Monday, 7 October 2013

Browns 37, Bills 24

I went to a Bills playoff in Cleveland in January of 1990 - the season before they began their 4 year Superbowl run. Cleveland won the game 34-30 after Ronnie Harmon dropped the game-winning touchdown pass from Jim Kelly in the endzone in the dying seconds of the game. On the following play, Kelly was intercepted by Clay Matthews to seal the win for the Browns. There are 2 things I remember very clearly from that game: first, Bills receiver Don Beebe jumped high to catch a pass, was hit in the air and made NFL highlight reels for years to come by then bouncing vertically off the top of his head. He was not injured. The other memory from that game was a kick-off return by Eric Melcalfe of the Browns. As a fan of the visiting team, I was not participating in the roaring of the crowd as he broke through the wedge and coasted from his own 40 yard line. As opposed to a goal in hockey for example, a kick-off return for a touchdown affords the crowd a good 10-15 seconds of frenzied cheering before the play ends and I remember looking around the stadium (the old Cleveland Municipal Stadium) at the crowd and thinking that Cleveland fans must be among the best in the NFL. It was deafening.

The Browns and the Bills share more than Lake Erie waterfronts. Both franchises have had success in the past but, in recent years, both teams have been very disappointing to their loyal fan bases. Art Modell even moved Cleveland's team to Baltimore and the city had to then press the restart button with an expansion team. Both teams have been dismal since 1999 which was the last year that the Bills made the playoffs and the year that the new expansion version of the Browns first took the field. So, because both are struggling rust belt cities with dedicated working class fan bases, because of the recent on-field sorrows they share and because I have been to a game there, if the Bills are to lose a game, it may as well be to the Cleveland Browns. Plus, they have the Rock 'n Roll Hall of Fame.

The most entertaining game of week 5 took place in Dallas yesterday. Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo and Denver quarterback Peyton Manning put on an a spectacular offensive show in the Broncos 51-48 win. But the story from the game will probably be that Tony Romo once again found a way to make a critical mistake at the end of the game by throwing an interception deep in his own territory. Manning then got the Broncos close and simply ran out the clock to set up the game winning field goal as time expired. Romo has a strong arm, can scramble when he needs to and shows himself to be a strong competitor but, as Rodney Harrison pointed out last night, when crunch time comes, he seems to worry about making a critical mistake. Then he makes it. But, he's still probably better than whoever is going to be under centre for the Bills for next few weeks.

As of Friday, there were 7.500 unsold tickets for the Bills next two home games - against Cincinnati and Kansas City - and about 10,000 left for the remaining two games against the Jets and Miami. At 2-3 and with the franchise quarterback EJ Manuel on the shelf with a knee injury, Bills fans are likely to experience 4 local black-outs this year after the team sold out the first 3 home games. At least we will be able to watch the Toronto game against Atlanta as it will certainly be "sold out". In fact, it already is.


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