The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Baker’s baffling Browns teetering on the brink

- By Tom Withers

BEREA, OHIO >> Jarvis Landry jumped up and down on the sideline, flapping his arms while madly urging Browns coach Freddie Kitchens to throw his red challenge flag.

Kitchens finally did. For naught.

Nothing is going Cleveland’s way.

Picked prematurel­y to be a Super Bowl contender, the Browns reached their bye week with a losing record and as perhaps the NFL’s most perplexing team. In the span of four quarters — or even four minutes — they can look brilliant, buffoonish and bewilderin­g.

It’s baffling.

They commit too many penalties, make too many turnovers and do too much griping about the officiatin­g.

Despite their obvious star power and on-paper potential, the Browns (2-4), who wasted a 14-point lead and lost 32-28 on Sunday to the Seattle Seahawks, are simply not playing well enough to win.

During a team meeting Monday, Kitchens made it clear to his players that things must change. Immediatel­y.

“At some point, we have to become a team,” he said, repeating the message he delivered to the Browns. “The difference between a group and a team is significan­t. To be a team, you have to do your job and then you bring it together collective­ly. The better team beat our group yesterday . ...

“All of this talent we have — that has gotten us 2-4. Now, let’s try something different. Let’s try to be a team and see if we can be better moving forward.”

For the third time this season, Cleveland fans made the same solemn walk of shame from FirstEnerg­y Stadium they’ve perfected over the past two decades. The Browns again failed to deliver at home, and a team that began the season with high hopes reached a critical juncture just six games in.

“At 2-4,” Kitchens said, “you are at the crossroads.”

It all began so well Sunday for the Browns, who scored touchdowns on their first three drives before the offense bogged down. Cleveland’s next seven possession­s went: blocked punt, intercepti­on, intercepti­on, halftime, fumble, punt, stopped on downs — at the 1-yard line.

That last drive appeared to end with a TD pass from Baker Mayfield to Landry, who looked as though he extended the ball over the goal line before it was knocked loose. It came during a strange sequence (the Seahawks were called for 12 men on the field) that had officials huddling, coaches complainin­g, TV viewers begging for a definitive camera angle and no one exactly certain what had happened.

It was crazy. Kind of like Cleveland’s season so far.

Landry, who left angrily after the game and without addressing the media, spent more than 20 minutes Monday giving an insightful analysis into where the Browns stand — and want to go.

The four-time Pro Bowler said the Browns’ situation reminds him of something he learned early in his athletic career.

“Talent wins games, teams win championsh­ips,” he said. “It’s not about talent. I’ve played on talented teams and we’ve won nothing, and I’ve played on teams that we were discipline­d, accountabl­e. We had a team full of leaders — my only playoff team. And then the following year pretty much the same team, but we lacked all of those traits that got us to where we were before.”

Right now, the Browns are stuck where they’ve been for years.

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