With no sports on the docket right now, we have become quite nostalgic about the state of Cleveland sports.
Today, we turn our attention to the Cleveland Browns.
Our first remembrances of the Browns was the 1965 season, a year in which, get this, Blanton Collier’s squad were the defending NFL Champions.
At that point in time, the Browns had been in existence for 20 years and had one losing season, a 5-7 mark in 1957. To that point, they had won four NFL and four more AAFC (All American Football Conference) championships.
They were arguably the crown jewel franchise of professional football, something my father said often and with pride.
We remember the ’65 title game, played in the mud at Lambeau Field in Green Bay, with the Browns coming up short, 23-12, in what proved to be Jim Brown’s last game in the NFL.
We watched at an aunt’s house, and she had a color TV, which was rare at the time. Talk about a great memory.
At that time, you won the Conference and you went to the championship game, they did have something called the Playoff Bowl, which matched the second place team in each conference.
Why? Who knows.
Even when the Browns didn’t win the Eastern Conference, they were still very competitive, finishing second three years, usually behind their hated rivals, the New York Giants, and finished third twice.
After dropping the title game to Lombardi’s Packers in ’65, the Browns finished second in ’66 to Dallas, and the following season, the NFL went to a four division set up, and the Browns won three straight Century Division (why? who knows) titles, advancing to the post-season.
They got lambasted 52-14 by Dallas in 1967 in the Eastern Conference playoff, but gained revenge, beating the Cowboys the next two seasons to advance to the NFL title game.
Jim Brown retired, but Leroy Kelly replaced him and became one of the top runners in pro football. Frank Ryan, the QB who led the Browns to their last title, was replaced by Bill Nelsen (acquired in a trade from Pittsburgh, of all teams), and he led Cleveland to within one game of the Super Bowl in ’68 and ’69.
Unfortunately, the Browns weren’t competitive in either contest, losing to the Baltimore Colts 34-0 in the first year, and then to Minnesota 27-7 the following year.
They still had one of the best receivers in the game in Paul Warfield, but the defense was mostly bend, but don’t break.
There was a reason the Browns played in the first Monday Night Football game in 1970. They were good, damn good, and for the most part, year in and year out.
Before that season, with Nelsen aging, the Browns traded Warfield to Miami so they could be in a position to take Purdue QB Mike Phipps, who finished 2nd in the Heisman Trophy voting, and followed NFL stars Len Dawson and Bob Griese in college.
Phipps never became what the Browns envisioned.
Cleveland finished 7-7 in 1970, the first year of the merger when they voted to the AFC to be in the same division as Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, and Houston. For those younger readers, the Browns, Steelers, and Colts agreed to join the existing AFL teams.
Nick Skorich, the new coach, got the aging Browns into the playoffs in ’71 and ’72, the latter year with Phipps at the helm, but they lost to the Colts and the Miami Dolphins (with Warfield and on their way to an undefeated season).
Even then, they never collapsed. Yes, they finished 4-10 in 1975 and 3-11 in 1976, but by ’78, they were a .500 team at 8-8.
By the time the Kardiac Kids had their heyday in 1980, the Browns had played 30 seasons, and had just four losing seasons.
Hard to fathom that right now, isn’t it?
MW