Red Right 88

In Cleveland, hope dies last

Comings and goings in Cleveland

Lots of activity in Berea this week, as the Cleveland Browns signed defensive ends Frostee Rucker and Juqua Parker as free agents and resigned defensive back Dimitri Patterson.

While the Rucker/Parker combo are not Mario Williams, it is still a decent move by the team, with Rucker being a decent run stopper (and we all know the Browns can use all the help they can get defending the run) and Parker can still effectively rush the passer.

Parker isn’t an every down player any more, but he can still rush the passer, according to Cold Hard Football Facts, who wrote that “he can handle a decent amount of work and still produce. Even though he found opportunities limited in Philadelphia, he still responded with 22 combined sacks, hits and pressures on 138 pass rushes (last season).

And Parker knows how to get to the quarterback, recording six sacks in 2010 and eight sacks in 2009.

Read more…

The Browns are not Duke & Duke

It’s all over for the Cleveland Browns.

That’s the only conclusion we can come to judging from the reaction pouring in from some corners of Browns nation after the team failed to “do something” on the opening day of free agency in the NFL.

Apparently to some fans, the fact the Browns did not sign someone, anyone, in the first 20 minutes of free agency means the team just isn’t trying.

In this warped view, team president Mike Holmgren and general manager Tom Heckert should be more like Mortimer and Randolph Duke, riding around in a limousine while trying to lure free agents inside with promises of money, clothes, nice houses and “whiskey, all you want.”

Head over to The Cleveland Fan for the rest of the story.

This is Liverpool’s story

Liverpool Football Club has decided to start releasing classic photos from the storied English club’s history on a blog called I’ve Loved Them All.

According to the site:

“Whilst there are other clubs around the world who have won more trophies and titles, none of them can boast a history that even comes close to rivaling that of Liverpool FC.

“It’s a history that has been written in books, in newspapers and even recently on the big screen but now we’re telling it again – this time through the medium of photographs on Tumblr.

We’ve launched it to share the history of Liverpool Football Club to a new online audience in the 21st century. Rather than employ endless streams of words in a digital age where the attention span of many online users is shorter than ever, we’re using photographs to tell this unique story – all sourced from a club archive of over 40,000 prints. Some choices will be iconic images you will have seen before but many others have never been published until now.”

The site boasts photos of players, fans and the people that have made the club one of the most successful in English football history.

The photo we have at the top of this post is one of the earliest known images of the newly created Liverpool Football Club. The exact date of the picture is unknown but thought to have been between June and August 1892 – nine years before the Cleveland Indians were founded – according to the site.

We wish the Browns, Indians and Cavaliers would start a similar project; its hard to believe that Cleveland fans wouldn’t flood a site featuring old photos of their favorite teams and players.

Enjoy.

Final thoughts on Browns & RG3

As the Browns prepare for the start of free agency on Tuesday afternoon, we have a few final thoughts before we close the book on the Robert Griffin III talk.

As we suspected, the Browns losing out on the right to move up to the No. 2 spot in the draft had nothing to do with the inability of general manager Tom Heckert to get the job done and everything to do with the Redskins be willing to grossly overpay to move up in the draft.

According to Peter King in his Monday Morning Quarterback column, St. Louis general manager Les Snead told any team interested in making a trade to submit their best offer. King writes that “according to one of the teams involved, Washington made an offer beyond what St. Louis ever thought it’d get — three first-round picks and a second-rounder. Cleveland offered something less, thought to be three ones.

“The Rams might have gotten more by telling the Browns what Washington’s offer was, but Snead had promised each side he wouldn’t play one bid against another but rather simply ask for each team’s best offer. Once Washington’s offer was better than Cleveland’s, the deal was done.”

Read more…

Well … time to move on apparently

Woke up this morning to the news that the St. Louis Rams were able to bait the Washington Redskins into overpaying for the right to move up to the No. 2 position in the NFL Draft and potentially select Baylor quarterback Robert Griffin III.

Of course, that means the Browns are now out of the picture.

Deep breath. Serenity now. Serenity now.

According to multiple reports
, the Redskins will give up their first-round picks in 2012, 2013 and 2014 and a second-round pick this year to the Rams.

Despite how some are going to try and spin this, the trade is more of a win by the Rams than a failure by the Browns.

Read more…

On the Browns, RG3 and trades

It may be time for Cleveland Browns fans everywhere to take a deep breath, have a sip of their favorite adult beverage and chill out a bit in regards to the Browns, Robert Griffin III and draft day trades.

There are two important, inter-related things to remember as the NFL heads into free agency on March 13 and the NFL Draft on April 26.

The first is: if the Browns want Griffin they will get him.

Because the Browns hold a second first-round pick, thanks to last year’s steal of a trade with Atlanta, the Browns can outbid any other team – if they choose to. It doesn’t matter what the Redskins, Dolphins, or any other team offers – the Browns should be able to top every single one of them.

If the power trio of team president Mike Holmgren, general manager Tom Heckert and coach Pat Shurmur truly believe Griffin is the answer at quarterback, he will be wearing Orange and Brown in 2012.

The second is: the trade the Browns could make today with the St. Louis Rams will always be there.

The trade with the Rams to move up to No. 2 and select Griffin – the trade that is currently tilted completely in favor of the Rams – will always be there. It will be there tomorrow, next week, two weeks from now and all the way up to the start of the first round of the draft.

The Browns don’t have to do anything until they see how free agency plays out. Once teams start signing players next week, we’ll see where Peyton Manning goes, where Matt Flynn goes and any advantage – real or perceived – that the Rams have in negotiating a trade will start to fade away.

If the Redskins, who some in the media have decided are the favorites to move up and draft Griffin because they are willing to go “all in,” are really that interested in trading, then what are they waiting for? If they really want Griffin so much, why not make the trade today and guarantee the pick? The Rams certainly wouldn’t say no.

It’s far more likely that the Redskins have their eye on a bigger prize – Manning – and are waiting to talk with him to gauge his interest and ability before they starting talking seriously with the Rams.

But no matter what, the Browns are in control (as hard as that may be to believe) because they can trump any potential deal that another team proposes.

For once, the Browns hold the cards. How they decide to play them is still to be determined.

Until then, hang in there Browns fans.

Browns Nation may need some Prozac

Cleveland Browns general manager Tom Heckert spoke with the media on Thursday to offer up some very meager tidbits about the team’s plan for free agency and the NFL Draft.

And, judging by some of the comments from fans afterward, Browns Nation may need to re-up its prescription for Prozac before all is said and done.

Heckert said signing free agent quarterback Peyton Manning is “probably not a direction we’re going to go in.”

No problem with that.

The Browns believe there are four good quarterbacks in the upcoming draft: Andrew Luck, Robert Griffin III, Ryan Tannehill and Brandon Weedon.

Read more…

Browns need to pass on Matt Flynn

Now that the Green Bay Packers have decided not to franchise quarterback Matt Flynn, the speculation will heat up as to the destination of the one-game wonder, with Cleveland being a landing spot in too many people’s minds.

So here’s the only primer that Browns fans will need as far as Flynn is concerned:

  • He has started two NFL games in his four-year NFL career.
  • His most recent start, and the one that generated all the buzz, was in Week 17 against Detroit. Flynn passed for 480 yards and six touchdowns against the Lions.
  • Detroit was the 22nd-ranked pass defense in the NFL this season.
  • The Lions secondary sucked, with former Browns cornerback Eric Wright giving up 79 receptions for 879 yards and five touchdowns, according to Pro Football Focus.
  • Detroit’s secondary fell apart late in the season, thanks to injuries to starter Chris Houston, nickel back Aaron Berry and free safety Louis Delmas.
  • In addition to Flynn’s game, the Lions gave up 307 yards passing to Aaron Rodgers in Week 12, 338 yards to Drew Brees in Week 13, 345 yards to Carson Palmer in Week 15 and 466 yards to Brees in the playoffs.
  • At LSU, he couldn’t beat out JaMarcus Russell, who turned into one of the biggest NFL busts of all time.

Basically, Flynn is Kelly Holcomb, who Browns fans all remember for passing for 429 yards and three touchdowns in a playoff loss against Pittsburgh in January of 2003.

Imagine how much money Holcomb would have made on the free agent market after that game. Now imagine if the Browns had given him a big-money contract and turned him into the starting quarterback?

Do we really want the team to make that same mistake with Flynn?

(Photo by The Associated Press)

The media will not decide who the Browns draft

We like NFL draft talk as much as the next person, especially when it involves the Cleveland Browns, but all the speculation about what will take place in the first round of the draft on April 26 is starting to work our last nerve.

The biggest thorn is the ongoing narrative pushed by the media that the Browns “must” trade up for Baylor quarterback Robert Griffin III at any and all cost. Failure to do so will somehow prove that the Browns are incompetent, insipid and generally an insignificant franchise that doesn’t care one bit about winning.

For more, head over to The Cleveland Fan.

(Photo by Getty Images)

Phase One Continues for the Browns

The Cleveland Browns continued to get their roster in order prior to the start of free agency as they placed the franchise tag on kicker Phil Dawson on Friday.

Now that the Browns have taken care of Dawson and linebacker D’Qwell Jackson, that just leaves the Peyton Hillis situation.

For the rest of the story, head over to The Cleveland Fan.

(Photo by The Plain Dealer)

Post Navigation