NOWHERE WAS the
release of the 2008 NFL schedule as newsy as it was in Cleveland. Quarterback
Derek Anderson was on the golf course when he got a call from his dad. "You
see how many times you're on national TV?" Glenn Anderson said. Fans
bombarded wideout Braylon Edwards with the news. "Three Monday night
games!" one of them told Edwards, who went to a computer to see for
himself.
There it was: A
Fox national game at home against the Cowboys in Week 1, a Sunday night NBC
game with the Steelers in Week 2, Monday-night ESPN games in Weeks 6 (Giants),
11 (Bills) and 15 (Eagles), and a Thursday-nighter on NFL Network against the
Broncos in Week 10. The Browns hadn't played on Monday night in five years or
on Sunday night in three; now they were going to play five night games in one
season—one more than the Super Bowl--champion Giants.
"Prime
time," Edwards says. "Now that's what I'm talking about."
And Cleveland
didn't even make the playoffs last year.
So, the theory
goes, the Browns must be a team about to break out. Or they're being set up for
a big tumble. "When I saw the schedule I said, 'That's what happens when
you play exciting football,'" says sixth-year guard Eric Steinbach.
"The flip side, of course, is being a younger team, and after having your
first winning season in a while, you worry about how all the exposure is going
to affect your young players. The true test will be surviving that exposure and
playing your best instead of playing like a deer in the headlights."
The Browns were a
bunch of sluggers without a pitching staff last year, winning 51--45, 41--31
and 33--30 (twice). And when Anderson struggled in December—he threw seven TD
passes and eight interceptions in five games—the defense wasn't able to cover
for the offense's drop-off and Cleveland suffered crushing losses to Arizona
and Cincinnati. The Browns wound up 30th in the league in yards allowed per
game (359.6) and in yards allowed per rushing attempt (4.5).
That's why
general manager Phil Savage, already without a first-round pick in 2008 because
he traded it to move up and draft quarterback Brady Quinn last year, dealt his
second- and third-round choices plus starting cornerback Leigh Bodden for two
monstrous defensive linemen: former Packer Corey Williams, who'll play left end
in coach Romeo Crennel's 3--4 scheme, and Shaun Rogers, late of the Lions,
who'll be the nosetackle.
Strange but true:
The 340-pound Rogers has never played the position. But the Browns believe he's
well-suited to occupy more than one blocker and plug the middle of the line,
creating the kind of congestion that makes for a great run-stopping unit.
"Our model is
the Patriots," says Rogers. New England is a 3--4 team with a history of
playing good run defense, and Rogers has studied the Pats' scheme. "[The
Browns] got me because they were looking for beef in the middle, and that's so
important to a 3--4 team," he says. "I don't want to be the whole
solution, just part of the solution."
Cleveland needs
some other defensive players to be part of the solution too. Pass-rush
specialist Kamerion Wimbley has to play hungrier. "How can I put this?"
says Savage. "He played a little safe last year." It's not often that a
rookie gets 11 sacks and follows with a five-sack season, but that's what a
healthy Wimbley did. The Browns have told him to take more chances, become more
reckless. Also, second-year cornerbacks Brandon McDonald and Eric Wright will
be picked on by opposing quarterbacks from Week 1, and by midseason fans may be
wondering why their team invested so heavily in the defensive line when it's
the secondary that's killing the Browns.