CLEVELAND, Ohio (92.3 The Fan) – With Joe Thomas and dozens of Browns Legends looking on, Nick Chubb put on a show.
Unfortunately, the Browns melted down in the final two minutes for one of the most epic collapses you’ll ever see.
The Jets, trailing 30-17, scored 14 points in the final 1:55 to stun the Browns 31-30.
Here are our Top Takeaways from Sunday’s disaster.
1. Of all the Browns losses, that was one of the worst snatching defeat from the jaws of victory in the expansion era that you’ll ever see.
2. There’s just no excuse – defense and special teams for that collapse. Lack of focus and execution came back to bite them.
3. Credit the defense for another nap at an inopportune time. They fell asleep for the third time in two weeks and allowed Joe Flacco to find Corey Davis wide open for a 66-yard touchdown to cut the lead to 30-24 with 1:22 remaining. Then they gave up a quick 9-play, 53 yard drive capped by Flacco’s 15-yard touchdown to Garrett Wilson to win it with 22 ticks remaining.
4. New York recovered the onside kick to give themselves life. In a world where onside kick recoveries are as rare as Browns playoff appearances these days, that’s a play Mike Priefer’s unit has to make.
5. Last week Cade York was the hero. Sunday, he takes it on the chin. His missed PAT after Chubb’s third touchdown was the difference on the scoreboard and prevented overtime.
6. Chubb will be a Browns Legend someday and like Joe Thomas, another brilliant performance was wasted Sunday. Final numbers: 17 carries, 87 yards, three touchdowns plus three catches for 26 yards. Chubb carried seven times for 34 yards and caught a pass for 7 more and capped it with a 4-yard touchdown run on their opening drive for a 7-0 lead. In the fourth quarter Chubb accounted for 56 of the Browns 75 yards on the go-ahead TD drive. He cut back, lowered his shoulders and pounded it in from seven yards out to put Cleveland in front 24-17 before adding a 12-yard run with just under two minutes to play to almost put the game away.
7. The opening drive was a downright offensive clinic by the Browns to go up 7-0. They executed the screen game well, used a variety of personnel groupings and tackle eligible formations. Brissett was an efficient 5-5 for 39 yards and he ran twice for 17. In all: 14 plays, 90 yards and a 7-0 lead with Chubb’s assistance.
8. Cleveland’s second offensive series was the Amari Cooper drive. Cooper capped it with a six-yard touchdown catch, his fourth on the drive totaling 48 yards. It was a 10-play, 61-yard march. Cooper finished with a team-high nine catches for 101 yards and the score.
9. Rookie running back Jerome Ford showed why he was active over D’Ernest Johnson. Ford ripped off a 44-yard kickoff return out to the 39 to set up the Browns’ second possession.
10. The Jets, desperate for a spark, faked a punt to keep their second possession alive. Punter Braden Mann found Jeff Smith for a 17-yard gain and a first down to the Cleveland 37. New York cashed it in and tied the game on Flacco’s two-yard touchdown pass to Garrett Wilson, who shook Martin Emerson out of his shoes on his break at the goal line.
11. Jets kicker Greg Zuerlein became the first player to kick a field goal from Brownie - his 57-yarder tied the game at 17 with 14:19 remaining in the fourth quarter.
12. Jadeveon Clowney suffered an ankle injury that sent him to the medical tent, then the locker room in the third quarter. He did not return and his status will bear monitoring with a short week and the Steelers in town Thursday night.
13. The Browns promised a different stadium atmosphere and they delivered. The team built a dog pen for player introductions, complete with a gate and two dogs standing attention and blowing smoke above the fence. Joe Thomas smashed a guitar on an oversized amplifier that blew smoke to ‘Sweet Child of Mine.’ They played scoreboard karaoke with a fan. Selfie cam on the scoreboard, great idea, when the wifi works. The best part, Brownie the Elf was finally painted on the 50. But the Browns gave fans exactly what they’ve been used to seeing on the field since 1999.