With our huge win last night against the Jets, we are officially playoff bound! Hit us with a repost for a chance to celebrate with an authentic practice-worn jersey from one of the guys, courtesy of @Binary_Defense
full rules ➡️ brow.nz/frjg
Browns Thursday Night Football Tickets giveaway.
2 tix located in the #DawgPound Sec 120
Must:
Be following me
Retweet this
Be a Browns Fan
Go to the game & not resell tix
Winner randomly chosen, at noon on Wednesday; contacted and given 1 hour to respond.
Go #Browns
We have signed C Austin Hedges to a one-year Major League contract.
To make room on the 40-man, we have designated 1B Alfonso Rivas for assignment.
Welcome back, Hedgey! 😌
#ForTheLand
It's interesting that while many #Browns fans are irate about the reverse play call that resulted in a fumble, no one is complaining about the back-to-back trick plays Kevin Stefanski called earlier in the game. That's because the T-formation play for the touchdown worked, and the RB snap reverse toss to the QB almost worked (the pass was dropped).
But when two players failed to execute a toss on a simple reverse, Stefanski was once again the worst play caller ever.
Also, earlier in the game, Harrison Bryant took the snap on 3rd and 1 and got the first down. But it was called back on a false start. Then, on 4th and inches, Bryant took the snap and fumbled. We've been running QB sneak plays with Bryant all season, and yet failed player execution cost us a turnover.
We promise the Browns don't practice fumbling snaps or botching simple tosses or dropping passes in their hands. Skill players should be able to execute plays that require simple skills. Right?
Whether you like Stefanski's play calls or not, we just ask Browns fans to be consistent. Did you like the RB reverse toss to the QB when it worked? Should Kevin give up play calling even though his trick plays scored a touchdown and (almost) 2-point conversion?
#DawgPound
@thedawgspodcast An incompletion on first down and an obvious run on second down create those obvious passing downs you’re talking about. With a great run game and a rookie qb, the plays should not be 50/50 anyways…
The #Browns called 16 run plays and 29 pass plays before DTR left the game. 6 of those pass plays were in/around the 2-minute drill in the first half, and 6 more passes came on 3rd and longs. So in non-obvious passing situations, the Browns were basically 50/50 run-pass with DTR in the game.
For the whole game, the Browns actually had 24 runs and 17 passes in non-obvious pass situations. Please explain how Kevin Stefanski should have run the ball more than 58.5% of the time in those situations against stacked boxes while trying to mount a comeback.
#DawgPound