Crennel cools Browns after win
Cleveland coach says 2-3 team needs to keep things in perspective after Monday's win over Giants.
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
BEREA — Fans hugged each other in disbelief. Quarterback Derek Anderson asked to keep the game ball, then tucked it under his arm and headed to the locker room amid delirium rarely seen inside Browns Stadium.
All that was missing from the wild celebration following Cleveland's shocking 35-14 win Monday night, Oct. 13, over the New York Giants was the obligatory bucket dumping.
Head coach Romeo Crennel saved the chilly dousing for Tuesday.
One day after the Browns' stunning upset of the defending Super Bowl champions, Crennel delivered a sobering message so his team, still trying to dig its way out of a 2-3 start, doesn't get carried away by 60 successful minutes.
"We still have a lot of work to do," Crennel said during his news conference. "The season is still a long season, and just because we won one game, it doesn't put us in the playoffs. We're not even .500."
With an imaginative offense and opportunistic defense, Cleveland made the most of its first Monday night appearance since 2003. Playing perhaps their most-complete home game in the expansion era, the Browns dominated the favored Giants, who came in unbeaten, riding an 11-game road winning streak and on the best-teams-in-the-NFL short list.
But beginning with wide receiver Braylon Edwards' 49-yard reception on the game's third play, the Browns controlled one of the NFC East superpowers. And, finally, with 73,000 frenzied fans on hand and millions of skeptics watching on TV, they looked like the team everyone expected them to be coming into the season.
With their season on life support, the Browns pulled through.
"It's the guys I've been telling you about," said quarterback Derek Anderson, who rewarded Crennel's faith and silenced more critics by throwing for 310 yards and two touchdowns without an interception. "I never doubted it — ever. It's the same guys that made plays last year all season."
Cleveland's offense was so efficient that punter Dave Zastudil's only assignment was to hold for place-kicker Phil Dawson on field goals and extra points. It was the first time the Browns have not punted in a game since 1995.
The Browns racked up 454 yards of total offense, nearly 200 yards more than their previous high this season against a team that had been allowing only 236.
Offensive coordinator Rob Chudzinski, who had two weeks to prepare for the Giants, devised a superb game plan that the Browns executed with almost pinpoint precision. He unveiled some new wrinkles, putting the versatile Joshua Cribbs in the shotgun and calling a reverse for reserve running back Jerome Harrison, who went 33 yards to set up a field goal.
Anderson barely got his uniform dirty as his line gave him ample protection while leading Cleveland on five scoring drives in eight possessions.
Next game
Who: Cleveland Browns (2-3) at Washington Redskins (4-2)
When: 4:15 p.m. Sunday
TV: CBS (WHIO Ch. 7)
Radio: WONE-AM (980)


