Browns could be headed for SI's cover
Steve King, Staff Writer
07.24.2008
When Peter King, the longtime, well-respected NFL writer for Sports Illustrated, visited Browns Headquarters during training camp last year, he bit his tongue when asked for his opinion by team owner Randy Lerner.
"He said to me, 'So, what do you think of the team?' " King said. "I told him, 'This will be a rebuilding year. Next year is the year you have to look for.'
"But I was lying to him."
King, like many others, had the Browns ranked at or near the bottom of the heap in the NFL going into 2007, to a great extent because of an unsettled situation at quarterback, and also the fact they were coming off a 4-12 finish, had had four straight losing seasons and seven of eight since they returned to the field in 1999.
Sitting on the sidelines watching practice, he said it pained him to say that because he believes Cleveland is a great football town. But he had to be honest.
To the media, that is, not to the owner.
King was back in town on Wednesday and Thursday as the Browns opened their 2008 camp. In fact, Cleveland, because of scheduling convenience since the Browns opened camp earlier that some other teams in the region, was the first stop on his tour of NFL camps.
This time, he could be honest, and not hurt anyone's feelings at all. That's because he is optimistic about the Browns chances in 2008.
"Cleveland and Pittsburgh are neck and neck in this division," King said of the AFC North race. "I'll know more after I go to both camps and get a look t the teams, but if I had to pick one right now to win it, I'd pick Cleveland."
The Browns.
Think about that. The Cleveland Browns.
If King is right, and he cautions that he's not right much -- "My picks always stink. You don't want me to pick your team," he said -- then it would be the Browns' first division crown since they finished 9-6-1 in 1989 and barely won the AFC Central. It would also be only their second playoff appearance since then, and their first since 2002.
But that will all start to play out come September. In the meantime, King and S.I. have been working for months on a piece on the club -- and its near 180-degree transformation over the last year -- that's likely toserve as the cover story for the magazine's NFL preview issue.
"Every year, we do a story on an up-and-coming team," King said. "The Browns this year one of the teams that a lot of people are anxious to see how they handle what (in 2007) was the first real success they had had in the nine years they've been back.
"The story will be a diary of the Browns in the offseason, from how crushed they were after beating the 49ers in the final game year and still not making the playoffs, to watching the postseason and saying to themselves, 'That should have been us," to a very active spring (in free agency), to a very inactive draft day, to a lot of high hopes going into this year.
"We think it will be pretty well-read."
The story will include King's analysis of how the quarterback play, supposedly the Browns' Achilles heel going into last season, turned into a major strength and spurred the team's resurgence after Derek Anderson became the starter for the final 15 games and had a Pro Bowl season.
"Up until the end of the season, when he stubbed his toe in Cincinnati, he was terrific," King said. "The Browns can look at themselves and say they've finally gotten what they had been searching for, for nine years, a quarterback. And maybe they've got a second one, too, in Brady Quinn, or at least trade bait down the road.
"Almost as big a part of the strides the Browns made last season can be attributed to the offensive line. They had been looking under every rock in the universe to try to find an offensive line, and then last offseason they go out in free agency and draft and get Eric Steinbach and Joe Thomas, who was my co-Rookie of the Year along with Adrian Peterson. That solidified that whole left side of the line.
"The Browns got a lot done last year that will help them for a long time to come."
Like so many others, King is curious how the Browns will handle a schedule that has five prime-time national TV appearances, including three on Monday Night Football.
"It's like the old saying, 'Be careful what you wish for,' " he said. "Coaches would love to play 16 games at 1 o'clock on Sunday. We'll just have to see what happens.
"But when I was talking to Braylon Edwards, he said he can't wait to go into the pre-game meeting for Sunday Night Football so he can sit in there with John Madden."
Edwards will do that before the Browns host the Steelers on Sept. 14 in a game that will certainly have a major impact on the division race.
"For the Browns in those head-to-head meetings with Pittsburgh, it will boil down to how well their secondary plays," King said. "The Browns need to rattle Ben Roethlisberger."
And if they can, then well, maybe, Peter King's prediction will come true.
No lie.
http://www.clevelandbrowns.com/article.php?id=8590