There are performances to be proud of. Then there’s games where you have to dust-off the history books and show this film repeatedly over the years as the standard for excellence.
The Cleveland Browns defensive whipping of the Cincinnati Bengals falls in the latter category. The Bengals were limited to just three points, 165 yards of offense and converted just three of their 17 third downs – equaling out to a dismal 17 percent.
Andy Dalton was at the forefront of the steamrolling. He was held to a 2.0 passer rating, the worst for a Bengals quarterback since 1994. Dalton also became only the fifth quarterback since 1969 to complete less than 30 percent of his attempts, throw for under 100 yards while also throwing three interceptions.
It was a nightmare for Bengals fans. Why was Dalton clearly so uncomfortable the whole night? The Browns have figured themselves out as an entire defense: an aggressive, confident, bark-and-then-bite you unit, who will prey once they smell blood in the water.
It took some time, but the Browns’ defense is now a dangerous weapon on full-display. Those inconsistencies we saw in September seem like eons ago.
“We figured out what we are good at,” said
Skrine has been a large part of the secondary that’s been derailing offensive game plans since the Oct. 12 win against the Steelers. Safety
But the crown jewel of the night from the secondary was cornerback
“We kept the pedal down and we never wanted to just feel comfortable,” said Haden about the way the Browns played defense. “This is a different Browns team. It’s just us playing together.”
Coach Mike Pettine and defensive coordinator Jim O’Neil’s scheme can reach heights Browns fans have not yet seen if Haden can continue to take away top-shelf receivers – just like cornerback Darrelle Revis famously did for the New York Jets.
“It started with Joe matching up on A.J.,” Pettine told reporters after the game. “It was big for us to have Joe tracking him for most of the way and to have the success that he had. I thought our secondary covered as well as they have.”
With the secondary humming like an engine on a sports car, it bought more time for the defensive line and pass rushers to create even more chaos in Dalton’s face. And they stole his lunch money.
The pressure from the pass rush was constant, and effective.
The effort was spearheaded by
“Thursday night is a huge thing and a divisional game. As players, we live for moments like this,” said an inspired Bryant in the locker room following the win. “Our goal is to make it to the Super Bowl. A 6-3 record is a likely step along the way.”
Even better,
The Houston Texans, who are on a bye this week, loom next at FirstEnergy Stadium. You better believe coach Bill O’Brien and newly minted quarterback Ryan Mallet aren’t going to enjoy looking at what they see on film from the Cleveland Browns defense.

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