Landry made it clear, though, that the personal accolades take a backseat to his bigger goals as a recently extended member of the Browns. From the day he arrived in Cleveland, Landry established himself as a vocal leader in a wide receivers room that skews as young as any position group on the roster. That vocality goes beyond his position group, too.

Asked if this Browns team, at 2-2-1, had "arrived," Landry abruptly shut it down. He'd go without a catch for weeks if the team was still winning.

"It wasn't one of my primary focuses. I really didn't know I was close until someone told me that week," Landry said. "For me, I've got a lot of football yet and I want to win games. Obviously if we can get the stats up and do that as well, I want that, but I want to win games. That's really the big thing for me."

Defenses haven't made it easy on Landry in recent weeks, but he's continued to be one of the most consistent playmakers in the NFL. His 20-game streak of compiling at least five receptions ended Week 4 but he started a new one against the Ravens, amassing five receptions for a team-high 69 yards. He's the league's active leader with 68 straight games of at least two catches, a streak that dates back to the second game of his NFL career.

Landry has played with a number of different quarterbacks during that stretch, the latest being Baker Mayfield. His consistency has shown it hasn't mattered, but Landry could be in position to shatter even more records with the talented rookie set to be under center for a good long while.

"Jarvis is a very smart guy that understands coverage, double coverage and brackets, things of that sort," Haley said. "He is a competitive guy that wants to go out and win.