the field.”

Updated Nov 4, 4:07 pm EST
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20 Comments

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  1. Coke
    20. Posted by Coke Mon Nov 9 2:11pm EST

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    I'll miss Lewis.
    He was always and will probably always be my favorite RB to ever play for the Ravens although Ray Rice is getting up there.
  2. Tommy Boy
    19. Posted by Tommy Boy Fri Nov 6 12:23am EST

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    Bob(#17),remember the name Lawrence Taylor? Convicted of attempting to buy crack cocaine(turned out to be synthetic)from an undercover cop,yet still went into the HOF?
  3. raiders1
    18. Posted by raiders1 Thu Nov 5 6:46pm EST

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    Poor Lewis just retire and save face!
  4. Bob
    17. Posted by Bob Thu Nov 5 3:47pm EST

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    If he is going to retire give him the ball 30-40 times a game, get the most out of him
    On his legacy, I don't think he should be in. He is a convicted felon, why reward someone like that, he made his millions, got his numbers, thats enough
  5. <i>irishguy7555</i>
    16. Posted by irishguy7555 Thu Nov 5 2:24pm EST

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    as a life-long browns fan i am disgusted. i have to pull out my '64 scrap book just to rekindle any pride in this team. mangini is an incompetent fool,and no amount of time will change that. give him his yr.,as he will get us the 1st pick in the draft,then grab jeff fisher when he quits tenn.
  6. Richard
    15. Posted by Richard Thu Nov 5 2:30am EST

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    `this team needs to take a good look at it self from front office to ballboy. and if mangines son is a
    ballboy he sould be letgo first befor lerner interviews him for head coach. ernie accorsi would be agood addition. but i think mr. lerner should take a good look and evaluate himself and is he comfortable running a football team. he was brought into this do to the unfortunate death of his father.
    maybe it's time to move on and the best of luck to you.
  7. Richard
    14. Posted by Richard Thu Nov 5 2:29am EST

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    `this team needs to take a good look at it self from front office to ballboy. and if mangines son is a
    ballboy he sould be letgo first befor lerner interviews him for head coach. ernie accorsi would be agood addition. but i think mr. lerner should take a good look and evaluate himself and is he comfortable running a football team. he was brought into this do to the unfortunate death of his father.
    maybe it's time to move on and the best of luck to you.
  8. Richard
    13. Posted by Richard Thu Nov 5 2:28am EST

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    `this team needs to take a good look at it self from front office to ballboy. and if mangines son is a
    ballboy he sould be letgo first befor lerner interviews him for head coach. ernie accorsi would be agood addition. but i think mr. lerner should take a good look and evaluate himself and is he comfortable running a football team. he was brought into this do to the unfortunate death of his father.
    maybe it's time to move on and the best of luck to you.
  9. Mike N
    12. Posted by Mike N Wed Nov 4 6:15pm EST

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    Too bad J-Lew!

    Had we had a competant front office and HC maybe we could have used you like PIT used the Bus his last 2 years!
  10. SoCalBrowns
    11. Posted by SoCalBrowns Wed Nov 4 4:23pm EST

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    Just leave now so we can give Harrison more carries.
  11. D
    10. Posted by D Wed Nov 4 4:06pm EST

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    Curt F ..............your an idiot......................

    J Lewis ran wild his whole career and now he is so frustrated due to the lack of ownership this team has he is calling it quits before they really ruin the image of his great career your probably the same idiot that thinks we will win the rest of our games because Brady Quinn is playing the problems we have on this team run deeper than the players on the fieldevry sunday

    JLewis this decision will turn out to be the best run of your career congratulations and the league and the Browns fans will miss you(as long as you dont sign with another team and break your own record against us)
  12. chug69
    9. Posted by chug69 Wed Nov 4 3:59pm EST

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    I agree with mister ss as well to a certain degree. Yes we do need to stick with a coach. But at the same time it has to be the right coach. Mangini is not the right coach. Like others have said he has gone about this all the wrong way. That is the main reason we need an expirenced coach to come in and lead us out of this mess. Mangini does not have enough know how to lead a struggling team on the way down back up. He took over a good NYJ team and they maintained. They didn't get better and they didn't get any worse. That is the type of caoch he is. Cleveland was a mess from Crennel and needed someone with the know how to in-still winning attitudes and leadership. Mangini came in with a "my way or no way" type attitude and that is not what this team needed. They need a coach who can teach them how to be a winner. That being said I think Cleveland is moving in the right direction by getting rid of these non-expirenced staff.

    And for the fair weather fans who just because Cleveland is havng problems they want to jump ship. I say good riddance to you. The point of being a fan is to be there through good times and bad. My question to you is if your marriage was liek the Browns team right now would you leave your spouse? I have been a browns fan all of my life. I will be a browns fan when I die. Til death do us part.
  13. David
    8. Posted by David Wed Nov 4 3:01pm EST

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    Matter-of-fact it is textbook to see what is happening here:

    1. Hot-head coach goes in with a bunch of demands and iron-clad fist of rule.

    2. Superstar ultra-ego players cannot handle the post-Crennel discipline as it is a stark contrast

    3. Coach responds by eliminating the negative element (trading of Edwards).

    4. Team improves in morale by an inch, but loses by a mile as remaining ships sink (Cribbs and rest of crew are fumbling football, Lewis has had enough).

    5. I don't know what goes here... but it is even worse.

    6. Signs of improvement in maybe 2 or 3 seasons from now.
  14. Curt F
    7. Posted by Curt F Wed Nov 4 2:50pm EST

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    Good riddance, Jamal. Don't let the door kick you in the arse on the way out...
  15. David
    6. Posted by David Wed Nov 4 2:49pm EST

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    Agreed Mr. SS, however, the patience is non-existant in Cle and rightfully so. If you want to take the gut-it and start over from scratch approach as is being done, you have to inform people or at least give them an inkling of what is to be expected, or in this city you can pack your bags. Especially after going 10-6, followed by 4-12, followed by a possible and probable 1-15.

    In my opinion... Mangini has done it wrong. You do not just go into a place with a bunch of demands as a new coach. You can, but with the expectation of your DEMANDS not being met. Try leading the team to victory instead of criticizing them as human beings with 1700 dollar water bottle fines. Try coralling your talent pool instead of trading them away. Braylon improved once he went to NYJ, did you see that? Now you're going to lose Jamal... who might have stuck it out another year if you gave him a reason. He has none, and you got nothin'.
  16. <i>zardpocleeb</i>
    5. Posted by zardpocleeb Wed Nov 4 2:11pm EST

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    I believe in giving people a chance too, but when Mangini is clearly headed in the wrong direction (trading away all of their talent) I say enough is enough. I am a die-hard Browns fan and always will be. Real fans don't quit! They may get disappointed, but they never quit on their team. If you're done rooting for this team, we don't want you anyways.
  17. mister ss
    4. Posted by mister ss Wed Nov 4 2:03pm EST

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    that's the whole problem with Browns fans and Learner, they don't give a coach time to do what he has to do to have a good team, everybody's ready to kick Mangini out in a half season and there mad because he's trying to get disipline on the team which it badly needs since 1999 and build the Browns into a contender in a couple of years, you can't keep switching head coaches and offensive and defensive co-ordinators every year and expect to win!, learn a lesson from the squeelers as they have only had 3 head coaches since 1969 and they are always competitive, I am a die hard Browns fan and always will be no matter what but you people need to give 1 coach at least 4 years to build a team, miracles don't happen in one season, the Browns have 11 draft picks so far the next draft, let's see what happens next year.
  18. Curtis
    3. Posted by Curtis Wed Nov 4 1:32pm EST

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    I remember when Pittsburgh robbed Jamal of the single season rushing record. Oh, the memories....
  19. <i>chollyoo</i>
    2. Posted by chollyoo Wed Nov 4 1:21pm EST

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    I don't blame Jamal Lewis for saying he wants to retire after this season Cleveland is a career killer, as a Cleveland resident and Browns fan im retiring after this season too i follow this organization since a little kid now im positive i will never see a Super Bowl in Cleveland in my life time im 44yrs old im done rooting for this team i had enough.
  20. timeout
    1. Posted by timeout Wed Nov 4 1:07pm EST

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    This is only the beginning.As long as DA starts and Mangini is the coach everyone will look to get out.
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