BEREA, Ohio – The shortest Browns player has raised his profile.
Generously listed at 5-foot-9, Jerome Harrison has been told he’s too small to play football for as long as he can remember.
“I’ve heard that all my life,” he said, “and I’ve been scoring touchdowns my whole life. Opinions and thoughts don’t define me. Just put in the tape and watch me. Then you can make your opinion.”
The current consensus on Harrison is that he’s Cleveland’s best running back.
The other overriding sentiment running around town is: Where’s he been?
Harrison has rushed for 434 yards on 73 carries the past two weeks, out-of-the-blue performances that brought into question why the Browns, whose 32nd-ranked offense has struggled most of the season, didn’t try to use the shifty four-year veteran more earlier in the season.
Two weeks ago in Kansas City, Harrison ran 34 times for 286 yards — the third-most in NFL history — to break Hall of Famer Jim Brown’s single-game team mark. He followed that up with 148 yards last week against Oakland while setting a club record with 39 tries — one more than Lee Suggs’ team record and two more than Brown ever attempted.
Harrison showed he could withstand the pounding, even though he joked that he felt like a busted pinata.
“I’m good now,” Harrison said Thursday as the Browns prepared for their season finale against Jacksonville. “I can move a little bit. I took care of my body well this week — a lot of cold tub, hot tub and massages. When the season’s over I won’t move for about two weeks. I’ll just lay in bed and sleep and rest. I feel all right. I really do.”
While he’s been a workhorse lately, Harrison was a forgotten man for a large chunk of the season. Nicknamed “The Ghost” while running for 1,900 yards in 2005 at Washington State, Harrison was nearly invisible.
In Week 4, starting in place of an injured Jamal Lewis, Harrison had 29 carries for 129 yards against Cincinnati. Over the next seven games, he had just 23 carries and was inactive when the Browns visited the Detroit Lions on Nov. 22.
The second time he faced the Bengals, Harrison was handed the ball twice.
It was around that time that Harrison said he had a “good conversation” with Browns coach Eric Mangini. Harrison was not blocking as well as he needed to on blitzes, and his effort in practice was not up to Mangini’s demanding standards.
Harrison took Mangini’s words to heart.
“It was just two grown men getting on the same page,” he said. “We were working in the same direction ... We have a great relationship. I like the guy and everything is working.”
While Harrison’s size may have been a factor to the colleges that recruited him or the NFL teams that passed him up in the draft, he’s made the most of his gifts.
In a game of giants, sometimes it pays to be closer to the ground.
“There are some advantages to being smaller,” Harrison said. “It’s hard to see me when I’m running behind Joe Thomas. He’s 6-4 and huge. I’m a little guy. It has its advantage.”
This week, Harrison will be on the field with another of the NFL’s best “little” backs, Jacksonville’s Maurice Jones-Drew, a 5-foot-7, 208-pound battering ram.
The two squared off in college and Jones-Drew remembers Harrison doing damage against his alma mater.
“He tore UCLA up for 280, 290 (yards),” Jones-Drew said. “I’ve known Jerome for a while and he’s been a great back. Playmakers come in all shapes and sizes and a lot of people are starting to know that.”
Jones-Drew can count Harrison among his, um, biggest admirers.
“My favorite running backs are guys like Jones-Drew, (Darren) Sproles, LaDainian (Tomlinson) — smaller backs, guys people say are too small,” Harrison said.
Like Harrison’s recent yardage stats, the respect for him is growing too.
BY THE NUMBERS Yards Jerome Harrison, above, has run for in his past two games (217 per game average) Yards Harrison ran for in his first 44 games with the Browns (17.0 per game average)