Browns sticking with Anderson
Posted Oct 26, 2009 8:10 PM
 By TOM WITHERS
(AP)
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BEREA, Ohio -One day after another humiliating home loss, a few Cleveland defensive players spent part of their afternoon betting each other on who could shoot a ball from behind a laundry bin into a garbage can across their spacious locker room.
After several minutes and misfires, something became evident.
They're not very good at made-up games, either.
The Browns (1-6) seem stuck in reverse. Their offense — ranked 31st overall — has managed just four touchdowns in 81 possessions this season. Their defense — ranked dead last — can't tackle, can't cover, can't blitz, can't do anything. After Sunday's 31-3 win over Cleveland, Green Bay quarterback Aaron Rodgers said the Packers' scout team did a better job during practice last week of simulating Cleveland's defense than the real Browns.
Cheap shot, 15 yards.
Sadly, Rodgers was right.
And simply put, the Browns are horrible.
On Monday, coach Eric Mangini was asked if he plans to bench Derek Anderson, the NFL's lowest-rated quarterback, for backup Brady Quinn or anyone else.
"No," Mangini offered, shaking his head.
So, you're sticking with him?
Mangini nodded.
Anderson went 12 of 29 for 99 yards against the Packers, whose veteran cornerbacks shut down Cleveland's wide receivers and forced the Browns QB to throw to his backs and tight ends. Anderson has completed just 23 of 70 passes in the past three games and now has an overall 40.6 rating — nearly seven points behind the league's second-lowest ranked QB, Oakland's JaMarcus Russell.
Yet despite the atrocious stats, Mangini feels Anderson gives his team the best chance to win and will not switch back to Quinn, who began the season as Cleveland's starter but was replaced after only 10 quarters.
"I think he gives us the best chance right now to move the ball," Mangini said of Anderson. "I know his numbers have not been impressive, but he isn't alone in producing those numbers. There's been a significant amount of drops. There's been times where we had chances and there's been some breakdowns in protection.
"I've also seen him complete some balls that were well thrown and well caught. I've seen him complete those plays not just in games, but also in practice."
Anderson is grateful for Mangini's support, but knows he must improve or he will lose his job.
"I need to get better," he said. "All of us have to look at what we can do to get better. We watch plays and we're just one guy off. I miss a throw by a yard. It was really close on a lot. We left a lot of offense out there yesterday. It's frustrating."
Imagine then, how Quinn must feel.
He won the starting job over Anderson following their drawn-out battle through training camp and the exhibition season only to have it yanked away after only 2 1/2 games.
Still, Quinn is taking the high road, giving all the right answers.
Quinn insists he is not perplexed why he's not getting another shot, and says he's not dwelling on something he can't control. He hasn't been pushing Mangini or offensive coordinator Brian Daboll to put him in again — that's not his style — and said he has no personal problems with his coaches.
"There are a lot of things I can do to get better," said Quinn, who made three starts last season before he was sidelined by a finger injury. "We follow our head coach and whatever our head coach says, we go with."
Mangini maintains his decision to stick with Anderson is not because the team is trying to avoid paying Quinn $11 million he would earn this season if he plays in 70 percent of the team's offensive snaps.
"Nothing," Mangini said when asked if the money was a factor. "Zero. Nothing to do with it."
Quinn doesn't think his contract has anything to do with him being demoted and kept on the sideline.
"No," he said, "and I hope that's not the case. This is a game of football and we're just trying to win out there."
It's not happening and the losing is taking its toll on everyone in Cleveland. The Browns have lost 12 of 13 overall and eight straight at home.
On Sunday, a few sick puppies in the Dawg Pound wore paper bags over their heads to hide their shamed faces. Other Browns fans chanted vainly for Quinn, who never got the emergency call from Mangini. Thousands more fled Cleveland's lakefront stadium at halftime, hoping to salvage part of a crisp autumn afternoon.
This was not the place to be.
The stands were so empty in the third quarter that Rodgers barked his signals and said everyone on the field could hear him.
"Very quiet," he said.
Mangini understands the fans' frustration and knows its up to him and his players to do something about it.
"It's important for us to give them something to cheer about," he said. "That's what we have to do. It' a passionate group, and I respect that. We need to continue to move forward and make sure that nobody wants to leave the stadium."
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
2009-10-26 20:37:46

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COMMENTS ( 8 )
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SALLYJOandDANAS
2:41PM Oct 27 2009 
Lerner is a worthless.Mangini is worthless.Time to demand the team be sold to the fans.I am done watching this bullcrap until something is done about Lerner and his staff.
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Kinkboy1121
11:40PM Oct 26 2009 
Londoners are being quoted as saying that Randy Lerner thinks London would be a great city for the NFL. Roger Goodell was interviewed on the Sunday night game and confirmed the NFL is trying to expand their customer base, but a franchise is down the road in his opinion, he said.

Yeah three years down the road. The ghost of Randy Lerner is already working on history repeating itself in Cleveland Ohio. Like Model hired Bill Belicheck and drove the franchise into the ground, turning off fans, Randy Lerner hires Eric Mangini to do the same. The fans will abandon the stadium because the team will not be competive, and boom when no one's looking, the ghost of Randy Lerner swoops into Cleveland packs up the team, just like his Dad Al Lerner did, and we lose our franchise to London.
Randy Lerner just hired his patsy Bernie Kosar to try to restore his image so he can turn a buck in the process. Bernie broke and bankrupt takes the money cause he needs it and we lose our team because the local writers aren'********** the store.
Why else would a coach stick with the worst passer alive in the NFL, but to turn off fans, and it will work.... Lerner is instructing him in the background. Mangini plays the bad guy just like Art the traitor had Bill Belicheck do the dirty work. And don't think the NFL will stop Randy Lerner either. Lerner hates Cleveland and he'd like nothing more to be like his daddy, and slap our other cheeks on his way to London.... remember he's a hero there.... just like Model's a hero in Baltimore.
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Dodgerammer97
10:31PM Oct 26 2009 
Season is done! Put Quinns butt back in for the remainder. If he stays in one piece for the rest of the season, he is worth the bonus. Heck anyone playing for the Brownies deserves some sort of bonus!
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Kinkboy1121
6:10PM Oct 26 2009 
Mangini is deliberately ruining this kid's future and should be fired if we had a real owner. When Anderson got booed by fans when he was hurt, he vowed he'd get even with Cleveland. The ghost of Randy Lerner has rarely been seen in Cleveland. He has a record of 34-69 since inheriting the team, a pathetic 1 win for every three games, he's 1-15 against Pittsburgh, and he has all but killed football in Cleveland like the Grinch who stole Christmas. I've heard present and past players say if the owner don't care about Cleveland, why should we. Mangini brought in 17 of the 22 defensive and offensive starters, proof he has no eye for talent, cause not one of them could start on another NFL team.... so why would I trust him with 11 draft choices next year.... fact is I wouldn't trust this coach to pick my nose if I didnt have fingers.
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CHIL44124
5:20PM Oct 26 2009 
I blame the owner. Learner has no clue how to hire decent coaches or run a football team. He flies in for the game from his mansion on Long Island, smokes a few cigars and back he goes. He's clueless.
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Darthsprayer
4:51PM Oct 26 2009 
Mangini is an idiot, the money has everything to do with it. He'll bench Quinn after two and a half games with no O line, and getting sacked 9 times in 8 quarters of play. But he'll keep that duck slinging Anderson in their who dont have a clue, give me a break. This is a pathetic coach who seems to not have a clue what he's doing. But before all of this crap he trades our two best recieving threats in Winslow and Edwards. I know Edwards has the dropsies, but he was a real threat to burn you deep. So here we go into rebuilding mode for the next 3 years, WHAT A JOKE!!!!!
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Websterthom1
4:21PM Oct 26 2009 
I think we need a quaterback better than both Quinn, Anderson can the dog pound say Michel Vick.
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Dagoody
4:09PM Oct 26 2009 
what a bunch of bs. Mangini has turned true browns fans into steeler fans.
Plain and simple truth, Anderson is not better than Quinn. It is a shame that the coach will use the lame excuse that D.A gives better chance to win. Come on. Look at the stats and see he only gives a better chance a landing the number 1 pick.
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