Owner can be thankful for fans, but not team
By Terry Pluto
CLEVELAND - Exactly what are the paying customers supposed to think of their Cleveland Browns?
And Randy Lerner should know that.
His family may own the team, but it belongs to the fans -- who keep buying enough tickets for every game to be a sellout since the team returned in 1999.
The story wasn't that there were perhaps 20,000 no-shows at the game, but that about 50,000 still showed up on Christmas Eve -- even if some wore bags over their heads.
What are the fans supposed to think after watching the Browns lose 22-7 to Tampa Bay? The Bucs entered the day at 3-11 and had lost 7-of-8.
They saw Braylon Edwards benched at the start of the game -- ``Coach's decision,'' said Romeo Crennel, who made the decision.
But during the television broadcast of the game, the announcers reported several times that Edwards had a dislocated right thumb. The Browns said this was news to them. Crennel added that his No. 1 draft choice from 2005 didn't miss a practice.
Apparently, Edwards delivered this diagnosis to a member of the TV crew before the game. Whatever the real story, it seemed like the Browns were not in control of the situation. When Edwards did enter the game in the second quarter, he dropped a couple of passes. Fans booed. The frustration level rose.
The benching may have been because Edwards missed at least part of a team meeting -- or finally, Crennel just had enough of his self-absorbed receiver. You just wonder why this didn't happen a few weeks ago when he was late for a meeting before the Pittsburgh game, and also said some things about teammates that made no sense.
There's a sense of too little, too late.
The same with Crennel chewing out Kellen Winslow on the sidelines.
Oops, the coach said he was ``encouraging'' the tight end, after Winslow gestured and screamed at quarterback Derek Anderson, who failed to get him the ball.
Don't you wish Crennel had done some of this stuff sooner? In fact, the most disturbing part of the season isn't the 4-11 record (and that's awful), it's that Crennel has sometimes struggled with some of his young headstrong players. It seemed one thing he would be able to do is keep order.
The front office continues to say Crennel will return. Perhaps that's true, but the way the team seemed overwhelmed by another underachieving, losing team on its home field has to be very discouraging. It also does not reflect well on Crennel.
Clearly, coaching is just a piece of a very big, bitter tasting mud pie of what are your 2006 Cleveland Browns. The team has been savaged by injuries. But Tampa was on its No. 3 quarterback. Starting running back Cadillac Williams was out.
Both teams were beat up and playing for nothing. One showed more character and discipline, and it was not the guys in orange helmets. The players keep saying they like Crennel and want to work for him -- but many of them sure don't show it.
That has to bother the fans, and it has to lead to some serious soul-searching after the season by the front office.
As the Browns head into their final game, next Sunday at Houston, they'll be on their third quarterback. Ken Dorsey will start because Anderson was crushed by a Tampa rush and separated his right shoulder.
Doesn't that sound painful?
Not just the injury to Anderson, but that another Browns quarterback is hurt. Over and over, fans hear that story.
Last year, it was Trent Dilfer's knee. This year, it was Charlie Frye's wrist. A few years ago, Jeff Garcia broke a leg. Kelly Holcomb broke a leg. Holcomb also had fractured ribs. Tim Couch had several different injuries. Ty Detmer blew an Achilles.
This is not meant to defend a rattled Anderson, who threw four interceptions and had an embarrassing 12.3 rating, but the team can't protect any quarterback for long, regardless of who is in the pocket.
Nor will the Browns ever be able to develop a quarterback until the offensive line is upgraded, because the quarterback won't stay healthy enough to gain the experience required.
The latest version of the Browns has been around for eight years. In the last four seasons, the home record is 11-21, including 2-6 in 2006.
Yet, the fans still care -- even those who write e-mails, call talk shows and tell friends that they are sick of the team.
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