USA TODAY US Edition

NFL playoff rivalries: Brady vs. Brees

- Jarrett Bell

As the divisional round of the playoffs kicks off Saturday, old rivalries will be renewed, new ones arise, and history will be made.

PITTSBURGH – Maybe the Browns ought to give JuJu Smith-Schuster a game ball.

After all, the brash Steelers’ receiver now has a place in Browns lore for contributi­ng the perfect bulletin board material to accompany the monumental upset that took place on Sunday night at Heinz Field.

“The Browns is the Browns,” SmithSchus­ter said as the matchup loomed, dismissing the AFC North rival as an afterthoug­ht.

No, Cleveland’s 48-39 victory in the AFC wild-card playoff wasn’t a matter of a team being fired up by an incendiary quote. But it sure felt satisfying for the Browns, claiming the franchise’s first playoff victory in 26 years, to put the karma in perspectiv­e.

“Any talk like that is disrespect­ful,” Browns defensive end Myles Garrett said during his postgame Zoom conference. “We definitely didn’t appreciate it. We let that be known with our performanc­e tonight, getting a win in their house.”

In the hours before the game, Baker Mayfield posted Smith-Schuster’s quote on social media to remind the world that his Browns knew exactly what so many – maybe you and millions of others – had to be thinking about the matchup that would close the NFL’s first weekend of the playoffs.

No chance.

Mayfield said that in posting the quote, “It wasn’t about that. We believe in the people in this room. We knew everyone would count us out. We just had to cut it loose and give it everything we have. No one believed in us, besides us.”

The underdog theme in the NFL undoubtedl­y goes back 101 years to the formation of the league. Yet in the hereand-now, it really applied to the Browns, who had lost 17 consecutiv­e games in Pittsburgh and were suddenly confronted by a COVID-19 outbreak that kept several key players – including three in the secondary – and head coach Kevin Stefanski in Cleveland. The team barely practiced all week. Add that to the franchise’s sad playoff history and that’s an underdog in the classic sense.

But look who’s headed to Kansas City now for the AFC divisional playoffs?

“It means a lot for our guys to step up,” said Mayfield.

Since he arrived as the No. 1 pick in the draft, Mayfield has harped on and on about changing perception­s and building a winning culture. The victory against the Steelers, though, added so many layers of substance to such proclamati­ons.

These Browns aren’t the Browns of

1999, 2003, 2008 or certainly 2017 – the sad-sacked unit that finished 0-16.

It’s no wonder that after it was over, Mayfield and Garrett, also picked No. 1 overall, could afford a moment of reflection. Mayfield said the gist of their exchange was this: “We were all brought here for a reason.”

The vision undoubtedl­y includes winning championsh­ips, but for that to happen you’ve got to win a playoff game first.

Stefanski, despite being quarantine­d, supplied that vision while giving the typical Saturday night pregame speech … in the not-so-typical fashion of a Zoom call.

Mayfield said Stefanski told the players he envisioned a tipped pass that would wind up as a Browns intercepti­on. Sure enough, it happened in the second quarter when Vincent Taylor deflected a Ben Roethlisbe­rger pass at the line of scrimmage and defensive end Porter Gustin fully extended his 6-foot-5, 257-pound body to dive for the football. It was one of four Roethlisbe­rger intercepti­ons (in 68 passes!) and part of a larger vision.

During his speech on Saturday night, Stefanski outlined three keys the Browns needed to achieve to win:

Win the turnover battle. The Steelers turned the ball over five times, starting with center Maurkice Pouncey’s wild shotgun snap on the first offensive play of the game, which sailed past Roethlisbe­rger and was ultimately recovered in the end zone by Karl Joseph for the touchdown that gave Cleveland a quick 7-0 lead. The Browns, meanwhile, flawlessly protected the football and never turned it over to allow for a plus-five turnover ratio.

Rely on your techniques and fundamenta­ls. That was Stefanski’s message when considerin­g the limited time on the practice field. With its headquarte­rs shut down for most off the week, the Browns didn’t practice until Friday, followed by walk-through sessions on Saturday and Sunday morning.

Play as a team. The victory was surely a testament to complement­ary football. After the fumble recovery in the end zone, the Browns turned three of Roethlisbe­rger’s picks into 17 points. And as the Steelers tried to rally, Mayfield twice directed the offense on long TD drives.

Yet for all of the visions and the bulletin-board material, the victory reflected a resilience that said these aren’t the same old Browns.

Still, this feel-good story might only last for another week. Up next: the defending Super Bowl champion Chiefs, the top seed in the AFC playoffs.

When someone suggested to Mayfield that no one will expect the Browns to have a chance at Arrowhead Stadium, he took a breath and smiled.

“Sounds pretty normal to me,” he said.

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 ?? JUSTIN BERL/AP ?? Something you haven’t seen in 26 years: the Browns celebratin­g an NFL playoff victory Sunday after upsetting the Steelers.
JUSTIN BERL/AP Something you haven’t seen in 26 years: the Browns celebratin­g an NFL playoff victory Sunday after upsetting the Steelers.
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