Wednesday, December 5, 2012

The Sports Mixer - After further review

Each week I take a look back at the last Browns game and point out the things that stood out to me.  The most recent game was a 20-17 win over the Oakland Raiders....sorry Heny.

Brandon Weeden continues to make rookie mistakes, but he reminded fans why the Browns were high on him when he dropped a 44 yard touchdown pass to Josh Gordon that stunned the Raider crowd.  Unfortunately, he dropped two picks into the laps of the Raiders when the Browns were driving down the field, removing two potential scoring opportunities.  He now has 13 touchdown passes, but the 15 interceptions continue to be a concern.

Trent Richardson runs hard, but it seems like Montario Hardesty hits the hole faster and gets upfield quicker.  Richardson doesn't go down easily though and is still likely going to hit 1,000 yards rushing despite missing all of preseason and significant time in other games due to a rib injury.

Josh Gordon has been the surprise of the year for the Browns.  Showing a set of hands not seen in these parts in a long time to go with a good burst of speed and good size, the Browns may have found a number one receiver.  Add in the sudden improvement shown by Greg Little, and the receiver situation is suddenly ten times better than previously thought.

The defense, well, Buster Skrine, allowed a big play, but otherwise played fairly well.  There wasn't a ton of pressure on Carson Palmer, but the coverage was generally good.  Sheldon Brown in particular had a solid game, defending three passes and picking off an underthrown pass from Palmer that directly led to the scoring drive that sealed the win.

The team showed tremendous growth on that scoring drive as Weeden threw for a couple of critical first downs and Richardson punched it in from three yards out, something we're becoming accustomed to seeing from him this year.  He has seven on the season and it isn't inconceivable that he could pass Jim Brown's rookie record by the end of the season.

For the first time in a long time, Pat Shurmer didn't make any glaring mistakes in coaching.  He went for it on fourth down on two different occasions and had Weeden throw the ball deep on several other occasions to keep the Raiders defense honest.  Some may point to his lack of a challenge on a bad spot on the final scoring drive that burned a timeout, but in retrospect, that moment had little bearing on the final outcome.

The Browns matched their win total from last season with this win, and it's very possible they could win two more games this season.  This week's game against the Chiefs is winnable despite the mini momentum that the Chiefs picked up in their emotional win last week.  The following week gives them their first look at Robert Griffin III, then they travel to Denver where it's possible the Broncos could be resting some starters that day.  They finish the season in Pittsburgh, where the Steelers could be fighting for their playoff lives.

The growth on this team can't be discounted, even from the most pessimistic of people.  Jabaal Sheard's sack numbers are down, but he's been more involved in the steadily improving run defense.  Rookie defensive tackles Billy Winn and John Hughes have both shown tremendous promise as part of a rotation that includes last year's rookie Phil Taylor and standout veteran Ahtyba Rubin.  The young linebackers have shown growth as well, and despite Skrine's penchant for bad plays at bad times, even he has shown growth on the field.  Offensively, Mitchell Schwartz's name is not being called, which is good for an offensive linemen.  We've documented Weeden, Gordon, Little, and Richardson, but the offensive line has improved over the course of the season.

Josh Cribbs has complained about his role, but truth is, he's becoming less and less of a factor overall.  Aside from being one of the first men down on special teams to make a tackle, his return numbers have been declining and he made one incredibly poor decision to bring a kick out from 9 yards deep.  He still is capable of a big return, but it seems less and less likely he's going to break one anytime soon.

Last, but not least, a special shout-out to Phil Dawson, who's consecutive made field goals streak came to a halt, not because of a bad kick, but because of a high snap, treacherous field conditions, and a deflection because of the timing being thrown off.  Dawson made two other field goals though and ultimately provided the margin of victory.  Dawson has been steady and deserves one final contract before riding out into the sunset.

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