Tough task for the Browns
Cleveland taking on Pittsburgh without its coach on the sideline
The Cleveland Browns waited nearly two decades to return to the playoffs. To extend their breakthrough season, they’ll have to do it without their unflappable first-year coach in a place where the franchise’s shortcomings are put into stark relief:
Pittsburgh.
Maybe it’s fitting. The Browns (11-5) and Kevin Stefanski have spent the past four months turning Cleveland from a perennial punchline to a legitimate contender. A chance to provide an exclamation point awaits at Heinz Field on Sunday night, where the AFC North champions and longtime nemesis Pittsburgh Steelers (12-4) await.
If only it were that cut and dried. Not in 2020. Or 2021 for that matter. When the Browns run out of the tunnel, Stefanski will be back home in Ohio after testing positive for COVID-19. Special teams coordinator Mike Priefer will be in charge, with offensive coordinator Alex Van Pelt taking over play-calling duties.
“Hopefully there’s not too many times he’s yelling at the TV, ‘ What the heck is going on?!’” Van Pelt said with a laugh.
Stefanski would be in good company. The Browns have been largely exasperating since returning to the NFL in 1999 in general, and chronically overmatched in Pittsburgh in particular. The Steelers are 20-1 against Cleveland at Heinz
Field, including a 36-33 victory in the wild-card round in the 2002 playoffs and a 38-7 beatdown in October in which Stefanski pulled quarterback Baker Mayfield following a miserable
two-interception performance.
No wonder the Steelers, while respectful of the strides Cleveland has made, remain confident despite a rocky 1-4 finish following an 11-0 start.
“I think they’re still the same Browns teams I play every year,” Pittsburgh wide receiver Juju Smith- Schuster said. “I think they’re nameless gray faces.
They have a couple good players on their team, but at the end of the day, I don’t know. The Browns is the Browns. It’s one of those things, AFC North football. They’re a good team. I’m just happy we’re playing them again.”
With good reason. Pittsburgh took Cleveland to the final two minutes last Sunday despite letting Roethlisberger, outside linebacker T.J. Watt and defensive tackle Cam Heyward stay home with nothing more than playoff seeding on the line.
If they can bring that effort again on Sunday night even in a largely empty stadium after officials denied the team’s request to allow a small subset of fans in, they will pick up their first playoff victory in four years. Yet given all of Pittsburgh’s success when the Browns are on
the other side of the line of scrimmage, the 38-year-old Roethlisberger is trying to remind his younger teammates to take nothing for granted.
“It is interesting because is there really a home-field advantage? I don’t know. It’s just a different year altogether,” Roethlisberger said. “We have to go into with the mindset that we need to play our best football and we are going to get their best.”
Van Pelt likened the Browns being without Stefanski to a bunch of teenagers leaving home for the first time.
“Its tough when you lose your leader,” said Van Pelt, who hasn’t called plays since he was Buffalo’s coordinator in 2009. “It’s like being a parent and sending your kid to college. Hopefully, you’ve done enough to get him ready for what’s ahead.”