In a copy of Kellen Winslow's
suspension letter obtained by The Plain Dealer,
it's revealed Winslow was not only suspended by
the Browns for statements they felt were
disparaging to the club, but also for what the
team described as "profane verbal abuse of a
Club's public relations member in the locker room"
following the game at Washington.
While Winslow was sitting at his locker last Sunday
preparing to be interviewed, he asked director of
communications Amy Palcic to leave so he could speak to
a reporter. It was clear he wanted to speak his mind
without a member of the public relations staff
listening. It's common practice for one of them to be
there when big-name players such as Winslow and Braylon
Edwards are interviewed.
Neither Winslow nor Palcic raised their voices during
the exchange, which went like this, according to The
Plain Dealer's audiotape, which can be heard on
cleveland.com.
Winslow: "Amy, I'm good. Can you please stop playing
big sis and leave? Seeing what I'm going to say and
sh-?"
Palcic, who was standing a few feet away, remained
where she was.
Winslow: "Um, Amy, can you please leave?"
Palcic: "Talk if you want to talk."
Winslow: "What?"
Palcic: "Talk. I'm not going to cut you off."
Winslow then answered questions for about four minutes,
telling reporters he was upset with General Manager
Phil Savage for not calling him while he was in the
Cleveland Clinic with a staph infection and that he
felt like "a piece of meat." He also admitted during
that portion of the interview that he thought about
asking to be traded before last week's deadline and
informed Savage.
Palcic attempted to end the session midway through, but
Winslow continued. Then, in the middle of a question
about his contract, Winslow was beckoned by running
back Jamal Lewis. Winslow told him: "I'm good. Let me
get one more." But Lewis persisted and Winslow walked
away and joined him.
Palcic declined to comment Friday, but Browns spokesman
Bill Bonsiewicz, when asked if another exchange took
place with a member of the PR staff, said, "Yes, I was
made aware of another exchange, but due to the fact
there's a pending grievance, I'd prefer not to comment
beyond that."
After Winslow spent about 10 minutes away from his
locker, he returned, sat back down and spoke to a
reporter for a few minutes. Then he motioned The Plain
Dealer over for a one-on-one interview. During that
session, Winslow revealed his previously undisclosed
illness was a staph infection and said "there's
obviously a problem [with staph] and we have to fix
it."
"Just look at the history around here. It's
unfortunate, because it happens time and time again,"
Winslow said.
During that interview, Edwards, who was a few lockers
away, waved his arms back and forth at Winslow to try
to get him to stop talking. Winslow gave him the thumbs
up and said he was good. Another member of the Browns
PR staff, Reagan Berube, listened in. When Winslow
finished, the locker room period was over.
In the suspension letter, which was on Browns
letterhead, hand-delivered to Winslow and signed only
by coach Romeo Crennel, it says "you made public
statements that were inappropriate, inaccurate,
portrayed the Club in a false light, and diminished the
Club's reputation. In addition, you engaged in profane
verbal abuse of a Club's public relations member in the
locker room following the Redskins game."
It tells Winslow his actions "significantly disrupted
and adversely affected the Cleveland Browns team and
organization, and cannot be tolerated."
Winslow has appealed his suspension for Sunday's game
in Jacksonville and the hearing is set for Tuesday in
Cleveland in front of arbitrator Rosemary Townley.
Winslow's attorney, Adam Kaiser, said he insisted the
hearing take place Friday or today so Winslow would be
eligible to play in the game if it was overturned.
Because Kaiser requested the hearing be expedited, the
arbitrator had seven days in which to hear it and chose
Tuesday, according to NFL spokesman Greg Aiello. If
Winslow loses the appeal, he will forfeit his $235,294
game check. If he wins, he will recoup the money. The
two sides can also agree on a settlement beforehand.
Also, in response to Savage's remarks in an interview
on WTAM AM/1100 on Thursday regarding Winslow's
illness, a source with knowledge of the situation said:
"It's just staph. It was a bad staph infection."
Savage said during the interview: "Due to the nature of
this particular situation, it seemed that the people
involved wouldn't want it out there. So our hands are
tied in certain situations. And it was all agreed upon.
It's a nonfootball illness. It occurred during the bye
week."
(cleveland.com)