The No. 1 overall pick of the 2015 NFL Draft, Winston played five topsy-turvy seasons for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. His last was 2019, when he led the NFL with 5,109 passing yards and became the first and so far only member of the 30-30 QB club, throwing 33 touchdowns and 30 interceptions. Thereafter, he joined his Monday night adversary, head coach Sean Payton, in New Orleans, where he played the past four seasons, sometimes as a starter, sometimes as a backup. With Cleveland, he’s taken over for an injured Deshaun Watson and breathed new life and excitement into the Browns’ offense.
Winston’s Monday showing served as a microcosm of his career truly, the full Jameis experience taking center stage.
He’s started five games to Watson’s seven, but leads the team with 11 touchdowns, seven interceptions and 1,763 yards. With the good — and sometimes great — has come the head-scratching turnovers, though.
Winston was slinging beautiful passes all night through the Mile High air, hitting David Njoku for a pair of touchdowns, Jerry Jeudy on a 70-yarder to immediately answer a Bo Nix-to-Marvin Mims Jr. 93-yard strike and finally a 5-yarder to Nick Chubb. It was the TD toss to Chubb that propelled Cleveland to a 32-31 lead midway through the fourth quarter.
However, he was also slinging some ugly ones, such as a second-quarter ball that Nik Bonitto picked off and took the other way for a 71-yard score.
Following the Chubb score, the Broncos would forge back ahead when Nix led them on a go-ahead march that culminated with a Wil Lutz field goal for a 34-32 advantage.
Seemingly never daunted and always able to flush any past stumbles, Winston took over with his Browns trailing by two points from the Cleveland 30-yard line with 2:54 to play. Three plays later, Winston watched as his 51st pass of the game was picked off by Ja’Quan McMillian and returned 44 yards for a game-deciding score.
To put the capper on the chaos, Winston tossed one final interception, this one grasped by Cody Barton, enabling the Broncos to kneel away the craziness.
“I gotta play better, I gotta play better,” Winston said. “The team doesn’t deserve that. I have to finish in fourth quarters when it matters most. I can’t have bad throws.”
At times Monday, it seemed as though Winston couldn’t have been better. Then it seemed as though he couldn’t have been worse. That’s the enigma of Jameis.
Amid his 10th season, the 30-year-old is still pledging improvement. And, though the Browns’ postseason hopes are only alive in a mathematical sense, he’s still got plenty to show in his team’s final five games.
“I know I’m better than this,” he said. “I know, I’m just praying for the lord to deliver me from pick-sixes. That’s not me. A phenomenal game from the offense and do some great things but I messed it up.”
Dang it if he didn’t make it exciting, though, just like every roller-coaster ride is.
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