The Cleveland Browns are not going to let the media run wild with Johnny Manziel coverage ahead of the upcoming season, or they will at least try.

According to the Associated Press, the Browns will not allow him or incumbent quarterback Brian Hoyer to speak to the media during the three-day minicamp that began Tuesday. Manziel and Hoyer are expected to be available to comment to the media starting next month.

In true Manziel fashion, the rookie quarterback has made headlines for revelry, most recently at a pool party this weekend in his home state of Texas. He was also drafted by the San Diego Padres in the MLB amateur draft and showed support to his close friend LeBron James by showing up to Game 2 of the NBA Finals. However, Manziel is now representing the city James once scored with "the Decision."

The move is an obvious and intentional strategy to keep Manziel focused on football, as far as the public is concerned. Hoyer is believed to have the upper hand in the competition for the starting QB job, but Manziel is the likely future face of the franchise.

Mike Mayock, an analyst with NFL Network, told the Cleveland Plain Dealer the Browns' approach should keep Manziel humble.

"I love the way they are handling him right now," Mayock said. "I'm happy they didn't hand it to him. The kid has had too much handed to him in life already. Let him work for something here."

Glenn Moore, of Cleveland.com Sports, reported on Twitter that Manziel is "struggling with angle throws" but has looked fine when throwing down the field.

According to Cleveland.com, Browns head coach Mike Pettine also turned down the opportunity for his team to be featured on the popular HBO show "Hard Knocks." While it could have upped the team's popularity, Pettine said he felt the Browns did not need the extra exposure.