Cleveland Browns can hold off pressing panic button (for now…)

Eric Mangini is safe for one more week after the Browns defeated the Bengals on Sunday, 23-20.

It is speculated that Mike Holmgren might consider firing Mangini if the Browns reached 0-4. The firing of Mangini would also undoubtedly have resulted in the firing of offensive coordinator Brian Daboll. This would have left the Browns in complete disarray and with the reality of another disappointing season.

The coaches and the fans can thank the team for a well played game that resulted in a win.

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A Bold Browns Prediction (Part 1)

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The beginning of the NFL season is nearly upon us. The first week is the only time that every squad is undefeated —  including the Lions and Rams. That should last for a good few hours.

The Browns, however, are no longer in the same discussion with the Lions and Rams.

Cleveland has completely redone the look of their team during the offseason. The main addition was adding Mike Holmgren as basically the head of anything football related. He is not the head coach (yet), but if the team doesn’t preform, he might be seen on the sideline again.

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A Look at the AFC After Week 3

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It’s only Week 3 and the NFL already has provided plenty of great moments and stories.

You have the Jets emerging as a threat with rookie QB Mark Sanchez and the Ravens rolling right along with 2nd year QB Joe Flacco, but you also have the duds and the disappointments.

Lets have a look at all 32 AFC teams.

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Packers Plagued By Penalties and Pressure In Loss to Bengals

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packers-bengals recap | mike mccarthy, packers head coachWhere did the high-powered offense go?

Where is this vaunted Packers defense?

For the second straight week, the Green Bay offense was inconsistent. The defense, which bailed the Packers out against Chicago, couldn’t stop the run in their 31-24 loss to Cincinnati Sunday afternoon at Lambeau Field.

Bears castoff Cedric Benson looked like a Pro Bowler while gashing the Packers defense for 141 yards on 29 carries. It was pretty clear the Packers still have some issues against the run, and they’re still without first-round pick B.J. Raji, who missed his second straight game with an ankle injury.

The Bengals were also 9-of-14 on third down conversions as the Packers defense even allowed a third-and-34 conversion late in the second quarter.

Instead of punting from its own end zone, Cincinnati then had the ball near midfield. One play later Chad Ochocinco burnt Jarrett Bush for a 44-yard gain. That led to a controversial touchdown for Carson Palmer on a quarterback sneak.

The official who initially signaled for the touchdown had his vision of the play obstructed by Ochocinco. Although replays appeared to show that not only that the ball did not break the plain, but Palmer also fumbled as he raised the ball up over the heap of bodies.

Referee Ed Hochuli called it a touchdown, the first of two crucial mistakes he made. The second came in the game’s waning seconds.

With the Packers trailing 31-24 with 10 seconds remaining, Donald Driver caught his sixth pass over the middle at the Cincinnati 10. The Packers rushed to the line, and the ball was snapped with a second remaining, and before a pair of Bengals were able to get back on their side of the line of scrimmage. A flag was thrown, and the assumption was for offsides.

Instead, Hochuli’s crew ruled that tight end Jermichael Finley was not set and moved early.

Hochuli’s explanation was that time expired before the ball was snapped, which was false, but “even if the ball was snapped before time expired, there was a false start on the play, which requires a 10-second runoff. The game is over.”

The loss overshadowed a stellar performance from Charles Woodson, who picked off Palmer twice, returning one for a touchdown to give Green Bay a 21-14 lead in the second. He also led the team with nine tackles, seemingly being the only defensive player to show up to play.

Backup defensive backs Aaron Rouse and Jarrett Bush were both forced into more playing time because of injuries to starting safeties Atari Bigby and Nick Collins, who left early in the second quarter.

As poorly as the Packers played on defense, the offensive line was worse. Green Bay (1-1) managed just 89 rushing yards – 43 of which came on four Aaron Rodgers scrambles, and Rodgers was sacked six times. Five of those sacks came from Cincinnati defensive end Antwan Odom, who now has seven sacks in two games.

Odom abused the Packers line, especially after tackle Chad Clifton was carted off the field with an ankle injury. Whether he was lined up over Allen Barbre or Daryn Colledge, Odom was in Rodgers’ face the entire game.

Not helping Rodgers were the receivers, who dropped six passes as Rodgers finished 21-of-39 for 261 yards and a three-yard touchdown toss to Driver in the first. Driver led the Packers with six catches for 99 yards, but Greg Jennings was held without a catch.

The Driver score tied the game at 7-7 after the Bengals (1-1) scored on their opening possession. Palmer and Benson easily led them downfield, averaging 10 yards per play before a 5-yard touchdown pass to Laveranues Coles.

Woodson’s first interception set up a four-yard touchdown run from Ryan Grant, who struggled to find holes for the second straight week. He finished with 46 yards on 14 carries, a 3.3-yard average, and a crucial fumble that led to Cincinnati’s go-ahead score in the third.

The Packers special teams also struggled, giving up punt returns of 60 and 32 from rookie Quan Cosby that both led to scores. Mason Crosby also badly missed a 55-yard field goal.

Both teams played sloppy football. Cincinnati was flagged 13 times for 100 yards while the Packers had 11 penalties for 76 yards.

The Packers were a nine-point favorite, but the linemen were flat on both sides of the ball. With the St. Louis Rams and Steven Jackson next on the schedule, if the Packers don’t figure out how to stop the run, they could fall victim to another disappointing upset.

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* – Mike McCarthy photo credit: The Red Zone Report

Bengals round robin backfield, Benson to start Week 7

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photo credit: 007NASCARCovert
photo credit: Chris Breeze

Straight out of left field, the Bengals Press Box announced that Cedric Benson is listed as the starting running back over Chris Perry.  It should be noted that Perry is active for today’s game.

What an unbelievable turn of events for Perry and the Bengals, who must have seen something in Chris Perry to just release Rudi Johnson.  And then there’s Benson, who could not buy a yard in Chicago. 

I don’t recommend starting Benson or Perry today against a strong Pittsburgh Defense, and a Bengals offense starring Ryan Fitzpatrick at the QB position.  I do however recommend picking up Benson just in case he looks like he did in college, a bonafide workhorse.  Benson is available in 90% of fantasy leagues. 

 

Kurt Fraschetti

profootballinsight@live.com