New York Post

GRIEVELAND

Browns aim to end decades of misery in playoffs, Pittsburgh

- Steve Serby steve.serby@nypost.com

THERE HAVE been too many times in the lives of Browns fans when they must have felt as if they had been stiff-armed by Derrick Henry, or trucked by Jim Brown — for the minority of them who remember his greatness.

And the most recent one came a mere two days after their hated rival, the Steelers, decided to rest Ben Roethlisbe­rger and several other starters for the playoffs, and in doing so opened the door for Baker Mayfield and the Browns to beat them and reach the postseason for the first time since the 2002 season.

One more time, jubilation was fleeting for Browns fans, who were punched in the gut by the news rookie head coach Kevin Stefanski and several starters, including left guard Joel Bitonio, would be sidelined on the COVID-19 list for Sunday night’s wild-card game ... against the hated Steelers. Who won’t rest Big Ben this time.

Mike Priefer will be Cleveland’s head coach. Alex Van Pelt will be the play-caller. The Browns couldn’t practice for most of the week because the virus wouldn’t let them.

It’s another cruel stunt played on Browns fans by the merciless football gods. Don’t they care that Browns fans lost their team for three seasons when former owner Art Modell took it to Baltimore?

Don’t they care that Browns fans have suffered through 30 quarterbac­ks since Tim Couch was the first-overall pick of the 1990 draft?

Don’t they care that Browns fans had to endure the indignity of 0-16 in 2017 — with no Trevor Lawrence there for the drafting?

Don’t they care that while the hated Steelers have won six Super Bowls, Browns fans have never watched any of their heroes hoist the Lombardi Trophy?

Don’t they care that Chuck Noll, who won four Super Bowls, and

Bill Cowher, who won one, played for the Browns? How much can the poor Browns fans take?

There was Browns coach Sam Rutigliano passing up a last-minute field goal from the 12, and Raiders safety Mike Davis intercepti­ng Brian Sipe in the end zone on a play called Red Right 88 at an arctic Cleveland Municipal Stadium on Jan. 4, 1981.

There was “The Drive,” perhaps the cruelest of them all, when John

Elway drove the Broncos 98 yards and broke Cleveland hearts in the AFC Championsh­ip following the 1986 season.

Then, the very next season, there was “The Fumble,” when Earnest Byner was 3 yards from forcing overtime against the Broncos before he lost the ball in the AFC Championsh­ip game.

And, of course, when the Browns last appeared in the playoffs, in 2002, it was the Steelers who bounced them out, when QB Tommy Maddox erased a 17-point deficit in the last 19 minutes for a 36-33 wild-card victory.

“I don’t think anybody in the building thought we weren’t going to win,” Browns quarterbac­k Kelly Holcomb said of that game. “I think everybody thought we were going to go on.”

Holcomb was the quarterbac­k that day because Couch had broken his leg. Of course he had.

The last Browns playoff victory came on Jan. 1, 1995, when Bill Belichick and Vinny Testaverde, in his playoff debut, beat Bill Parcells, Drew Bledsoe and the Patriots, 20-13, in Cleveland.

Now it’s Mayfield, first-overall pick of the 2018 draft, looking to win his first playoff game against Big Ben, looking to win his third Super Bowl.

“We want to win a Super Bowl and bring that to Cleveland,” offensive tackle Jack Conklin said.

First things first. The Browns have lost 17 consecutiv­e games at Heinz Field. Of course.

 ??  ?? FEEL THE PAIN: (From left) The Browns’ 1986 season ended with John Elway’s “The Drive.” The next year, it was “The Fumble” by Earnest Byner. Fans were brokenhear­ted when Art Modell moved the team after the 1995 season.
FEEL THE PAIN: (From left) The Browns’ 1986 season ended with John Elway’s “The Drive.” The next year, it was “The Fumble” by Earnest Byner. Fans were brokenhear­ted when Art Modell moved the team after the 1995 season.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Baker Mayfield
Baker Mayfield

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States