Throwing darts, part II
If you’re still here, congratulations. You’re
either curious to see how dumb I can be or you’re a glutton for punishment. We
now continue with the back half of the 2020 season for the Browns. We pick it
up with . , ,
Week 10, Sunday
Nov. 15 vs. Houston, 1 p.m., FOX – Every time the Browns
play the Texans, the haunting thought crosses the minds of many Browns fans. Deshaun Watson, who many still believe
should have been the Browns’ second first-round pick after Myles Garrett in the
2017 draft, has developed into one of the best young quarterbacks in the
league. The Browns unwisely swapped the No. 12 pick in that draft for a
first-round choice in 2018 who turned out to be Jabrill Peppers, who was with
the club for one season. If that hadn’t happened, Mayfield would not be the
quarterback of this team. OK, the game. It’s a good thing this one is at home
because the new Browns are winless in five trips to the Texas city. Won’t help
in this one. The Texans prevail with a pair of Johnsons, David and old friend
Duke Jr., making life miserable for the sagging Cleveland run defense. The
Texans will not miss DeAndre Hopkins, Watson’s favorite receiver the last three
seasons, who was shipped to Arizona. The addition of veterans Brandin Cooks and
Randall Cobb should offset the loss. (L)
Week 11, Sunday
Nov. 22 vs. Philadelphia, 1 p.m., FOX – Third straight home
game and looking for their first victory of the month. Won’t get it as the fans
get restless as the Browns slip to 4-6. Too much Carson Wentz (yet another
Browns reject), receivers Alshon Jeffery, DeSean Jackson, Marquise Goodwin and
rookie Jalen Reagor, tight ends Zach Ertz and Dallas Goedert. Wentz will put
the ball up a lot against a Cleveland secondary still experiencing problems. He
averaged 38 throws a game last season. That’s because the Eagles’ run game is
ordinary. The no-name Eagles’ defense is anything but ordinary. It’s coming off
a 43-sack season. Mayfield will be under fire all afternoon from defensive
coordinator Jim Schwartz’s unit as the homestand winds up 0-3 with four of the
next five on the road lurking. (L)
Week 12, Sunday Nov. 29 at Jacksonville,
1 p.m., CBS – For some reason, the Browns have always had
problems with the Jaguars ever since they entered the league as an expansion
team in 1995. The Jags have won 12 of the 16 games between the teams (6-2 in
Cleveland) since the return. This one was originally scheduled to be played in
London, but the pandemic scuttled that. It’s a sign that this year will be
different. Yep, the Browns snap a three-game losing slide with an improbably
easy victory as Mayfield torches a vulnerable Jaguars secondary and Nick Chubb
and Kareem Hunt take turns gouging the Jacksonville run defense. (W)
Week 13, Sunday
Dec. 6 at Tennessee, 1 p.m., CBS – If there was ever a
revenge game this season, this would be the one. Browns fans last season
harbored thoughts of the postseason as the season got underway against the Titans
at home. The pres-season hype all but handed the Browns, coming off a 7-8-1
season, an invite to the playoffs. The Titans grabbed on to a gigantic needle
and thoroughly burst those thoughts to smithereens with a 43-13 victory . . .
and it wasn’t even that close. The undisciplined Browns under rookie head coach
Freddie Kitchens were their own worst enemy, committing 18 penalties for 182
yards. It was an everything-that-can-go-wrong-will kind of game. It won’t be
much different this year down in Nashville, mainly because quarterback Ryan Tannehill,
coming off a career year, is now in charge of the offense. Last year, he
watched from the bench as Marcus Mariota piloted the upset victory. It won’t be
43-13 this time, but it will end the Browns one-game winning streak. So much
for revenge. (L)
Week 14, Monday
Dec. 14 vs. Baltimore, 8:15 p.m., ESPN – The Browns enter
having lost four of their last five games, a season rapidly falling apart
(again) and the AFC’s best team itching to sweep the season series. Every once
in a while, especially when the nation drops in for a peek, strange things
happen in the NFL. Call them “on any given Sunday” moments. Substitute Monday
for Sunday and you get an idea where this is going. The Browns will play as
they did when they hammered the Ravens early last season in Baltimore and come
up with yet another an eye-blinking, where-in-the-world-did-that-come-from
stunner. Everyone contributes on offense, especially a line that keeps Mayfield
clean, and a defense that stifles the league’s best offense all evening. (W)
Week 15, Sunday
Dec. 20 at New York Giants, 1 p.m., CBS – Two straight
weeks in the New York-New Jersey area in what had to be a scheduling screw-up.
The first sees the Browns coming off their huge upset of Baltimore into a game
Odell Beckham Jr. has waited nearly two years to play, getting his first crack
against his old teammates. The Browns’ wide receiver, having a solid season
with 79 receptions, 1,101 yards and eight touchdowns, comes through, adding
another eight grabs, 98 yards and a touchdown to his season totals, but it
isn’t enough. That’s because Saquon Barkley continues to prove he’s the best
running back in the league, shredding the Cleveland defense for more than 200
yards from scrimmage and three touchdowns, one via Daniel Jones’ only scoring
pass of the game. The Giants defense throttles Mayfield & Co. The best the
6-8 Browns can do now is finish at .500. (L)
Week 16, Sunday
Dec. 27 at New York Jets, 1 p.m., CBS – Mayfield and Jets
quarterback Sam Darnold hook up for the second time in three years – Darnold
missed last season’s game with mononucleosis – and this one won’t turn out any
differently than the first two for Mayfield, 2-0 against the Jets after a 23-3
victory in week two last season. That’s the game where Beckham busted an 89-yard
pass and run that opened up fairly tight game in the third quarter. This time,
the Cleveland defense after last week’s debacle suddenly remembers how to play
well when the opposition has the football and shuts down Darnold and the solid
running game featuring Le’Veon Bell and grizzly veteran Frank Gore. The
offense, meanwhile, plays just well enough to inch closer to the .500 mark. (W)
Week 17, Sunday
Jan. 3, 2021 vs. Pittsburgh, 1 p.m., CBS – Remember what
happened the last time the Browns faced a strong division opponent at home? Yep,
I’m talking about the mid-December beatdown of the Ravens in front of a
national television audience. Well, it’s going to happen again as they start
the new calendar year off right by snapping Ben Roethlisberger’s personal
seven-game unbeaten streak against them, reducing his record against them to a
still-ridiculous 24-3-1. How are they going to do it? The same way they knocked
off the Ravens – with smart, mistake-free football, rewarding a coaching staff
determined to set the tone for season two. Mayfield caps his comeback season –
only 11 interceptions after the 21 he threw last season – with touchdown passes
25 and 26 aided by a relentless ground game that made it easier to operate the
offense. (W)
The
8-8 finish will be met with mixed reviews. Those who predicted a better record
will cite underachieving as a reason they were wrong. Those who believed
Stefanski isn’t any better than his predecessor will say, “Told you so.” And
then there are those who fall in between and use a .500 record as a launching
pad toward a more prosperous future. Consider this a launching pad.
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