The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Winless Browns are in Ravens’ path to playoffs

- By Tom Withers The Associated Press

CLEVELAND » There’s no easy road to the AFC playoffs. However, the Ravens may be on one.

They’re facing a threeweek pathway to the postseason deprived of much real danger. Don’t tell John Harbaugh that, though.

Baltimore’s coach isn’t buying that his team’s last three regular-season games are gimmes, and he refused to allow his players to feel comfortabl­e as they prepared to play their final road game on Sunday against the lowly Browns (0-13), who are hoping to dodge disgrace as the second 0-16 team in NFL history.

Although Cleveland has come up short 13 times in 13 tries in 2017, Harbaugh insists the Browns can’t be overlooked.

“I feel like they have played well all year,” Harbaugh said. “They have played well enough to win plenty of games this year. All you have to do is watch the tape to understand that. They are very well coached, a very hard playing team with talent. We are going to have our hands full with a very good football team, and that is how we are looking at it.”

The Ravens (7-6) control their postseason destiny, and with a 3-0 finish they’ll return to the playoffs after a two-year absence.

Their schedule appears to be favorable with the game at Cleveland followed by home dates against Indianapol­is and Cincinnati — three teams with a combined 8-31 record.

The Browns are winless. And that’s what makes them perilous.

They are the first team to go 0-13 to start consecutiv­e seasons, and the Browns want to avoid further infamy.

Getting a win in their last home game — that’s what they did last season to escape 0-16 — and spoiling Baltimore’s season would ease the pain of another forgettabl­e year.

“If we are going to go and get our first win, we would love to get it in front of our home crowd,” said Browns rookie quarterbac­k DeShone Kizer, who threw three intercepti­ons in Baltimore’s 24-10 win on Sept. 17.

“Obviously, the end of the season can go one of two ways: It can create momentum going into next year or you can reset after this year and try to squash and put it behind you.

“As a team, we have made a decision that we want to see momentum into next year.”

Rough year

Kizer was forced to leave the Browns’ first matchup against Baltimore with a migraine. It wasn’t his only malady this season.

It’s been a bumpy baptism for the 21-year-old, who enters Sunday’s game leading the league with 17 intercepti­ons. Kizer has been benched and beaten, but not broken. Despite his deficienci­es, coach Hue Jackson believes Kizer can develop into a quality starter.

“There are some things that you continue to even scratch your head about, but I think he is working through it,” Jackson said. “He gets it. He is accountabl­e to it. He knows there are some things he has to fix, and he is trying.”

Clutch Collins

Coming off the finest game of his NFL career, Ravens running back Alex Collins is poised to face the league’s sixth-ranked rushing defense. Collins ran for 120 yards, caught two passes for 46 and scored a touchdown in Pittsburgh. Not bad for a guy who started the season on Baltimore’s practice squad.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States