After his rookie season and going into his first NFL offseason, the Browns' coaching staff wanted WR Jamari Thrash to work on becoming a consistent pair of hands for the quarterbacks to pass to.
The second-year wideout took that feedback to heart and has exhausted every avenue to work on his technique. He has been on the JUGS machine catching passes. He is constantly squeezing a tennis ball to strengthen his hands, and he is running routes whenever possible. He worked out with QB Dillon Gabriel this summer in California, building chemistry with a teammate and seeing the spiral of the football come at him from the opposite way from a left-handed NFL quarterback.
The work paid off for Thrash against the Eagles, as Gabriel found Thrash four times through the air for 43 yards. Thrash led