You win three games in 39 tries, and suddenly the pressure rises a bit. Tough world, that NFL.

The tide is beginning to turn against Hue Jackson, with one report stating the Browns front office is “less than pleased” with the head coach as a season in which real hope exists is now off to a 2-4-1 start.

After the Browns’ 26-23 overtime loss in Tampa on Sunday — their OT record stands at 1-2-1, with more extra-session games than four-quarter affairs — Jackson went on the offensive, appearing to blame offensive coordinator Todd Haley for a unit led by Baker Mayfield that started terribly slow, launched a fourth-quarter comeback and could not finish the job.

“I’m not gonna continue to watch something I know how to do keep being that way,” Jackson told reporters. “That’s just the truth. That’s nothing against anybody in our building, that’s just what I do and I need to be a little bit more involved.”

What he means is, if he is going out, he is going out on his own terms. And that means taking over the offense, whether that means being more involved with the game-planning or taking the play-calling reins back from Haley. Jackson’s background is on offense, and he called plays for the Browns (unsuccessfully) the past two seasons.

“[Haley is] the playcaller,” Jackson said. “Trust me when I say, I’m not trying to create any issue. But if the offense is not playing well, and we haven’t over a period of time, being a head coach and an offensive guy who’s done this, I think I have every right as a head coach to jump in there and see if I can help and assist and get this thing to where I think it needs to be. Because we need to be better on offense. And if that’s my specialty, I think I need to be involved more, and I will be.”

Jackson is 3-35-1 in two and a half seasons and now has a promising quarterback Cleveland believes it can build upon — and needs to pair with the right offensive mind who can mold him.

If Jackson can survive, the clawing begins now.