BEREA, Ohio (AP) — Pro
Bowl tight end Kellen Winslow appealed his
one-game suspension for critical comments he made
about the Cleveland Browns' handling of his
hospitalization with a staph infection, the latest
development in a bizarre back-and-forth squabble.
Winslow was suspended without pay by general manager
Phil Savage on Tuesday for comments and behavior
disparaging to the organization. Winslow was critical
of Savage and said he only came forward to reveal he
had staph — for the second time — out of
concern for his teammates' health.
Denise White, a publicist with EAG Sports Management,
said Winslow appealed the suspension and filed the
appropriate paperwork with the NFL Players Association.
Union attorney Adam Kaiser will represent Winslow in an
expedited grievance proceeding before an arbitrator in
Cleveland on Friday or Saturday. If Winslow loses, he
will sit out Sunday's game in Jacksonville and forfeit
$235,294, his one-game paycheck. If Winslow wins, he
could keep his money and Kaiser said it's possible the
25-year-old could be reinstated in time to play against
the Jaguars.
Whatever the outcome, Browns coach Romeo Crennel feels
Winslow's rift with the team can be fixed.
"I think it is repairable," he said. "Kellen is not a
bad kid. I have a pretty decent relationship with
Kellen. With me personally, I feel that relations are
repairable and we will go forward."
The unusual case pitting star player and struggling
franchise began on Oct. 9 when Winslow was admitted to
the Cleveland Clinic with an undisclosed illness.
According to Crennel and Savage, the team and Winslow
made a joint decision to keep the player's medical
condition confidential. However, when he returned to
practice last week after missing Cleveland's 35-14
upset over the New York Giants, Winslow said it was the
Browns who didn't want to disclose his illness. He said
he agreed with their stance.
But Winslow broke the apparent pact following Sunday's
loss in Washington, revealing he had staph and saying
the team, which has had at least six known cases of
staph since 2005, asked him to conceal it. He also
lashed out at Savage for not calling him during his
three-day stay in the hospital and said he felt he was
being treated "like a piece of meat" by the team.
Savage responded by suspending Winslow and called the
fiery player's comments and behavior "unwarranted,
inappropriate, and unnecessarily disparaging to our
organization."
Winslow countered with his own statement, saying he
spoke out because of a health concern and not because
he's seeking a new contract from the Browns.
Despite the disturbingly high number of staph cases,
Crennel said he abided by the team's understanding with
Winslow and did not inform Cleveland's other players
that the tight end had staph again.
"He was in the hospital and it was a personal issue,"
Crennel said in explaining the team's decision to keep
Winslow's illness from his teammates.
This was Winslow's second bout with staph. He first
contracted an infection following surgery on his right
knee, which he severely injured in a near-fatal
motorcycle crash three years ago. Winslow has had at
least three other surgeries on the knee, which was most
recently scoped during the past offseason.
While his suspension is in effect, Winslow is not
allowed to attend practices, team meetings or be at the
Browns' training facility.
Surprisingly, there was little reaction inside
Cleveland's locker room to Winslow's suspension and not
one player interviewed seemed alarmed by a new case of
staph.
A few players, including center Hank Fraley and
linebacker Andra Davis — two team captains
— as well as tight end Steve Heiden were
reluctant to address Winslow's situation.
"I don't even want to talk about it," said Heiden, who
will likely start in place of Winslow. "We're trying to
beat the Jaguars, that's all I'm worried about. I can't
wait to have Kellen back, and when he gets back we'll
go to work with Kellen."
Quarterback Derek Anderson admitted he was somewhat
surprised by the team's decision to suspend Winslow,
who has a team-high 21 receptions and has been one of
the Browns' best players the past three seasons.
"A little bit," Anderson said. "Obviously, they made a
decision and went with it. I just play here."
As for the team's problems with staph, kicker Phil
Dawson said the Browns have been proactive in educating
their players about how to protect themselves from
becoming infected. During training camp, infectious
control experts from the clinic visited the team and
explained the risks of staph and how to combat the
virus, which has become more common in the NFL.
"This thing is everywhere," Dawson said. "All the
information was given to us, literature we could take
home. With all that said, you still feel for a fellow
player who gets it. Your heart goes out to them and
it's a scary thing, but I don't think it's isolated to
the Cleveland Browns."
(ap.com)