CLEVELAND BROWNS (1-5)
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GAME #6 |
PITTSBURGH STEELERS (4-1) |
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VS. |
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| 10 |
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28 |
Ugh, that was rough. While you can make a case that the Browns were "in the game," the team's constant inability to reach Ben Roethlisberger before he delivered the football and some questionable calls by the officials foreshadowed the fact that Cleveland wasn't going to win the game.
It's hard to explain my emotion after this defeat. My colleague, Matt Wood (better known as Bernie19Kosar), was optimistic following the game after a gloomy sports weekend, even going as far as saying, "I know we lost, but Sunday's game made my weekend. In fact, this was better than the win over Cincy." Those statements were mostly in reference to the performance of our potential future quarterback (Colt McCoy) versus getting excited over a veteran backup's performance (Seneca Wallace).
I do take a lot of positives out of this game, but it's still a punch in the gut any time we lose to Pittsburgh, or when you have to accept the fact that playoff aspirations for a 1-5 team are out of the question. Let's get to the review of the game, starting with the goats and followed by the game ball...

Disclaimer: Since this is being posted Tuesday night, I realize many of these topics have already been discussed to death over the past couple of days. There's no need to restart those same discussions, but I couldn't do a game review and ignore those points.
WEEK 6 - CLEVELAND BROWNS VS. PITTSBURGH STEELERS (COMPLETE GAME REVIEW)
Goats of the Game:
- Eric Wright: Chalk up two more touchdowns in which Wright was burned on. He wasn't the only member of our secondary victimized, but the one I am particularly steamed about is the one where he had a chance to tackle Hines Ward shy of the end zone, but seemed to be going after the football instead. Wright claims he was beat and felt the only way to stop the touchdown was to break up the pass, but I don't buy it.
- The Officials: First off, let me make one thing clear: I don't blame the officials for the Browns losing to the Steelers. With that said, when James Harrison made helmet-to-helmet contact to Mohamed Massaquoi, I immediately thought of it as being a worse hit than the one T.J. Ward put on Jordan Shipley a few weeks ago. Whether or not the hit is "justified" is beside the point -- per the rule book, the play is a guaranteed 15-yard penalty. To my surprise, as Massaquoi is taken off the field, no flag was thrown.
As a fan, seeing such disparity after Ward was ridiculed so much for his hit really detracted from me being able to fully enjoy the game. Is Harrison above everyone else that even the officials don't subject him to the rules? He seemed to think so following the game, as he along with Hines Ward bragged about the hit. The hits didn't initially get national attention, but the league and others started paying attention to it toward the end of Sunday. UPDATE: I started writing this part Tuesday morning, and have since seen the report that Harrison was fined $75,000. I'm glad the league at least took notice.
Awarding the Game Ball:
- Evan Moore: In my opinion, nothing is more important to a young quarterback than to have a receiver you can count on to go up and make a bunch of big-time catches. For as little time he sees on the field, Moore continues to shield off smaller defenders and make plays down the field. He finished the game against Pittsburgh with 4 catches for 84 yards, and he was in position to make a touchdown catch (near garbage time) before a defender jumped on his back (still no flag). The confidence is definitely there between McCoy and Moore.
- Reggie Hodges: I'll discuss him below.
General Thoughts:
- McCoy's First Game: Like most others, I came away very impressed with how Colt McCoy handled himself in his first career game, against the Steelers' defense no less. He didn't look the least bit scared out there, which is a positive from the get go. He seemed to develop confidence as the game went on too, as he showed signs of recognizing when the pressure would get to him.
- Similar to Wallace: I think what we saw with McCoy was an offense that was quite similar to the one we saw under Seneca Wallace. McCoy showed off his mobility by running for a couple of yards on scrambles (4 runs for 22 yards). There were other times in which he eluded defenders, rolled out, and fired a strike down the field. I'm not talking about "lucky" type of plays either -- McCoy showed a promising sense of confidence. Given how well McCoy was doing, the offense should have come away with more points than just the ten they got (seven of which were near garbage time).
- The Mistakes: Overall, McCoy was accurate, and I'm glad Brian Daboll didn't approach this game with a mindset of, "we'll keep everything safe for McCoy." Not including a couple of times he ran into sacks early on, the first "mistake" for the rookie came on a throw over the middle intended for Ben Watson. While the throw was on the money, the area was very crowded and certainly prone to being a pick considering Watson had to dive for the ball. His second interception was behind the intended receiver later in the game, and he also had one other throw that was nearly picked by LaMar Woodley after he dropped back in coverage.
Overall, McCoy did a very good job making the right reads on his completions. Even on his mistakes, these are small things that he can definitely adjust to with a little more experience.
- QB Moving Forward?: It sounds like McCoy will start again this week by default, while Jake Delhomme and Seneca Wallace heal. The real decision will come after the bye week, when all three quarterbacks might be healthy. If McCoy looks promising against the Saints again, it's hard to argue for him not to start moving forward versus one of the veterans. Given how well Wallace played before his injury though, I wouldn't be opposed to him being back in the lineup. It's unfortunate what happened to Delhomme (in terms of injury), but I really think that putting him in will piss off the fanbase. Plus, any confidence he built during training camp has probably gone back to square one.
- The Competitive Game: So, how close were the Browns in terms of competitiveness this week? Once again, it almost felt like one player, coupled with the absence of another in an unfortunate circumstance, prevented Cleveland from having a chance down to the final seconds. Late in the third quarter, the Browns were still only down 7-3. Then came Eric Wright's god-awful tackle on Ward; if he stops him like most cornerbacks would, it's only a 10-3 game. Then came the muffed punt by Chansi Stuckey mid-way through the fourth. Both of those plays resulted in this being a "28-10" game versus a "13-10" type of finish.
- What to Do: I have no clue what to do with Eric Wright. In his first several years here, I was so high on him and his abilities to be a No. 1 cornerback. This year, he has been a liability way too often for comfort. I don't see the Browns keeping him next season, so what should they do? Mike Adams can play cornerback probably just as well as Wright is at this point.
- Ryan Needs to Stop: I cringe when I see the all-out blitz from the Browns for three reasons.
a.) We keep giving up long touchdowns when it is called.
b.) We rarely even reach the quarterback to punish him.
c.) As a viewer at home, even I can tell when the Browns are all-out blitzing. There is no element of surprise. Opposing quarterbacks are just chucking it deep without any hesitation to the decision, and our defensive backs haven't shown to be good enough to make a play on the football.
I'm definitely compelled by the thought of bringing the house on defense, but Rob Ryan has to go with the odds: with the personnel we have, it just isn't working.
- Worth a Challenge: Given how unclear the officials are with calls these days, it probably would've been worth it to challenge Mike Wallace's first touchdown grab. Upon catching it, he immediately lost control (with two feet in), briefly gained control (with two feet in), but then suddenly bobbled it again (just as one of his feet touched the out of bounds line). I probably would've ruled it a catch still, but I could have seen it go the other way.
- Stuckey's Role Solidified: Isn't it weird that you can have Brian Robiskie be virtually absent as a starting receiver, but yet Chansi Stuckey continues to thrive in his role as a slot receiver? Stuckey has lived up to my expectations this year as a "role" player, but he might be forced into the starting lineup this week against New Orleans due to injuries at the position. Maybe we'll even see the debut of Carlton Mitchell.
- Hodges' Fantastic Day: As each week goes by, Reggie Hodges continues to impress. If he keeps punting the ball as well as he's been, how can you just toss him aside for Dave Zastudil next season? Hodges punted the ball five times against the Steelers, and four of those punts were "inside the 20." That statistic doesn't tell the whole story though -- his punts were somehow landing right at the one-yard, and bounding backward instead of into the end zone.
- Defense Doesn't Capitalize: Despite Hodges' success at punting the ball, the defense struggled to capitalize on the golden opportunities to frazzle the potentially rusty Roethlisberger. Look at some of the starting field positions Hodges gave Pittsburgh, and what they ended up doing with the football:
-2 yard line: First play is a 25 yard run by Mendenhall; Steelers eventually punt, forcing Cleveland to start at their own 16. That's a failure for the defense.
-6 yard line: This came right before halftime with very little time left. We forced a punt since Pittsburgh didn't care to rush down the field via the passing game, but without Cribbs back there and the clock having run out, this one can be "tossed out" of consideration when evaluating the defense.
-4 yard line: First play is a 50 yard bomb from Roethlisberger to Wallace. Second play is a 36-yarder to Heath Miller. A few plays later, Ward scored his touchdown.
-8 yard line: The Steelers moved the ball well enough to eventually punt the ball into our end zone for a touchback. Once again, our offense didn't benefit from any big stop defensively.
Have you ever seen a defense not even able to capitalize once with so many opportunities? These were the perfect situations the Browns needed to give their offense great starting field position, making it all-the-more frustrating that Pittsburgh just kept moving the chains with ease.
- Getting Pressure: Give credit to the Steelers' offensive line I guess, because even with them suffering injuries at the guard position, and despite the many defenders Cleveland would blitz at times, it wasn't enough to bring Ben Roethlisberger down. The team sacked the big man eight times in their last meeting, but couldn't do it once in Pittsburgh this past Sunday. For the game, they only had two quarterback hits -- one from Scott Fujita and one from Shaun Rogers. When you compare that to the Steelers, who had five sacks and nine quarterback hits on Colt McCoy, you can tell which team has the dominant defense.
- Haden & Ward: Overall, it wasn't a terrible first game for the rookie defensive backs in their debut against Pittsburgh. T.J. Ward didn't have any punishing hits, but he made several nice tackles. I believe he was responsible for covering Wallace on Roethlisberger's 50-yard pass from his own end zone though. Joe Haden was in the right place at the right time on an errant throw on the Steelers' first drive. I thought he was going to take it back the distance with all of the nifty moves he made across the field before finally being taken down.
- Staying Competitive: It's difficult for me to pinpoint specific players on the offensive and defensive lines and give them credit for the way they played, so I'll just say this: I think both units held their own and showed enough toughness to keep the team in the game. Joe Thomas' man wasn't heard from, so he's already back on track.
- Special Teams Tackles: There were five special teams tackles recorded against Pittsburgh -- two from Blake Costanzo, and one each from T.J. Ward, Jason Trusnik, and Chansi Stuckey. The Browns' coverage was again superb; on two kick returns, Pittsburgh averaged 19 yards a pop.
- Re-Punt the Ball: I was a little confused by Eric Mangini's decision to have the Steelers punt the ball three times in a row. After the first punt, Cleveland could've had the ball at the eight. After the second punt, Cleveland could've had the ball at the eleven. After the third punt, Stuckey muffed it for the turnover. In any of those two cases, Stuckey is either going to have to fair catch the ball -- something he already looked scared to death doing -- or let it go into the end zone (perhaps with the Steelers stopping it even closer to the goal line).
There wasn't any chance for their to be a return, and we really weren't going all out to block the kick. If the reliable Joshua Cribbs was back there, I could understand having faith in his ability to calmly fair catch 50 punts in a row. Not Stuckey though.
- Brownies: RB Peyton Hillis leaped over Troy Polamalu on a catch and run in the flat...Mike Bell had two uneventful carries in his debut with the Browns...James Davis was active but didn't receive a carry...Ben Watson led the team again in receptions and caught the team's only touchdown...the tackling took a step back this week, and I was wrong to assume that Pittsburgh would abandoned Mendenhall to start the game...Cleveland gave up their first rushing touchdown of the season, but kept Mendenhall to under 100 yards (a 3.1 YPC average).
Next up, the Browns take on the New Orleans Saints. Drew Brees and company don't like to go deep, so our secondary should be able to do a little better this week, right?
I’d look uncomfortable too is Big Ben was that close to my face.
Brownie's Year - October 19, 2010
I feel like we could get some great captions for that. Brainstorm people.
emily522 - October 19, 2010
“Hey, are these Altoids working?”
SpecialBrownie - October 19, 2010
“you got a purdy mouth”
da36chamberz - October 19, 2010
Haha, I thought the same thing when I first saw that picture.
Buckeye Brad - October 20, 2010
“Hey Colt, it’s a good thing you aren’t a college girl.”
shep615 - October 20, 2010
“is your sister single?”
DontCallMeJoey - October 20, 2010
“Ha! Not that it matters! Am I right?!”
Simmsinns - October 20, 2010
Win.
emily522 - October 20, 2010
Big Ben says “Durr…Why you marry wife for? You could big swinger like Ben! Durr…”
Brownie's Year - October 20, 2010
Crude, but I like it.
Simmsinns - October 20, 2010
hey if you’re ever in georgia i know this bar we can hang out at…….
sleepy042 - October 20, 2010
I just saw your comment, beat me to it while I was writing mine.
Kimble_79 - October 20, 2010
Ben: “Hey, so uh, if your gonna be around tonight I can take you to this club just outside of town…”
or
Colt: Please don’t hug me, please don’t hug me
Kimble_79 - October 20, 2010
notice Colt kept his helmet on.
notthatnoise - October 20, 2010
Nice summary. Almost my exact sentiments on this loss.
Brownsyup - October 19, 2010
I think Robiskie’s been the most disappointing player on this team this season.
emily522 - October 19, 2010
I would have to give that award to Eric Wright.
woodsmeister - October 19, 2010
Abe Elam?
SpecialBrownie - October 19, 2010
I think its a tie between all three of them.
Kimble_79 - October 20, 2010
Actually, comparing my expectations to output, it might be Rogers.
Ryan Kelsey - October 20, 2010
Rogers and Wright.
Roger Dorn - October 20, 2010
Is he healthy yet? What was the deal with his injury? He certainly hasn’t played like I expect him to.
rufio - October 20, 2010
Good question. I expected him to be healthy, and we haven’t heard anything. Is he on the official injury reports?
Ryan Kelsey - October 20, 2010
i feel like he’s listed as “questionable” or “probable” each week, which doesn’t help much
DontCallMeJoey - October 20, 2010
and he’s sat out of practice several of the past few week.
DontCallMeJoey - October 20, 2010
If I remember correctly, I don’t think he has practiced all season.
Bernie19Kosar - October 21, 2010
Here’s my reasoning: Robiskie was virtually nothing on the ‘09 team. Mangini and Delhomme were raving about him all throughout the offseason and training camp. Maybe I was in the minority, but I thought he’d step up in a Stuckey like role or maybe a solid #2. Hasn’t done anything still.
Wright’s been disappointing, but it’s not like he hadn’t been contributing previously and was expected to be a lot more productive.
emily522 - October 19, 2010
MoMass and Robo are playing wrong positions, we really can’t blame them as of now for the lackluster play. They don’t have the skill sets for their positions.
SpecialBrownie - October 19, 2010
Interesting. Where is it Robo should be playing? I haven’t heard this before.
Brownsyup - October 19, 2010
MoMass is a #1 and Robo is at #2. Ideally, they should both be pushed down one more slot.
MoMass is an ideal #2 and Robo is an ideal #3 slot. But the problem is, is that Stuckey is starting to run away with that spot, so when we do bring in a true #1, Robo will be left without a spot.
SpecialBrownie - October 19, 2010
which i think underscores the fact that robo sucks and that he’s one of the most disappointing browns of the season, right?
i vote wright .. primarily b/c lots of us expected him to continue to progress toward a number 1-ish CB, and after 6 games he should be headed toward the “cut” pile.
DontCallMeJoey - October 20, 2010
MoMass should be a 2 and Robo shouldn’t be on the field.
Roger Dorn - October 20, 2010
my extreme bias won’t let me admit that second part.
notthatnoise - October 20, 2010
Hell no.
SpecialBrownie - October 20, 2010
Exactly. There’s really no defending Robiskie.
Western Reserve - October 20, 2010
don’t make me do it!
notthatnoise - October 20, 2010
I’d like to see it.
Roger Dorn - October 20, 2010
I almost feel obligated, but my heart wouldn’t be in it.
notthatnoise - October 20, 2010
You may do it for Dorn’s sake if you wish, but I’d think it would mostly be an exercise in futility….er, in the theoretical.
Western Reserve - October 20, 2010
Robo’s position has now been identified.
Kimble_79 - October 20, 2010
The thing that is bad about Robiskie is that he was our second overall pick and the 36th pick overall. That is a high pick. Players that were picked after were:
Alphonso Smith DB – CB for Lions. Started most games this year. Has 21 Tackles and 3 Ints in 2010.
Rey Maualuga LB – Starter for the Bengals. Has 27 tackles and a sack in 2010.
Eben Britton T – Starting OT for the Jags.
Ron Brace DT – A #2 DT on the Pats. Has started 2 games this year. Has 7 tackles.
Darius Butler DB – A #2 CB on the Pats. Has started 2 games this year. Has 14 tackles.
Jairus Byrd DB – Starting FS for Buffalo. Has 24 tackles.
Everette Brown DE – A #2 DE for the Panthers. Has started 2 games this year. Has 11 tackles and an Int.
This is more what you should see with a decently high pick in the second round… not a guy that is hardly even activated for most games.
Brownsyup - October 19, 2010
honestly, some of those names are not good examples of comparison.
Smith was traded, everette Brown and Ron Brace’s impacts are minimal.
I dunno why you say he is hardly activated for most games. maybe you are referring to last season, but even then he was active for 11 games (but was unlucky to play the most right around the time we stopped passing). He has played 4 of 6 games this year and has only missed time due to injury (which you really can’t blame him for being ‘active’ there). Surprisingly, he does have at least one catch in every game he’s been active too.
bross09 - October 20, 2010
Darius Butler has been just horrible this year. The only guy on that list I regret missing out on is Jairus Byrd. The whole 2009 draft was awful.
Roger Dorn - October 20, 2010
But are players on that list actually productive players, even if modestly so? If the answer is yes, well…
Western Reserve - October 20, 2010
Not really enough where we have a solution. I don’t care if we have player A who does absolutely nothing, and they have player B who sucks but gets some playing time.
Roger Dorn - October 20, 2010
I guess the question is this: Was the 2009 draft class so horrible that Robiskie really was the best of the worst? Or did we just swing and miss?
Western Reserve - October 20, 2010
Players taken after Robo but before MoMass, I’d be upset on missing out on: Jairus Byrd
Players after Robo and MoMass: Lesean McCoy, William Moore, Sebastian Vollmer, Shonn Greene, Mike Wallace
Good God this draft is terrible reading over it. Our mistake was not trading our talent for 2010 picks.
Roger Dorn - October 20, 2010
maybe a bit of both. I still think at this point, he was a miss, but there weren’t a lot of hits to be made.
bross09 - October 20, 2010
I don’t think that helped your case very much. Robo wasn’t active for games last year, so were some of those games.
Ryan Kelsey - October 20, 2010
At least Wright sees the field.
Western Reserve - October 20, 2010
He has a great view of the empty space between him and the back of the wide receiver he’s supposed to cover. Every week.
woodsmeister - October 20, 2010
Oh, I know. But what does Robiskie have a great view of? Every week.
Western Reserve - October 20, 2010
He sees the field, too… from the bench.
emily522 - October 20, 2010
This made me laugh.
North Coast Flea - October 20, 2010
I second that. Robiskie didn’t do anything last year so it’s not a big surprise that he’s absent this year. Wright’s making B-Mac look like a decent corner right now. (Not that I want him back.)
dawgtribe - October 20, 2010
Nice write up.
Some thoughts:
- I would like to see Carlton Mitchell get some playing time next week
- I hope Cribbs can play
- Haden needs to start over Wright
- I hope Colt continues to start. I wouldn’t be opposed to Seneca starting after the bye though, and I get scared every time Delhomme throws a pass
da36chamberz - October 19, 2010
I agree about Mitchell but I’m still a bit leery about the number of open drops he had in the pre-season.
Monsters of the Midway - October 20, 2010
I look at it this way, unless he turns the ball over he can’t be much worse than Robo.
dawgtribe - October 20, 2010
I like that view point.
Monsters of the Midway - October 20, 2010
Wrong. Mitchell could be much worse. Given the choice between a guy who hits his marks and makes the right reads, but can’t seem to get open and a guy who runs the wrong routes and makes the wrong reads, I’ll take the first guy every time.
That being said, I’d really like to get a look at Mitchell this week. I just hope he’s improved dramatically since the preseason. I don’t want McCoy throwing pick-sixes because Mitchell is lost.
golanbatrac - October 20, 2010
It could be devastating for our (semblance of an) offense. If we throw on 1st or 2nd and Robi isn’t open, we check down and have a shot at gaining 5 yards.
If we throw on 1st or 2nd to an open Mitchell who then drops the ball, we are likely looking at 3rd and long, which is not where our offense wants to be.
We would need to get some big rewards (deep completions) to offset that risk of gaining 0 yards.
rufio - October 20, 2010
Have him run a 9 route every down.
At least someone has to go with him. Open some space underneath.
Bernie19Kosar - October 20, 2010
I am fine with this.
rufio - October 20, 2010
I don’t think we have a choice other than to play Mitchell.
notthatnoise - October 20, 2010
i hate to go negative … but can i focus a little bit on the point chris raises about ward getting burned out of the pitts endzone?
is it just me, or does his pass coverage generally suck still? i’m not down on the guy or anything — i love what he’s brought so far as a rookie db — but it doesn’t feel like he has much of a clue in pass defense. maybe that just points out that elam sucks and needs to be replaced w/ a real FS.
DontCallMeJoey - October 20, 2010
The kid wants to hit. Being a FS hurts him but Abe Elam is screwing with his true potential.
SpecialBrownie - October 20, 2010
Agreed. He looks like a rookie in coverage and has gotten exposed by the better QBs that we’ve played.
Ryan Kelsey - October 20, 2010
Ward was under the impression that the blitz would get there.
The steelers had a double-move route for Wallace. Ward jumped the first move, thinking that this would time up perfectly with the blitz. It should have. The blitz never got there, Wallace/Ben had time for the second move and we were smoked.
I see this as a mistake Ward made because he knew enough about what we were trying to do but he didn’t have it ingrained enough that he could react naturally, eye the QB, and notice that the blitz wasn’t getting there and the ball wasn’t out. He’ll get there.
rufio - October 20, 2010
Great analysis.
dawgtribe - October 20, 2010
how are you sure he’ll get there?
The Licensed Pessimist - October 20, 2010
How is anyone sure of anything?
Roger Dorn - October 20, 2010
How about “he can improve on this and it would frankly be surprising if he didn’t”?
rufio - October 20, 2010
I remember a few times that Ryan only rushed 3 and we still got scorched through the air.
At this point I think Ryan is going to continue rolling the dice and trying to make the QB make quick decisions, hoping he will make a few terrible ones every game.
The question isn’t if the blitz is coming, it is where it is coming from and where the ball should go.
I know I criticized him for not mixing it up enough and trying to disrupt the internal clock of the QB, but he’s tried a few times and we don’t have the talent up front to get there with 3 or 4. I see this as a talent problem in the front 7, and I think a lot of DCs would have to choose between this and Romeo’s 3 man rush.
I would still like to see us vary the amount we send more often, and I would like to see us show blitz but drop out of it more often. I think we just might not have the talent to do a lot of this yet.
rufio - October 20, 2010
In your opinion if the Browns could upgrade one spot in the front 7, which one would have the greatest impact?
Monsters of the Midway - October 20, 2010
the OLB spot opposite of roth….gimme a faster roth..
sleepy042 - October 20, 2010
If we could get DeMarcus Ware, I think that’d do it.
rufio - October 20, 2010
I told you that Colt McCoy, was the real deal,and he’s only going to get better.I think we found our quarterback.
What, do you think of this idea?Put Evan Moore at wide receiver,I know he’s not fast enough, however,you don’t have to be that fast to run a good route,get open,and he’s got great hands,he catches almost everything,true, he,s not deep threat,but, he would once in awhile(we don’t have any deep threats, anyway). what have we got to lose.
dawginhouston - October 20, 2010
They do occasionally line Moore up as both in the slot as a WR and out wide as a WR. I would like to see us do more of this.
rufio - October 20, 2010
he seems like our most under-utilized offensive weapon. I don’t care if he can block or not, neither could K2.
notthatnoise - October 20, 2010
It also presents a matchup problem in the same way. If you put a LB out there to cover him, you might have to play with less than ideal numbers in the box and we can run. Or Moore can just get open on the LB.
If you put a safety out there, you tip a bit of the coverage.
If you put a corner on Moore, I hope he can block the guy so we can run the ball.
rufio - October 20, 2010
Keep working Colt McCoy, he´s quite adept at making things happen. But make sure he´s not glued into the pocket, if he can roll out with that ball cocked, he´s much more dangerous. But mainly for God´s sake stay healthy, evade those sacks, don´t take any hits.
Then if we could see combinations involving Peyton Hillis, that is in two back sets? As a fullback with James Davis and then as a power runner behind Lawrence Vickers, those types of guys need to be immersed in the game all day. Same thing, minimize the injury risk, he got hurt that way in Denver. They´re gunning for him, quick passes to the outside, or screens fine, but cut the fancy stuff.
Yeah, I think Evan Moore can continue to succeed especially in combinations with the other tight-ends.
Carlton Mitchell looked very exciting in his college highlight reel. I think he has a chance to do what Brandon Marshall does, f.e.
Robiskie needs to specialize.
Mohammed Massaquoi needs to grow into the steady eddie wideout mold, can he be coached up some more?
Too bad about Eric Wright. I always hoped he could become our Ryan Clark, doesn´t look like it though, huh? I´ve mentioned it before, the spot that is up for grabs I think, is the free safety slot, Abe Elam should have the strong safety slot nailed down. So it´s between Ward, Haden and Wright. Personally, despite Ward´s knack for harsh hits, I think Haden should take it.
Lets reemphasize that Shaun Rogers is the best nose guard in the NFL, he should make the Pro Bowl, no matter how bad we do.
mooncamping - October 20, 2010
At this point, I’m actually partial to siding with Moony about moving Wright.
BrownDawg1409 - October 20, 2010
Actually, we love to go deep even if it is only to get the DB off the under receiver. The reason our offense struggled in the first 5 games is because there was no deep ball for Brees. In the Tampa game however, Brees found the deep ball again and it is why we were able to go back to our 2009 ways.
Jon Banks - October 20, 2010
He was being sarcastic. The NFL knows you guys love to go deep, that’s why we are thinking our secondary will get torched by you guys.
Kimble_79 - October 20, 2010
--------------^^^^^^^^^^---------
Joke over my head.
Jon Banks - October 20, 2010
Ha! I wouldn’t expect you to have gotten it without being around here for a while.
Kimble_79 - October 20, 2010
Not really. In fact, I predicted that Stuckey would come away with at least 30 catches this season (what’s the count on that btw? I can’t find a site with a current number.)
I know it’s just a game, but whenever I played Madden I always had an easier time passing to the slot reciever or the tight end than my starting wide outs. The way I played Madden was a lot like I figured the Browns would play offense this year, ergo how I made my prediction.
BrownDawg1409 - October 20, 2010
19 receptions so far, on pace for 51.
Also: Welker/Moss. Passing to the slot is often much easier.
rufio - October 20, 2010
I’m screwed.
Bernie19Kosar - October 20, 2010
what was the deal again? you had to change your avatar?
also, TRSS never wrote his fan post.
notthatnoise - October 20, 2010
Haha, Stuckey is our best wideout this year.
Roger Dorn - October 20, 2010
If this means that Colt McCoy really grows as a young QB this season, I will rock whatever avatar he wants.
Totally worth it.
Bernie19Kosar - October 21, 2010
yeah, I conveyed my thought wrong. I meant to infer that I have a suspicion that stuckey is seeing more snaps than robo. Hard to tell if robo is even out there!
Chris Pokorny - October 20, 2010 via mobile
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