The Columbus Dispatch

Browns driving to end 25- game road skid

- By Tom Withers

CLEVELAND — For more than three years, the Browns have only tripped on the road.

Cleveland hasn’t won an away game since Oct. 11, 2015, a losing streak that has reached 25 straight — just one shy of the NFL record for road futility held by the Detroit Lions (2007 to ’10).

As the Browns prepared for Sunday’s game in Cincinnati against the Bengals (5-5), and a clumsy reunion with fired former coach Hue Jackson, interim coach Gregg Williams delivered a specific message to his players about the losing streak.

"Don’t hide from it," Williams said. "Be aware of it."

It’s impossible to miss. The Browns (3-6-1) have dropped all four road games so far this season, but two came in overtime and another could have gone to OT.

In Week 2, the Browns lost 21-18 at New Orleans, a defeat that still stings but looks more impressive Saints defensive back Marcus Williams intercepts a pass intended for Browns tight end David Njoku during a game in New Orleans on Sept. 16. The Browns lost that game and are 0-4 on the road this season.

now given how well the Saints are playing. Despite perfect indoor conditions, Cleveland’s Zane Gonzalez missed four kicks that day, including a 52-yard field goal at the end of regulation that would have forced OT. The Browns cut him the following day.

Two weeks later, the Browns fell 45-42 in OT at Oakland, which benefited from two questionab­le calls

going the Raiders’ way in the second half. And on Oct. 21, Cleveland lost 26-23 at Tampa Bay, losing on a 59-yard field goal late in overtime.

Those close calls have the Browns convinced their road woes will soon hit a dead end.

Safety Damarious Randall believes it will happen Sunday. Randall spiced up this week’s matchup by essentiall­y guaranteei­ng a Cleveland win Friday when he was asked about facing Bengals star receiver A.J. Green, who is questionab­le with a toe injury.

"If they don’t have A.J., they’re getting their (butts) beat," Randall said. "I hope he plays, to make the game a little bit more interestin­g."

The battle of Ohio is almost always interestin­g, and the Browns go into it with some momentum following their best all-around performanc­e in a win over Atlanta on Nov. 11 and a bye week.

The Browns are healthy and hungry. They’re certainly starved for a road win.

Josh McCown was Cleveland’s quarterbac­k for that long-ago road win in 2015, a 33-30 OT shootout in Baltimore. And if the Browns have designs on becoming a legitimate playoff contender, they need to win anywhere, at any time.

"It would be big," left guard Joel Bitonio said. "You’ve got to win on the road at some point to be a good team in this league, and we’re trying to improve, every week, at that. But if we can go out there and win a road battle, it’s been stressed we haven’t won a road game in a long time, it’d be great for us. It’d be another step in the right direction."

Rookie quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield has the Browns and their fans feeling the worst is over. Mayfield, who threw three TD passes against the Falcons, hasn’t experience­d a road win in the NFL, but he orchestrat­ed plenty at Oklahoma.

But Mayfield, who snapped Cleveland’s 19-game winless streak in his pro debut, said going into New Orleans or Pittsburgh or Cincinnati to play is very different than visiting a campus in Stillwater or Waco.

"It is not the same as college rivalries, so I think it is very easy in college to kind of come together," he said. "You have every reason to do that. Now, it is much more profession­al, so you have to find ways to bring everybody together to have that mentality that your back is against the wall and that it is just you on the road, and you have to find a way to win."

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