LONDON – The funniest answer to an NFL reporter's question this week came from the lips of Browns center JC Tretter when asked about the team's preparations for Sunday's game against the Vikings in London.
"We just want to make sure we don't change our normal routine," he said.
"Normal" for the current Browns regime is 1-22 since the start of last season. "Routine" is 1-22 with Hue Jackson as coach. Status quo is 1-22 with football decisions made by Sashi Brown, a lawyer, and Paul DePodesta, baseball's "Moneyball" analytics expert.
JC, buddy, change is the only thing Browns fans have to cling to once again as rumors intensify that Peyton Manning's lifelong family ties to Browns owner and fellow University of Tennessee alum Jimmy Haslam could lead to Manning taking over as Browns general manager as early as next season.
Manning reportedly is a happy stay-at-home dad to 5-year-old twins. But he recently admitted to Peter King of themmqb.com that he's interested in running an NFL front office. And Fox's Jay Glazer reported that Manning will be back in the NFL as a GM next season.
Glazer mentioned the Browns, Titans and Rams as possibilities. Partial ownership of a team could be part of closing the deal for Manning if the future first-ballot Hall of Fame quarterback does indeed choose to follow in the footsteps of Hall of Famers such as Denver's John Elway and Baltimore's Ozzie Newsome.
Haslam would be wise to pay da man. Since their resurrection as an expansion franchise in 1999, the Browns are notorious for one thing above all else: infamous decisions at quarterback that have led to an amazingly consistent trend of drafting the wrong ones while passing on the right ones.
For those who argue that Manning doesn't have any experience running an NFL front office, listen to what Hall of Fame executive Bill Polian, the guy who drafted Manning in 1998, told Tony Grossi of ESPN 850 WKNR in Cleveland: