BEREA, Ohio -- Terrelle Pryor, whose contract is up after the season, wants to remain in Cleveland at least as long as his head coach.

"I respect him very highly and if Hue Jackson's here, I'd love to stay here,'' Pryor told cleveland.com Thursday. "I want to be here if Hue's going to be here for a while, because I know this is a building process -- and it's not really. We're right there. We're competing with everybody, we've just got to put teams away and I'd like to be where Hue's at.''

Pryor, on a one-year deal worth $1.671 million, will be an unrestricted free agent after the season.

"Cleveland's awesome,'' he said. "The fans are are awesome. But right now, I'm here and I'm going to try to get it done."

Pryor said to his knowledge extension talks with the Browns haven't started, but that he'd certainly be up for that.

During Sunday's 30-24 overtime loss to the Dolphins, Pryor became the first player to have at least 120 receiving yards, 30 passing yards and 20 rushing yards in a single game since Hall of Famer Frank Gifford on Dec. 6, 1959.

His jersey, cleats and glove will be on display at the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, in a way that will honor Gifford.

Pryor (6-4, 230) accounted for 200 of the Browns' 430 yards in Miami, including 144 on his eight catches. He also threw for 35 yards out of the Wildcat and ran for a 3-yard TD off one of 14 direct snaps.

The top tier wideouts make from about $8 million a year to $15 million. Pryor brings the added dimension of playing in the Wildcat, posing a legitimate running or passing threat.

Jackson, who drafted Pryor as a quarterback in Oakland, said the multi-purpose threat is only just beginning.

"This relationship with me and him goes way back to 2011,'' said Jackson. "There are a lot of things I know about Terrelle that maybe a lot of people don't. I'm talking about as far as what he is really capable of doing. I would say to all of you that he hasn't even scratched the surface of what he is. He's growing each and every day as a football player, as a person. He's getting better, and his best football's still ahead of him by far. He just has to keep working like he does every day and continue to get better and stay humble and be as good as he's been and good things will happen."

Jackson, who was instrumental in Pryor switching to receiver after he cut him as a quarterback in Cincinnati in 2015, said he didn't pick him up in Cincinnati as a receiver after the Browns cut him because he didn't know where he was in the transition.

"On that team at that time, we had guys who played the position and knew how to do it,'' he said. "I didn't know how far along he was or not at that time."

Lucky for Jackson he didn't know. Because now he's got Pryor on his side instead of having to face him twice a year.

If Pryor has his way, it will stay like that for a long time.