Saturday, March 20, 2010

Vintage Browns: The Kardiac Kids Chess game

Here is yet another example of how the Kardiac Kids dominated the airways in 1980. This two play sequence against the Bengals shows a classic one two punch of the 1980 Browns. On the first play, Sipe passes to Greg Pruitt out of the backfield. Pruitt burns a linebacker on the play and gains 25 yards. On the second play, Sipe finds Ricky Feacher for 55 yards and a touchdown. In this sequence you can clearly see how Sipe used his depth of receivers to set the defense up.

What is interesting to note on the first play are the two Bengals DB's number 44, former Ohio State great Ray Griffin and number 27 Bryan Hicks, have to come over to support the play because Bengals linebacker number 50 Glenn Cameron was 5 years behind Pruitt.

When a defense gets burned deep on a pass play, it almost always affects them on the next play as they try to adjust themselves to the quarterback's chess game and knowing this, the clever Brian Sipe orchestrates his next move beautifully. Sipe goes deep to Feacher and the same number 27, Free Safety Bryan Hicks, who had to come over to help with Greg Pruitt on the previous play, is late and well out of position. A Free Safety's first duty is to support the cornerback on a long pass. Was Bryan Hicks late getting over to help Bengals CB Ken Riley because he was still thinking about Greg Pruitt?? You can bet he was!!

Net result: Touchdown Kardiac Kids!


Brown's history: Hanford Dixon


Was there ever a cornerback in Brown's history who covered receivers man to man better than Hanford Dixon? Probably not. Dixon and Frank Minnifield gave the Browns of the 80s era a major advantage on defense. They could shut down almost anyone in man to man coverage.

Dixon also made a permanent contribution to Brown's history by naming "The Dawg Pound".

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Goodbye Brady

Off to Denver, we wish you the best

Ben Roethlisberger: Helpless victim



Against all odds, once again, Ben Roethlisberger asks us to believe he is the helpless victim of a ruthless woman. To further outline his innocence, Big Ben has hired the same Georgia attorney who cleared Ray Lewis of murder charges and Ben's team have also hired a top notch private investigator to "assist" him in his efforts to be cleared of these charges.


While the NFL's crime problem is well known, if you visit the blog in this link you will find that no other NFL player has been accused in the past year of crimes related to sexual assault. There are several players who were accused of domestic violence, but none were accused of crimes of a sexual nature.

So you have to ask, if we are supposed to believe that NFL players are such easy targets for ruthless predator women, why aren't false accusations of sexual violence against professional sports figures more commonplace?!? Why is it that Ben Roethlisberger is the only player so unlucky to get himself accused not once, but twice, of sexual assault???

For more details on Big Ben's night of consensual fun times, read the article in this link. As another wise man once said, fool me once shame on you, fool me twice shame on me.

The signing spree continues


The Browns continued their March signing spree by picking up veteran QB Jake Delhomme. Interesting to note that 3 of the 4 free agent players the Browns have signed this month have Super Bowl experience. Could it be that Randy Lerner has decided that the non salary cap year of 2010, pending the 2011 work stoppage, might be his best chance to win a Super Bowl for Cleveland? Consider that most NFL teams right now are sitting tight and not spending, while Mike Holmgren has been extraordinarily active. It's a very good sign.

It's probably a bit early but I'm starting to get excited about 2010. The signings made to date at a minimum are going to make the Browns very competitive in 2010, furthermore they will free Holmgren to draft players in the upcoming draft, who can contribute immediately. We all know that a QB drafted in round 1 almost always needs a year or two to develop but a linebacker, DB, WR or RB can almost always hit the ground running from day one.

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Ben Roethlisberger, Roger Goodell, Michael Vick and the NFL Personal Conduct Policy


A wise man once stated that if it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck..... it's probably a duck.

Is Ben Roethlisberger a sexual predator? I don't know but he sure is quacking right now.

If Big Ben ends up sitting in a prison cell and or suspended part of the season by Roger Goodell, it will certainly assist our Cleveland Browns chances in 2010 so let's hope he keeps on quacking all the way to the big house.

Unlike the dogs that Michael Vick victimized, Roethlisberger's latest alleged victim is a human being, hence Ben's vast financial resources might allow him, ironically, to escape justice as it will be his word against her word and Roethlisberger's advisors are already lining up the best support money can buy to assure that their wealthy young client avoids any consequences for his acts. You know what they say, if the glove don't fit............

One has to wonder however what the position of NFL commissioner Roger Goodell might be. Goodell's NFL Personal Conduct Policy (click here to read the policy) to date has correctly held NFL players to a much higher standard than any commissioner in the past and Goodell is not bound by legal judgements. Practically speaking, he can do as he wishes when it comes to enforcing standards of player ethics.

From Roethlisberger's point of view, even in the best case scenario, his behavior that evening is still well outside the standards that Goodell's Personal Conduct Policy seeks to enforce.

If Goodell doesn't punish Roethlisberger at least as severly as he punished Vick, what would that mean? White quarterbacks are more important to the NFL than black quarterbacks? Or perhaps Goodell is simply a dog lover.

We will follow this issue closely in the coming weeks...

Mike Holmgren's Report Card: March 2010



I personally am quite impressed to date with the Browns off season moves. It's apparent that Mike Holmgren has been working very hard. Most Browns fans would agree that Derek Anderson is not a Super Bowl quarterback and now he is gone. It also appears that Brady Quinn is not viewed favorably by Holmgren, and while I have a lot of sympathy for Quinn, I don't get the same sensation watching Quinn that I had years ago watching Sipe or Kosar at the beginning of their careers. Granted Sipe had two years on the taxi squad in which he could learn and mature but from the first instant Brian Sipe stepped on the field in 1974 at 25 years old, you could tell he was a winner. Quinn often looks lost.

QB Seneca Wallace is unproven, but in his 5 NFL years as a backup he has made an impact. More big plays than mistakes and his career numbers would indicate this guy just needs a chance to play full time. Clearly Holmgren himself believes in Wallace but Holmgren also thinks Wallace needs some time under his guidance. This as witnessed by the visit of 35 year old Jake Delhomme to Browns town this week. But if Holmgren signs an older quarterback, it appears his role will be to buy time.

The signings of TE Ben Watson, LB Scott Fujita, and offensive lineman Tony Pashos all bring skilled veteran players to the Browns, two of whom, Watson and Fujita, wear Super Bowl Championship rings.

If you have to give a report card for the month of March so far to Mike Holmgren, the result is A+

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Derek, Allow me to retort....


As The Brown Log accurately predicated over two weeks ago, Derek Anderson has been cut. Mike Holmgren correctly decided that Anderson's potential does not justify the $2,000,000 roster bonus due Anderson on March 19.

Upon learning of being cut, Anderson had this to say about Browns fans:

"The fans are ruthless and don't deserve a winner," Anderson wrote. "I will never forget getting cheered when I was injured. I know at times I wasn't great. I hope and pray I'm playing when my team comes to town and (we) roll them."

As Jules Winfield says in Pulp Fiction....."allow me to retort"....

"Way to go Derek. Nothing like making a sweeping generalization about several million people based on the actions of a handful of drunken assholes or to put it more politely, excuse me Derek but..........Fuck you too!"

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Holmgren on the QB situation


This link has an interesting article from today in which Mike Holmgren gives insight into how he evaluates a QB and where the Brown's QBs stand right now. Holmgren correctly refuses to show his hand but the comment that Anderson throws too many interceptions would seem to indicate that the Browns will very likely cut Derek Anderson before March 19, the date on which he has a roster bonus due. On the other hand, Holmgren states that Quinn hasn't proven himself but he still might have time. My guess is that Holmgren will make a move for a new QB before the 2010 season.

One thing is for sure, Holmgren has a long and successful record with quarterbacks, so for once, Brown's fans can feel comfortable that this guy won't screw it up.

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Brown's history: Dino Hall


Working under Art Modell put enormous constraints on Brown's head coaches. The most imposing of those limits was that Browns coaches were almost certainly forced to cut players who had earned a position on the 45 man roster based on their play but whose salary was too high. The evidence of this is simply overwhelming.

Modell was cheap but he wasn't a fool. With the exception of Tom Skladany and Jack Gregory, Modell usually did not apply salary pressure to the most critical roster positions. Instead Modell likely forced coaches to make do with lesser talented players in those positions that were less visible but nontheless important. In particular backups were systematically diluted year after year to pad Modell's pockets. Modell's self imposed salary cap clearly contrasted with winning teams especially during the 1970's and it's the prime reason the Browns rarely made the playoffs in those years. One need only site the Steelers and recall that whenever an injury hit a key player, a very able backup was ready to stand in. I can recall the excellent Dirt Winston stepping up for Jack Lambert when Lambert was injured and the Steelers more than holding their own. Tony Dungy was a very good defensive backfield bench player and the Steelers defensive line was 6 deep with a great player like John Banaszak in reserve. This contrasts Modell's Browns and that lack of depth in 1978 and 1979 hurt the Browns as the season progressed and those inevitable injuries that every team suffers piled up. It's the only reason the Browns missed the playoffs those years.

As I study Brown's history, one coach who wears very well with time is Sam Rutigliano. The reason I admire Rutilgiano is that he was very creative in coming up with strategies to deal with the realities he confronted. One of those realities was Art Modell. Previous to Rutigliano in the 1970's, the coaches who toiled under Modell, when forced to cut superior players, stuck with conventional wisdom when selecting the players that Modell was in fact willing to pay for. Rutigliano on the other hand, bucked conventional wisdom in several cases. If you have to put a player on the roster at league minimum salary, why not pick a brilliant athlete who for some reason was not appreciated by others? Dino Hall was a perfect example. Hall was way too short and didn't weigh nearly enough, but he was a fantastic athlete and a great football player. Even at 5' 6", Hall made real contributions to the success of the Browns in that era.

I've often wondered what might have been the result had Rutigliano gone with this intuition a bit more often, especially on defense. In particular the 1979 Browns had an offense that was Super Bowl caliber but their defense was so full of holes that as the season wore on, they folded completely as did the Brown's playoff hopes. Perhaps a few undersized defenders who were great athletes might have patched enough holes to get the '79 Browns into the playoffs.