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November 2009 | Dawging the Browns
 

Home > Blogs > Dawging the Browns > Archives > 2009 > November

November 2009

Cribbs out of the hospital, seems fine

The only bit of good news to come out of Monday night’s embarrassing 16-0 loss to the Baltimore Ravens appears to be this, as released by the team just now:

“Browns wide receiver Josh Cribbs was taken to the Cleveland Clinic following last night’s game against the Baltimore Ravens for precautionary testing. Those tests were negative and Josh was subsequently released from the hospital early this morning.”

Cribbs was hurt on the last play of the game when the Browns foolishly tried a hook-and-ladder play in hopes of somehow averting a shutout. He was strapped to a backboard and wheeled off as players on both teams prayed.

The whole night was pretty much a disaster, highlighted by ESPN color commentator Ron Jaworski saying this is the worst offense he’s ever seen.

And why in the world was Cribbs, your best player, even on the field for that final snap? Maybe the subject will come up at Eric Mangini’s telephone press conference this afternoon.

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Just another reminder of the futility

Brady Quinn (yawn) is the starting quarterback again for your favorite football team. He has this going for him: The offense can’t get any worse, and he can’t be any worse, statistically, than Derek Anderson.

Much more interesting today was the release of Don Cockroft’s book called “The 1980 Kardiac Kids — Our Untold Stories … A Season of Destiny … A Moment of Despair … A Lifetime of Memories.”

Cockroft was the placekicker on that team and it was his injury that led to quarterback Brian Sipe’s infamous decision to force a pass to Ozzie Newsome in the waning seconds of a playoff loss to Oakland rather than heave it “to the blonde in the first row,” as then-head coach Sam Rutigliano later would say.

Mike Davis intercepted the wobbly aerial, forever securing “Red Right 88” (the shortened name of the play) a place in Cleveland sports lore.

Ultimately, all the Browns won that year was an AFC Central Division title, and the fact that this warrants a book speaks volumes for how frustrating it’s been to be a Cleveland football fan, with rare exception, since about 1972.

Rutigliano is revered in Cleveland and still pops up on local TV and gets off a good one-liner now and then, but 1980, when the Browns went 11-5, was his only playoff season and the team crashed to earth the next season.

I’m sure Cockroft’s book is full of insights and maybe it will sell a few copies, but it’s not like they went to the Super Bowl, let’s remember. They won a lot of close games in miraculous fashion only to lose in the end when Sipe, the league MVP that season, made a bad decision.

Great season. Enjoyed every minute of it, and as I sat through “Red Right 88” in the sub-zero cold Jan. 4, 1981, I truly thought they would win that game. From my perspective of Row X in the lower deck, it was hard to tell right away if Davis had caught the ball. Eventually, there was no doubt and all that remained was the long, numb walk back to my friend Steve’s Gremlin (he had this annoying habit of parking very far away because he was morally opposed to paying for parking).

Some years ago, Pat McManamon of the Akron Beacon-Journal wrote at length about that play, that game.

I don’t know about you, but I don’t need any more reminders.

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Schottenheimer: Don’t call me

Just in case you’re thinking how wonderful it would be if Marty “There’s a gleam, men” Schottenheimer stepped in to fix everything, let it be known he has no interest in getting anywhere near the situation. He said as much today on a Sirius NFL radio show.

Host: “We’re going to have some Cleveland Browns fans call and they are going to want pick your brain about whether or not you’d have interest in that sort of thing yourself simply because of the expertise that you have and all the years in the league and your ties with [the Browns] organization. Any interest whatsoever in possibly going to be a consultant for the Browns?”

Marty: “I don’t even see that kind of a role for me. I’m not familiar enough with what they have in terms of their front office. Let somebody else do that. It’s really a very unusual circumstance and it’s going to take some dramatic measures in my mind to be able to get the thing headed in the right direction.

“The bottom line for them right now is they don’t have a real good football team. They’re not playing even to the level that the talent is expressed and it’s going to be a very, very difficult circumstance. The important thing in my view is very simply this: You cannot lose your football team. And dashing around doing all these things that are on the periphery don’t serve any useful purpose at this point in time. You want to resolve issues like this? Let the thing play out, gather information as you go.

“We recognize the decision for them from the standpoint of a playoff berth is virtually impossible for them to achieve. You need to leave some sense of stability at least through this season because players that are there signed to long term contracts are thinking, ‘What in the world is going on here?’ You worry about the reaction of your players and, believe me, let’s not make any mistake about this: That feeling that a player has about his organization is an integral part of their ability to perform at the highest level.”

Earlier today, The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer reported that former Browns GM Ernie Accorsi also said he hasn’t the slightest bit of interest in attempting to resurrect the franchise.

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Another GM crashes and burns

The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer first reported early Monday evening that first-year GM George Kokinis had been fired and, in fact, escorted from team headquarters.

At about midnight, the team got around to confirming the reports, although the part about Kokinis being ushered from the building was denied.

So in record time, another front-office figure crashes and burns, joining the likes of Dwight Clark, Pete Garcia and Phil Savage since the Browns returned in 1999.

Team owner Randy Lerner has only himself to blame, of course. He hired Eric Mangini as head coach, thinking it was a coup, then had Mangini pick the general manager, who turned out to be his buddy.

It was a curious management model from the start, the coach essentially picking the GM.

In the end, Kokinis wasn’t here long enough for anyone to determine his worth as a personnel man. Lerner apparently was irked that Kokinis stayed in the background and that he rarely said anything for public consumption. This should hardly come as a surprise, however. When you hire an overbearing coach like Mangini, you can’t imagine his hand-picked personnel lackey thinking he belonged anywhere near the spotlight.

So Mangini’s power is being systematically stripped. The woman who was his “assistant” was recently told to vacate the premises and now Kokinis is sent packing. Meanwhile, the shadow of Bernie Kosar looms as the process of carving out some role for the iconic — and bankrupt — former quarterback apparently moves forward.

There’s even some speculation that Ernie Accorsi, who built the Browns into the team that went to three AFC Championship Games in the late 1980s, might emerge from retirement to keep the chair warm until Kosar is up to speed.

What you have is an organization in constant flux, an organization as dysfunctional as any in the NFL, including the Raiders (whose owner at least knows football even if he’s a bit out of touch with reality).

It all goes back to Lerner. Given a chance to hire a strong personality to run the personnel side, he instead opted to hire the coach, who picked his bobo. Lerner should have known this was a dubious model. Why? Because it didn’t work with Butch Davis, who arrived with the similarly inexperienced Garcia in tow.

At least Lerner appears to be on the case. We know he’s in town, anyway, because he has agreed to meet Tuesday with those two buffoons who are threatening to organize a protest at the Monday night game against the Ravens.

One of those guys, by the way, used to dress up as a container of French Fries during the brief heyday of quarterback Charlie Frye. Wonder if he’ll show up in costume today for the meeting with Lerner. That really would be appropriate given the clown act currently in progress.

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