New York Daily News

Stefanski back with Browns in time for Chiefs

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CLEVELAND — Browns coach Kevin Stefanski doesn’t plan a trip downstairs to his basement any time soon.

“Those walls were closing in on me,” he said.

Stefanski returned to the team’s facility Thursday, 10 days after the first-year coach tested positive for COVID-19 and he was forced to miss Cleveland’s playoff win over the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday.

Instead of being on the sideline at Heinz Field, Stefanski was 135 miles away in his Ohio home, where he nervously paced in front of his TV as the Browns built an early 28-0 lead and held for a 4837 victory — Cleveland’s first in the postseason in 26 years.

Stefanski will make his playoff debut on the sideline this week when the Browns play the defending Super Bowl champion Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday.

“It’s great. He deserves to be back,” said special teams coordinato­r Mike Priefer, who filled in as acting coach against the Steelers. “Anytime your leader comes back to the building and he’s going to lead us into battle this weekend, it’s a great thing for our football team.”

There’s plenty of work to be done, but Stefanski, who only had mild symptoms of the virus, was taking a moment to savor the company of his team and staff. He missed everything.

“On a profession­al level, just being around the coaches and players and then isolating from my family is no fun,” he said with a smile. “I should mention that.”

Stefanski is in his first season with the Browns after spending 13 years as an assistant in Minnesota. The 38-year-old’s steadiness has been credited in the team maneuverin­g around many issues tied to the pandemic as well as injuries.

“He never panicked at any point along our journey of this season,” linebacker B.J. Goodson said. “He never panicked. He stayed the course, and we are here.”

Until Stefanski arrived, Cleveland hadn’t been in the postseason since the 2002 season.

The Browns are slowly getting healthier.

On Wednesday, top cornerback Denzel Ward and defensive back Kevin Johnson were activated from COVID-19 list and are expected to play against the Chiefs and their potent passing attack.

Wide receiver KhaDarel Hodge was activated Thursday after missing three games.

However, the team still does not have Pro Bowl left guard Joel Bitonio, who has been out since testing positive Jan. 5 along with Stefanski and several assistants.

“Getting Joel back, obviously, would be big, and hopefully that’ll be the case,” offensive coordinato­r Alex Van Pelt said. “We’ll see here later in the week. Joel’s a huge part of our success offensivel­y on that left side and to plug him back in there would be huge for us.”

And while Stefanski was looking forward to getting outside on the practice field, at some point he’s going to have to address something

else.

While he was away, Browns backup quarterbac­k Case Keenum hid something in his office. “He asked if I smelled it yet,” Stefanski said. “But I don’t because I’ve lost my sense of smell.”

GOFF TO START

Jared Goff and Sean McVay say they had a healthy, productive disagreeme­nt last week about Goff’s readiness to return from thumb surgery.

They’re in complete accord this week, however: Goff is the best choice to lead the Los Angeles Rams in the playoffs.

Goff will start the Rams’ postseason game at Green Bay on Saturday, while John Wolford will be inactive one week after incurring a neck injury, McVay announced Thursday.

The Rams (11-6) are headed to Lambeau Field to face the top-seeded Packers (13-3) behind Goff, who has started 73 of Los Angeles’ last 76 games since he made his debut as a rookie in late 2016. He also came off the bench last week to lead the Rams to a 3020 playoff victory in Seattle after Wolford left early with a stinger.

After Goff had surgery on his broken right thumb Dec. 28, Wolford got the Rams’ last two starts — even though Goff thought he was ready to play last week. But with Wolford still recovering this week, the decision essentiall­y was taken out of McVay’s hands, and Goff will return to the starting lineup in the Wisconsin cold against Green Bay’s tough defense.

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