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Dual-role Detmer Browns hoping newest QB will be starter, mentorPosted: Tuesday February 23, 1999 10:31 PM
CLEVELAND (AP) -- If Ty Detmer is going to be his teacher, Tim Couch promises he'll study hard. The Cleveland Browns have agreed with Detmer on a seven-year contract with the idea he'll start at quarterback for the expansion club next season while serving as a mentor to the Browns' QB of the future. And it looks more and more likely that quarterback will be Couch, the Kentucky All-American who on Tuesday said he liked the idea of being Detmer's pupil. "I think it would be great," Couch said by phone from Lexington, Ky. "He has been in the league for a long time and he could do nothing but help me. I could learn a lot under him." After being chased by the Browns for two weeks, the 31-year-old Detmer finally agreed to come to Cleveland on Monday by approving a trade with the San Francisco 49ers. He was hunting cougar with friends in Utah when his agent finally tracked him down. "Ty has verbally approved the deal and it's subject to the documentation of the Browns," Detmer's agent, Don Yee, said. "Ty's very excited to be heading to Cleveland and is looking forward to contributing to the Browns in any way he can." Initially, that will be as the Browns starter, but if the team uses its No. 1 pick in April's NFL college draft on Couch, Detmer will find himself once again in the role of backup. The Browns were awaiting completion of paperwork before formally announcing Detmer's signing, team spokesman Alex Martins said Tuesday evening. Cleveland and San Francisco will swap picks in the fourth round and the Browns' first pick in the fifth round will go to San Francisco for Detmer, who has completed 407 passes for 4,807 yards and 27 touchdowns in 44 NFL games. The teams were close to finalizing a deal on Feb. 9 during the expansion draft, but Detmer used a no-trade provision in his contract. The Browns did acquire tight end Irv Smith and defensive end Roy Barker from San Francisco, but Detmer was the player they wanted most. Dwight Clark, Cleveland's director of football operations, has been a fan of Detmer for years. When he was with San Francisco, Clark attempted to trade for Detmer, who was then starting in Philadelphia. Following the 1997 season, Clark wanted to sign Detmer, a free agent, to a 10-year contract but settled for a five-year, $4 million deal. Detmer was in the second year of that deal with the 49ers which paid him about $800,000 per season. In his new deal with the Browns, Detmer will make $3 million in 1999 and $14 million for the entire contract. "The deal is designed to give him longevity," said Browns president Carmen Policy. Policy signed Detmer before last season to be Steve Young's backup in San Francisco and to help bring along 1997 first-round draft pick Jim Druckenmiller. Before joining the 49ers, Detmer spent two years as a starter for the Eagles and served as Brett Favre's backup in Green Bay for almost four years. Detmer set 59 NCAA records during his career at Brigham Young, and won the Heisman Trophy with the Cougars in 1990 after passing for more than 5,000 yards and 41 TDs as a junior. Couch was just a kid then, but remembers watching Detmer shred defenses. "I followed him when he was at BYU and I'm familiar with the kind of offense he ran there because we ran BYU's offense at Kentucky," he said. Couch, who will work out for the Browns on March 11 in Lexington, got his first chance to meet with Cleveland coach Chris Palmer during last week's scouting combine in Indianapolis. "I thought it went great," Couch said. "It was just nice to sit down and talk football with him. I'm sure we'll talk more in-depth later, but we just talked about basic football stuff, coverages and stuff like that."
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