Red Right 88

In Cleveland, hope dies last

An Intriquing Possibility

Now that the Denver Broncos have traded Brandon Marshall to Miami for draft picks, does that open the door for the Browns to trade down in next week’s draft?

The Broncos would appear to need a receiver and Dez Bryant could very well be sitting there when the Browns go on the clock with the seventh pick. If the Broncos are interested in Bryant, they may be open to switching first round picks with the Browns – Denver is at No. 11 – and throwing in one of their two second-round picks – No. 11 or No. 13 – into the deal.

Of course Seattle, which picks right before Cleveland, also needs a wide receiver and they could take Bryant or work a trade themselves.

Sliding down four picks would probably cost the Browns a shot at Tennessee safety Eric Berry, but adding another second-round pick would help the team either improve on its depth or give them the means necessary to move back up into the late first round and grab their QB of the future.

If I’m Mike Holmgren, I would certainly be open to making a call to Denver if the right time presents itself.

Sweet, sweet Schadenfreude

Ever since the Browns returned in 1999, fans have had to endure annual on-field beatings from the Pittsburgh Steelers along with the ridiculous notion from their fans and members of the national media that the Steelers are better than everyone else because they do things “the right way,” the “Steeler way.”

Well, the Steeler way has been taking quite a beating lately. First the on-going problems of wide receiver Santonio Holmes came to light: what a sweet guy he is. The Steelers finally ran out of patience and shipped him off to the Jets and, oh boy, is that going to be a fun training camp this year.

Which brings us to the ongoing escapades of Ben Roethlisberger. While no charges will be filed in his latest bar romp with a co-ed in Georgia, the quarterback may still face league or team sanctions.

And the media is starting to turn against him: Ron Cook in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette calls for a suspension; John Harris in the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review says the team may jettison Roethlisberger; Pat McManamon at FanHouse says the Steelers should cut the cord; and even Terry Bradshaw has come out with harsh words.

And in what has to be the cruelest cut of all, a Pittsburgh company has pulled its beef jerky sponsorship with him. However will the yokels know what brand of beef jerky to choose?

It’s enough to put an extra hop in the step of Browns fans everywhere.

Rest is the Sweet Sauce of Labor

“Five players on the floor functioning as one single unit: team, team, team – no one more important that the other.” – Coach Norman Dale.

Coach Dale preached and practiced the concept of team first, a valid philosophy that Cavs coach Mike Brown is right to follow as the regular season comes to a close Wednesday in Atlanta.

Despite the fuss raised by some about the Cavs resting key players down the stretch, with Tim Povtak of FanHouse leading the brigade of fools, Brown is paid to make the hard decisions and look at the big picture – how to get the 16 playoff wins needed to capture the team’s first championship. And he has been masterful at putting the team’s needs above everything else down the stretch.

Finishing the season with 61 or 62 wins is completely unimportant – having the team ready when the playoffs start is priority one. And while some of the players, most notably Shaq, may need the first round to shake off some rust, that shouldn’t be a problem. While the Cavs may not have the cakewalk they experienced last year in the first round against Detroit, any lingering impact from players resting should be minimal.

Plus the Cavs earned the right to rest players by fighting for the best record in the NBA. They worked hard during the season and this is the reward for that effort. If other teams don’t like it, oh well, maybe they should win more games so they have the opportunity to do the same.

With playoff positions becoming more focused, the pieces are falling into place perfectly for the Cavs. It looks like Boston will draw Miami in the first round, and if Kevin Garnett thought Kevin Durant got all the calls, wait until he gets a load of Dwyane Wade in the playoffs. Orlando will have to deal with a tough Charlotte team followed by a potential second-round matchup with Atlanta.

The pairings are working perfectly in the Cavs favor, why risk going against your gut instinct just to appease a few people?

Luckily, we can be assured Brown will make the right call. He’s not the most successful coach currently in town for no reason.

The Curious Case of Dez Bryant

With the NFL draft only 10 days away and the Browns holding the seventh selection in the first round with numerous holes to fill on defense, the brain trust is poised to select a defensive player – such as Eric Berry, Joe Haden or Earl Thomas.

Or are they?

The speculation wheel has now landed on the Browns taking Oklahoma State wide receiver Dez Bryant in the first round. Of course, this being Cleveland and the Browns, it’s never that simple. Bryant’s suspension last season for lying to the NCAA about a meeting he had with Deion Sanders has raised concerns among some about the dreaded “character issues.”

After the purging last year of Braylon Edwards, Kellen Winslow and, eventually, Jamal Lewis, it would seem unlikely that the Browns would be interested in taking a chance on Bryant.

Sports Illustrated‘s Peter King had this to say in his Monday Morning Quarterback column: “I think, for those Browns fans who yearn for a franchise receiver and ask, ‘Why don’t we trade down a bit in the round and get Dez Bryant?” here’s your answer: Eric Mangini’s spent a lot of energy trying to get his locker room right, and though Bryant appears to be on the right track and could well be a terrific NFL citizen for the next 10 years, they don’t sell insurance for this kind of thing, and the Browns would rather take guys without question marks on their resumes.”

Sounds plausible, although King does come up with this nightmare scenario involving potential Browns moves on draft day: “Unless something strange happens, it’s hard to envision anything standing in the way of Sam Bradford to the Rams with the top pick on April 22. The only strange thing I see is Cleveland paying a ransom to move up to pick Bradford – like the seventh and 38th picks this year, and the Browns’ first-rounder next year, plus something else.”

Maybe it’s best if we just move on.

On the flip side, Mel Kiper has proclaimed Bryant the pick, saying “I’ve talked to people around the league about Dez Bryant, and I can tell you the notion that there are concerns about Bryant’s character is blown out of proportion. Here the Browns get the best WR in the draft, a threat they really need, and a player that, in a football environment, is a workhorse and a producer.”

With Kiper’s track record that makes it seem more likely the Browns won’t take Bryant.

While Bryant’s talent would seem to fill a need for the Browns – the team’s wide receivers are the weakest part of the team thanks to Eric Mangini’s over-rating of Mohamed Massaquoi and Brian Robiskie in last year’s draft – you have to wonder. Plus, much like quarterbacks from the Big 12, you have to question if the numbers put up by the wide receivers are inflated because defenses are, to be polite, limited in their abilities.

Character matters, just like how a player performs on their Pro Day, at the combine and on the field. It’s another piece of the puzzle and another tool to help guide a team in the right direction on draft day. Even though it appears likely that the punishment did not fit the crime, I don’t see the Browns picking someone with any kind of questions about them, especially at No. 7.

Of course, Bryant will probably fall in the draft and land in Pittsburgh and torment the Browns for the next 10 years. But that’s a discussion for another day.

For a compelling argument on why the Browns should consider Bryant, check out Cleveland Frowns’ Dez Bryant’s Bad Rap.

Where would you rather be?

With all the foo-faa over where LeBron James will sign when he becomes a free agent this summer, one potential angle has been overlooked.

Fast-forward to opening night of next season. The Cavs are coming off a season that saw them capture their first NBA championship – only one fewer than the “storied” Knicks franchise – and the first title in Cleveland since 1964. Quicken Loans Arena is full and the TV audience is through the roof as the team prepares to raise a championship banner.

You’re LeBron James, the local kid who vowed to make Cleveland “light up like Vegas,” who put a dying franchise on his back and carried them to the top of the NBA, the reigning MVP who has exceeded every expectation placed on you.

On this night you could be with the Knicks playing a meaningless game against Toronto. Or you could be with the Nets, playing in a temporary arena in the Terminator-like wasteland of Northern New Jersey.

Or you could be on the court in your hometown watching as a championship banner is raised.

You have to wonder:

Where would you rather be?

Born to Run

The New York Times NFL blog, The Fifth Down, is ranking the 10 best offensive linemen at each position. Good news for Browns fans as three players made the top four at their respective positions.

Joe Thomas was the top-ranked left tackle, with The Times calling him “A natural. Rarely does his side of the pocket quiver in pass protection, and on the ground, he can seal defenders or throw blocks on the move with ease.”

Alex Mack was the third-ranked center who “Looked like a 7-year veteran by the end of his rookie year. Sustains well in pass protection despite questionable strength, and is a portrait of athleticism in the run game.”

Eric Steinbach was fourth-ranted at left guard for his “Fantastic range in pulls and sweeps.”

Not surprisingly, no one from the right side of the line made the list, so John St. Clair can stop hitting the refresh button on his computer.

The development of the offensive line, which should continue with the addition of Tony Pashos and possible help on draft day, will go a long way to improving a rushing attack that has only ranked higher than 20th in the league twice since 1999.

Add in running backs Jerome Harris, Peyton Hillis and James Davis, mix in Josh Cribbs and Seneca Wallace in the Wildcat, and the Browns have the makings of a team that can commit to the run, which is vital for those cold-weather games in November and December.

Maybe we’ve seen the last four interception performance during a windy, late-season game?

A Browns fan can dream, yes?

Play like a Champion

With Inter Milan and Barcelona advancing yesterday to the semifinals of the Champions League, today’s return legs will fill out the remaining two places in the tournament’s final four.

If you’re planning to follow the World Cup this summer – and why wouldn’t you? – today’s games (Manchester United v. Bayern Munich and Bordeaux v. Lyon) and the rest of the tournament provide a perfect opportunity to catch some of the players who will be in South Africa perform for their club teams.

Wayne Rooney (although injured), Rio Ferdinand, Bastian Schweinsteiger, Frank Ribery, Thierry Henry and Lionel Messi are just some of the players still involved in the tournament who should also take the field this summer for their national teams.

If you’ve never watched a Champions League match, give it a shot. And if you happen to be one of the five people in the country who receive Fox Soccer Channel in HD, more the better because this sport is built for HD on a large screen.

You never know, you may just like it.

The Right Move

Eleven years ago the Browns had an opportunity to draft Donovan McNabb. They passed, selecting Tim Couch instead which turned out to be the wrong move. I know, I’m not telling you anything you didn’t already know.

With McNabb being traded over the weekend to Washington for a second-round pick and either a third- or a fourth-round pick, we’re left to wonder if the Browns had made a move would they have landed the QB that could have been the face of the franchise for the past decade? They could have easily matched Washington’s offer and the allure of sending McNabb out of the division may have sealed the deal for the Eagles. But if they were in talks for a McNabb trade, not pulling the trigger was the right call, just as much as not drafting him was the wrong one.

While McNabb certainly would be an improvement over Jake Delhomme for the next few years, he still would not be the long-term solution to the QB position. By holding on to their remaining picks – they have five in the top 100 (spots 7, 38, 71, 85 & 92) the Browns can fill a hole either in the secondary or offensive line with the first pick and then still make a move in the second round (or trade up to the late first round) to grab the potential QB of the future.

We may never know if the Browns were tempted, but in the end the Holmgren/Heckert brain trust made the right call.

In other news, nice work at Cleveland Frowns on ESPN New York’s love affair with LeBron.

And Waiting for Next Year checks in with an additional take on what the McNabb trade could mean for the Browns draft plans.

Indian Fever Starts Today

The Wahoo Warriors open their 109th season of baseball this afternoon against the White Sox. Optimism is running, well, tepid is probably the best way to put it.

The consensus puts the Tribe around 75 wins – that’s the over/under in Vegas – with the Beacon Journal’s Sheldon Ocker going high – 82 wins – and Sports Illustrated going low – 66 wins. Everyone else falls into the 75-win range, with the five Plain Dealer writers splitting at two with 75 (Bud Shaw & Bill Livingston), two with 76 (Terry Pluto & Dennis Manoloff) and Paul Hoynes with 77. The New York Times puts the Tribe in fourth place, saying “The Indians should score but will struggle on the mound as they wait for a new wave of talent to mature.”

So what to expect this year? How can the Indians top most expectations? A solid start to the season would help. It’s no secret that the Indians struggled in April & May under Eric Wedge, so a reasonably good start will help things out. If the Tribe can pick up one win they weren’t expecting each month of the season that would add six wins to the 75 and put them at .500. Since most people believe the division can be taken with 88-89 wins, can the Tribe pull out a few more and contend? It’s hard to see that happening, at least this year.

One of the best things that could happen is also one of the worst for the Indians – a deep playoff run by the Cavs. Since everyone will be hyper-focused on the Cavs until June, there will be no pressure on the Tribe early in the season. However, if we all get up the day after the Cavs season ends and find the Indians 10 games under .500 and 12 games out of first, we’ll collectively hit the snooze button until training camp starts for the Browns. Apathy is far, far worse than indifference.

We’ve all been down this road before with a rebuilding team. Sometimes, like in the ’90s, it works. More often for the Tribe it turns out more like the 1970s. The 1996 book Total Indians recalls how fans were optimistic about a young team in 1977 that seemed to be building a core of young players in Buddy Bell, Rick Manning, Charlie Spikes, Duane Kiper, Dennis Eckersley and Jim Kern. That year, the Indians added 20-game winner Wayne Garland via free agency only to see him tear his rotator cuff that spring. Manager Frank Robinson didn’t make it through the season as the team lost 90 games. Two months into the season GM Phil Seghi traded reliever Dave LaRoche for two players and $250,000 to keep the team afloat. The team lost 31 of its first 57 games.

The following year the break-up of the team continued when the Indians traded Eckersley (who ended up in the Hall of Fame) before the season and Bell (six Gold Gloves) after the season for some spare parts.

They summed up the decade by saying “The Indians’ treadmill to nowhere, as usual, was running at full speed.”

Sound familiar to anyone?

Now we’re left to wonder what to make of the coming season. Do we root for Travis Hafner to return to his old self because it will help the team, or because it will increase his trade value? Do we want Grady Sizemore to make the leap to the next level, even though it would mean he would be pricing himself out of Cleveland? That’s the joy of being a Cleveland fan in today’s unbalanced Major League Baseball.

In any event, it will be an interesting season with lots of young players who will hopefully show significant progress during the season.

For a look at what they’re saying in the other Central Division towns, check out:

Chicago Sun-Times

Detroit Free Press

Kansas City Star

Minneapolis Star-Tribune

Feeling a Draft

With all the recent talk about who the Browns should/shouldn’t/will/won’t draft with the No. 7 pick in the upcoming draft – please, not a QB in the first round and no “projection” players – not as much attention has been made to the selections in later rounds. Of the Browns’ 12 picks in the upcoming draft, seven of them are in rounds four through seven. Can the Browns find talented players who can contribute on the field in the later rounds?

To answer that question, I went back through every Browns draft since 1975 – around the time I started following the team – to see if they were able to find talent in the later rounds (defined here as fifth round or later because the draft used to be 12 rounds). Here’s one person’s take on the 10 best late-round picks by the Browns:

10. Mike Babb (5th round): He started and was a main component on the line for the Browns from 1983-87, and again in 1990 and ’91.

9. Paul Farren (12th round): A solid offensive lineman who played with the team from 1983-1991. A starter from ’85-’90 who missed only three games in that span. He was named the team’s lineman of the year in 1988 and offensive lineman of the year in 1989.

8. Ryan Pontbriand (5th round): A Pro Bowler in ’07 and ’09 as a long-snapper. Butch Davis’ best draft pick.

7. Lawrence Vickers (6th round): A solid blocker who rarely touches the ball.

6. Reggie Langhorne (7th round): Had 261 receptions for 3,597 yards from ’85-’91. A key receiver on the teams that made three AFC Championship game appearances.

5. Michael Jackson (6th round): Played five years with the team, catching 170 passes for 2,797 yards and 28 TDs. Caught Bernie Kosar’s last TD pass as a Brown.

4. Eddie Johnson (7th round): Recorded 712 tackles over his nine-year Browns’ career (’81-’90). A cornerstone on the teams that made three AFC Championship game appearances.

3. Dick Ambrose (12th round): Started in his rookie season, held starting MLB role for rest of his Browns’ career (’75-’83). Led the team in tackles five times.

2. Cody Riesen (7th round): Made two Pro Bowls (’87 & ’88); was on seven playoff teams in his 10 seasons.

1. Earnest Byner (10th round): Three 1,000-yard seasons, 6th in career rushing, 7th in touchdowns and 10th in career receptions.

Thanks to www.clevelandbrowns.com and www.pro-football-reference.com for draft history and stats.

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