More tests for Browns’ Mingo

Status of RB Lewis unknown after leg surgery

8/19/2013
ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Browns’ Barkevious Mingo experienced shortness of breath and he coughed up blood before telling the team’s trainers. He was diagnosed with a bruised lung.
The Browns’ Barkevious Mingo experienced shortness of breath and he coughed up blood before telling the team’s trainers. He was diagnosed with a bruised lung.

BEREA, Ohio — Browns rookie linebacker Barkevious Mingo will undergo further medical tests on a bruised lung, an injury that caused him to spit up blood during an exhibition game last week.

Mingo was hospitalized for two days at The Cleveland Clinic after he sustained the unusual injury some time in the first half of Thursday night's win over the Detroit Lions. The No. 6 overall pick in this year's draft said he coughed up blood and experienced shortness of breath on the sideline before he told coaches and the team's trainers that he was hurt.

Browns CEO Joe Banner said running back Dion Lewis is undergoing surgery Monday after breaking his left leg against the Lions. Banner said the team still does not know if Lewis will play this year.

Banner said Mingo will have more tests and the team does not yet know how long he will be out.

"We really don't," Banner said after giving reporters a tour of the team's renovated headquarters. "[The timetable is] still fairly open-ended. Hopefully we'll get more information soon and have a better idea."

Mingo was released from the hospital on Saturday morning. After watching that afternoon's practice, the 22-year-old said he did not injure his ribs and attempted to downplay an injury that could have potentially been fatal if untreated.

Mingo believes he got hurt while covering the opening kickoff, but he wasn't certain because he didn't take a big hit. He'll miss this week's preseason game at Indianapolis, and it's still to be determined how much more time the 6-foot-4, 240-pounder will be sidelined.

Banner made it clear the Browns will be cautious with Mingo — or any injured player.

"I think you've got to make sure he's fully healthy before you put him back out there and then he should be at no greater risk than anybody else, at least as I understand it," Banner said. "But you've got to make sure. With any injury, if you put him out when they're only 75 percent healed, you're at greater risk of something happening. So we've got to make sure he's fully good to go."

Banner said the nature of Mingo's injury caught the Browns a bit off guard.

"Anytime a player gets hurt, especially one where it's sort of ambiguous — some of these injuries are, 'I did this, OK, that's two weeks. You did this, that's eight weeks.' Obviously the range of this being from minor to quite serious is larger than most injuries. But you know we've got top quality medical people and they were fairly quickly able to assure us and get him in a place where we were able to determine that he was in good shape.

"Mostly it was initial, 'What is that? How'd that happen?' But I think as soon as you understood, we were at a point where the medical people had done enough to make us feel confident that it wasn't going to be a big deal."

As for Lewis, the Browns still don't know if he'll be able to help them this season. The third-year back fractured his fibula while being tackled in the third quarter of Cleveland's 24-6 win.

The Browns have two options with Lewis: place him on season-ending injured reserve, or put him on the IR and designate him to return after Week 8 of the regular season, if they think he can come back.

"We won't have any idea until after the surgery," Banner said. "Even then, we may or may not have any more clarity than we do right now. It just may be a matter of seeing how it heals."

Lewis has been a great addition for the Browns, who acquired him in an April trade from Philadelphia. He complements starter Trent Richardson well as a third-down back who can also run between the tackles. Lewis played in 24 games the past two seasons for the Eagles.

With Montario Hardesty also expected to miss at least one month after having knee surgery last week, the Browns re-signed free agent Jamaine Cook on Sunday to bolster their depth.

The Browns have given a behind-the-scenes look at their remodeled headquarters and training facility, which was given a $5 million face lift during the offseason.

Banner took media members through the team's building on Monday. With open working spaces and a modern decor, the Browns are hoping the changes can not only build chemistry among their current employees but entice others to work for them in the future. Throughout the facility are reminders of the team's past glory with photos of Hall of Fame players like Jim Brown and Paul Warfield on the walls along with inspirational quotes from Abraham Lincoln, Thomas Jefferson, Mother Teresa and others.

Banner's favorite saying belongs to fictional character Willy Wonka because "everyone thinks I'm so serious. It's sports. It's supposed to be fun."

Also, the Browns acquired offensive lineman John Moffitt in a trade from Seattle for defensive lineman Brian Sanford.

Cleveland needed an experienced guard after losing Shawn Lauvao and Jason Pinkston to ankle injuries in the past week. Browns coach Rob Chudzinski said Moffitt is a "tough and versatile lineman who will be in the mix for us up front."

The 6-foot-4, 319-pound Moffitt made 15 starts over the past two seasons. He started the final six games — four at right guard, two at left — last season, helping Seattle earn a spot in the NFC playoffs.

The Seahawks drafted Moffitt in the third round in 2011. He started his first nine games as a rookie before sustaining a season-ending knee injury.

Sanford played in six games the past three seasons for Cleveland.