
| Cleveland Browns can’t rely on a top pick to be… | |
BEREA, Ohio — Browns cornerback Sheldon Brown, who’s seen a lot in his 10 years in the NFL, held court on a getaway day Monday and said he’s not waiting for a college star such as Baylor quarterback Robert Griffin III to come in and be the savior of this 4-12 team. “I’m definitely not, and if you are, you’re crazy,” he said. Brown stressed that one or two rookies — the Browns will have the fourth overall pick in the April draft and the Falcons’ first-round pick in the 20s, aren’t going to change the fortunes of this rebuilding team, at least not overnight. “My thing is, if you’re dependent on a draft pick to come in here and change your life, then you’re kidding yourself,” he said. “This game is too hard. There’s too big of a jump to come from college and think that he’s going to come in … who does it? Maybe Randy Moss did it. So you already know the pattern. It’s not that.” So what will it take for the Browns to compete in the AFC North, where their three foes are skipping off to the playoffs? “The guys here have to step their game up to another level because they’re experienced,” said Brown. “When you lose close games, you can go back and maybe point to one or two drops, or one or two miscues. When things like that happen, I bet you go back and you say ‘ah, [it was] a young player [who] hadn’t been in that situation. Hadn’t experienced it.’ Well now he’s experienced it and he won’t do it again. “Most rookies, anyway, they get hurt because they get tired and they don’t understand the speed and the strength of this game at the professional level. So I’m never sold on high draft picks.” Brown said he’s not spewing lip service when he says the Browns are close to being a good team. They lost six games by seven points or less, and went down to the wire most games with their division rivals, although they finished 0-6 in the division for only the second time since 1999. “We’re very close,” said Brown, who went to the playoffs with the Eagles six times, including one Super Bowl. “It’s one or two plays each game. You just have to find the playmakers and they just have to understand the sense of urgency and make the play.” But don’t Browns fans hear the same thing every year? “I didn’t tell you this last year,” he said. “I thought we were way off last year, from a lot of other things we were having to deal with. You can say whatever you want to say, but I do believe that and I came from an organization where we’d start 0-4 — sometimes 0-3 — and we were one or two plays out, and we found a way to start making those plays. Then we’d run off eight in a row, and then the people that were laughing, they don’t seem to laugh any more.” Brown is convinced coach Pat Shurmur — who took a critical beating by some fans and media this season — is the right man for the job. “I think he did a tremendous job, dealing with being a head coach for the first time,” said Brown. “Everybody thinks it’s an easy job, everybody wants to sit in a room and say, ‘I can do this better, I can do that better.’ He dealt with the situations the best he could, and he kept this football team fighting. For me, that’s how I judge a head coach. “If a football team goes out there and competes week in and week out, through thick and through thin — and it was very thick this year — but we didn’t quit. So that tells me that the leader is in place and the guys believe in him and they will fight. If you put a football team out there that’s giving up 40 points, scoring nothing and they’re quitting, that tells me that the leader in place is not the guy.” Can he make the jump in year two? “He can definitely make a jump,” said Brown. “But the most important thing is that the players have to make the jump. And the players have to make the plays. “I think this coaching staff is in place for a while. The worst thing that I’ve known of the history of the Browns is, one or two years and they want to blow it up. People want to think that it changes in one or two years. There’s a process that you have to go through in this league and you have to be patient to do it. “The coaching staff did the best [they could] with their knowledge of the players, not having an off-season to really get to know the guys. They put them in the best positions that they knew how to make plays on the field, and I think it’s heading in the right direction.” As for the defense, which finished 10th overall, Brown is certain it’s on solid footing. “Anytime you have a [middle] linebacker like D’Qwell Jackson, your foundation is in place,” said Brown. “Anytime you have a starting defensive tackle — and I’ve played with some good ones — like Ahtyba Rubin, motor doesn’t stop, intense guy, angry player, studies, and he brings the young guys like Jabaal Sheard and Phil Taylor along with him, it’s in place. You’ve got Joe Haden, T.J. Ward, young players in the secondary, the foundation is in place. “We had to go through the growing pains of being young, but the foundation is in place and I think it’s going in the right direction.” While losing teams such as the Rams and Bucs fired their coaches Monday, other Browns agreed that this is a 4-12 team on the rise. “My rookie year I played for Green Bay and we were 6-10 and there wasn’t a whole lot of turnover on that roster,” said tight end Evan Moore. “They had a lot of young guys that they let grow up in that system and look at them now. Granted, that team has a lot of talent and I believe we do, too. We have a lot of young guys I think are only going to get better. “I think it goes without saying that a foundation needs time. Guys need time to mature and I think we have the makings here of something that could be pretty impressive if guys are given time to mature.” Said kicker Phil Dawson: “We were in a lot of games. It’s death by inches, though. How are you going to look at that? Are we that close, or is that just the nature of the league? It depends on your personality, how you’re going to view that. “In my little world, if my plant foot misses the spot by a quarter-inch, I miss the kick. That will probably tell you how I look at it. Everybody looks at themselves critically and figures out how they can improve. If we do that, now these close games are coming out in our favor. Hopefully that’s the way guys respond to it.” On Twitter: @marykaycabot Leave any suggestions in the comment box. Posted in 1, bengals-news, D'Qwell Jackson, Evan Moore, Joe Haden, Phil Dawson, Sheldon Brown, t.j. ward | Comments Off
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| Steelers wrap up No. 5 seed by outlasting the… | |
The The progress of a game on the opposite end of Ohio may determine how much. A first-round bye is in sight for the Steelers with a victory over the Browns on Sunday and some help, but otherwise they’d After suffering a high ankle sprain in a 14-3 win over Cleveland in Week 14, Roethlisberger played through pain in a 20-3
Needing two wins and a Baltimore loss to win the AFC North and guarantee at least a first-round bye, the Steelers (11-4) rested Baltimore held off a late rally by the Browns to win 20-14 that same day, but the division’s current leader – by virtue of A Baltimore loss and Pittsburgh win would give the Steelers the No. 2 seed, and potentially No. 1 should New England falter. It was unclear early in the week if the Steelers would risk Roethlisberger for what amounts to a 50-50 shot at best at a bye, “As long as I can deal with pain, I’ll be out there,” Roethlisberger said. “I don’t want to let the guys down, so I’ll do Coach Mike Tomlin’s offensive coordinator agrees – to a point. “I want him out there but not at the risk of injuring himself,” Bruce Arians said. “If he can’t move around and get out of
While the Steelers need help from the Bengals – offensive lineman “Cleveland’s going to do whatever they can to put a damper on our season as much as possible,” Essex told the Steelers’ official
Roethlisberger isn’t the only quarterback to have sustained a potentially significant injury in the first meeting. Browns McCoy returned to the game, but was later diagnosed with a concussion. The decision to send him back in led to the NFL instituting One of the harshest critics of the Browns’ handling of the situation was none other than Harrison, who said last week that As for his play, Harrison claims he’s lowered his target area. Browns linebacker D’Qwell Jackson isn’t so sure. “Harrison is who he is and whether you fine him, you suspend him, he’s not going to change,” Jackson said.
McCoy, who missed the past two games, has not been medically cleared and is unlikely to return for the finale. “We have to try to take advantage of every opportunity and make sure we do it at 100 percent,” Wallace said. “Do it at a high As long as Roethlisberger’s been in Pittsburgh, matchups with Cleveland have typically been just that. The Steelers are 13-1
“You never want to lose to Cleveland,” Steelers safety If anybody needs tickets to games, remember to click the tickets link at the top. Posted in 1, Ben Roethlisberger, bengals-news, Charlie Batch, Colt McCoy, D'Qwell Jackson, James Harrison, Mike Tomlin, Pittsburgh Steelers, Rashard Mendenhall, Ryan Clark, Seneca Wallace | Comments Off
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| Cleveland Browns almost always almost win, but… | |
CLEVELAND, Ohio — Notes, observations and some facts on the fourth quarter … • On super-important first possession, Browns complete 3-and-out with a third-down swing pass to Peyton Hillis. Groans. Minus-3 yards. Punt. • Ben Roethlisberger’s shovel pass to Hines Ward results in 3-yard loss on alert hit by D’Qwell Jackson. Nonetheless, Steelers celebrate Ward’s 1,000th career catch. • Isaac Redman loses the ball on a hit by Chris Gocong. Eric Hagg recovers and refs tack on 15 yards on a facemask penalty. Browns have it at Steelers’ 43. • Mohamed Massaquoi gets a first down with a catch at the 32. Peyton Hillis out with a knee injury. • Wallace’s pass over middle a little behind Massaquoi, but catchable. Dropped at the Steelers’ 19. • After a Wallace throw two yards out of bounds, Browns punt from the Steelers’ 34 with 10:11 to go. • Buster Skrine’s pass interference against Jerricho Cotchery bails out Steelers. First down at 26. • Redman coughs up another after a 22-yard gain, and it’s recovered by the Browns at their 39. • After one first down, Wallace’s passes on second and third down are off mark and almost intercepted. One fourth-and-10 with 4:59 to go, Browns elect to punt. • Ben Roethlisberger makes a big throw to Heath Miller for 11 yards and a first down at the Steelers’ 29. Browns use their last timeout with 2:44 to go. • Steelers can’t close the game out on offense, as Roethlisberger’s third-down pass is knocked away by Joe Haden. Browns, with no timeouts, get one last chance after Cribbs fumbles the punt out of bounds at their 24. • Evan Moore catches one for eight yards at the 32, clock runs. Cribbs drops a short dump pass, but that at least stops the clock. Is there any play that’s more than 15 yards downfield? • On third down, Cribbs catches another dumpoff for a first down. But can’t succeed doing this. • Sideline pass to Massaquoi … just four yards downfield … is dropped. • Snow coming down heavily on second down. Moore catches it over the middle and runs out of bounds to the Browns 45. • Just 41 seconds left … have to go downfield. Carlton Mitchell grabs his first reception for 18 yards, and Wallace spikes the ball with 22 seconds left at the Steelers 37. Pittsburgh calls their second timeout. • Snowglobe conditions. Moore catches a pattern near the sidelines, but can’t get out of bounds. Ball is clocked with five seconds remaining at the Steelers 25. • Last play is … delayed by the Steelers’ last timeout. Will Browns have some final trick play to end the season? • Hail Mary sees Greg Little get his hands on the ball in the end zone, but the ball is knocked harmlessly to the ground. End of game. End of season. Gotta run!. Posted in 1, Ben Roethlisberger, bengals-news, Chris Gocong, D'Qwell Jackson, Evan Moore, Heath Miller, Hines Ward, Jerricho Cotchery, Joe Haden, mohamed massaquoi, Peyton Hillis | Comments Off
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| Cleveland Browns offense — 3 punts, 2 sacks, 16… | |
CLEVELAND, Ohio — Notes, observations and some facts on the first quarter … • Browns win coin toss, receive, and punt after three plays, one a sack. • Sheldon Brown holding penalty on third down gives Steelers a first down. • On a third-and-1 inside handoff, Isaac Redmon gains 13 yards on an inside cut. Steelers drive to Browns’ 32. On fourth-and-3, Redmond beats D’Qwell Jackson on a circle route, but Ben Roethlisberger’s touch pass is too long. Mike Tomlin eschewed 49-yard field goal try with 24 mph wind. • Seneca Wallace is sacked before he takes two steps on well-timed blitz by Troy Polamalu. Browns offense really humming. Six snaps, 14 yards, two sacks, two punts. • Roethlisberger is being very careful not to hold the ball very long. As a result, his passes are not sharp. He’s in dink and dunk mode, like the second half of Dec. 8 game after his injury. • Ahtyba Rubin storms in to bury Roethlisberger for a 9-yard sack. • Jeremy Kapinos’ punt bounces backwards from the goal line. Browns take over at their 4, then have third 3-and-out in a row. Gotta run!. Posted in 1, Ben Roethlisberger, bengals-news, D'Qwell Jackson, Mike Tomlin, Seneca Wallace, Sheldon Brown, Troy Polamalu | Comments Off
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| Cleveland Browns’ Seneca Wallace out to prove he’s… | |
Browns quarterback Seneca Wallace will go out this season the same way he came in: determined to prove he should be the Browns’ starting quarterback. With Colt McCoy officially ruled out for Sunday’s game against the Steelers, Wallace will make his third straight start, and he indicated it shouldn’t have taken so long for him to get his chance. “At the end of the day, I can control what I can control,” he said. “Yeah, I get frustrated that, hey, I feel like I deserve a shot or I want a shot. But at the end of the day, it’s just a matter of making sure I lead my teammates in the right direction. The rest will take care of itself.” Asked if he should he have a chance to compete for the starting job next season, Wallace said: “Maybe so. I don’t know. I’ll let you guys evaluate that.” Before the season, Wallace, who had just signed a new three-year deal worth $9 million, told The Plain Dealer that he’d do everything he could to beat out McCoy for the starting job in camp. “I still want the opportunity to go out and be able to play myself, so I’m not just going to sit back and watch,” he said then. “I’d rather go out there and play.” During an interview Thursday on FM/92.3, Wallace said it’s been “very tough” for him to sit all season. “Do I feel like things always are fair? No. And that’s just the way it is. . . . It was Pat [Shurmur's] decision to give Colt an opportunity, and that’s what it was.” A nine-year pro, Wallace reiterated what he told The Plain Dealer in June — that he wasn’t going to share all his knowledge of the West Coast offense with McCoy because he wanted to beat him for the job. Asked during Thursday’s interview how much mentoring he’s done with McCoy this season, Wallace said: “Not much. Not much. That was Jake [Delhomme's] deal. He did a lot of some stuff with him last year. But that’s not my thing. It’s just one thing I don’t do. I came in with the mind-set I wanted to compete, whatever case that was.” Wallace said he’d answer any questions McCoy might have about the West Coast offense, but he wouldn’t offer unsolicited help. Also during his radio interview Thursday, Wallace changed his tune a little about the botched ending of the first half in Baltimore. Instead of assuming full blame for not spiking the ball as he did after the game, he put some of it on Shurmur. He said the players looked over to the sideline after tight end Evan Moore wasn’t ruled out of bounds and the clock was ticking down. “I don’t know if Pat was ready to have his next call, or whatever the case may be,” Wallace said. “It was just a miscommunication between us, at that point.” Jackson, Adams honored: The local chapter of the Pro Football Writers of America voted linebacker D’Qwell Jackson as the Browns Player of the Year, and safety Mike Adams was voted the winner of the Good Guy Award for his cooperation with the media and for the way he carries himself in the community and with his teammates. “I guess it means a lot,” Adams said, laughing. “It also means you guys are slipping because I’ve been here for five years and you finally got it right. I commend you guys for finally getting it right. I appreciate it. It’s an honor. I always try to tell the truth and tell as much as I can without giving any secrets away. I try to be as honest as possible, straightforward and just try say what I’m feeling, and I guess a lot of people respect that.” Adams, who’s contract is up after this season, said he’d love to be back with the Browns. “It’s my first choice, but I have to embrace change if change happens,” he said. “I’ve been around this business a long time. I’ve seen guys I never thought would get released get released. I think I did a good job this year. I definitely think I showed I’m a starter and I showed that I can make plays, get my team lined up and make the right calls.” He said the Browns have given no indication they want him back. “There’s been no numbers, no contract talk,” he said. “But that’s OK because I didn’t want it to mess me up mentally.” But he wants to be around when the good times roll. “When we went 10-6, that feeling was like no other — and we didn’t even go to the playoffs,” he said. “I want to experience that here again.” Hicks to start: Artis Hicks will start Sunday at right tackle in place of Tony Pashos, who has been out all week with a stomach issue. Pashos has also been battling an ankle injury. “People always remember what they saw last, so you always want to leave your best stuff out there,” Hicks said. He’s gearing up for outside linebacker James Harrison, who lines up all over. “In their nickel packages, they’ll move him inside, he’ll come over, he’ll rush on the right side. When you have a guy like that who’s capable of creating havoc, you want to get him moved around and try to get matchups with him all game.” Hicks said he won’t get hung up on trying to get revenge on Harrison for his hit on McCoy on Dec. 8. “All I focus on is what’s happening right now in front of me,” he said. Injury update: Several key Steelers are probable, including quarterback Ben Roethlisberger (ankle), safety Troy Polamalu (knee), Harrison (neck), center Maurkice Pouncey (ankle) and receiver Mike Wallace (ankle). Thanks for reading! . Posted in 1, Ben Roethlisberger, bengals-news, Colt McCoy, D'Qwell Jackson, Evan Moore, James Harrison, Mike Adams, Seneca Wallace, Tony Pashos, Troy Polamalu | Comments Off
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