Browns have faith in new head coach

September 20, 2005

BEREA, Ohio — It took 25 years in the NFL for Romeo Crennel to get his first win as a head coach.

So it was only appropriate that quarterback Trent Dilfer gave Crennel the game ball after Cleveland upset Green Bay 26-24 on Sunday.

Even more fitting though was that Crennel gave the ball right back.

“As soon as Trent gave it to me, I said, ‘This game ball belongs to the 2005 Cleveland Browns,’ because it was a team effort,” Crennel said. “I think that they deserve it because they are the ones who applied themselves, went to Green Bay and were able to pull out that victory.”

Crennel’s gesture embodied the team-first attitude he’s been trying to instill in an organization that had been searching for an identity through six mostly dismal seasons.
Cleveland Browns

His unselfishness certainly made an impression on his players.

“It talked about the kind of man that he is and as a player you always want this kind of coach,” rookie wide receiver Braylon Edwards said yesterday. “You always dream to play for this kind of coach.”

Edwards was one of several players who spoke of their admiration for the former New England defensive coordinator.

“It seems like he’s been a head coach for 20 years,” Dilfer said. “He knows what buttons to push, and he treats us with a great deal of respect.”

Although Crennel’s wait to become a head coach was a long one, the wait for his first win was shorter than expected and came in the most unlikely of places — Lambeau Field, where the Browns were 0-5 dating back to 1964.

In addition to receiving and giving back the game ball, Crennel was doused with Gatorade by offensive coordinator Maurice Carthon after the win.

“He took it with good spirits,” center Jeff Faine said.

But Crennel spoke stoically to reporters afterward and again showed little emotion yesterday. He said he took some time to reflect on the win during the flight home, but didn’t do anything to celebrate other than enjoy congratulatory phone calls from his wife and daughters.

“You don’t have time to celebrate in the NFL,” he said. “You go home, get into bed and wake up the next morning to break down the film. Then you start getting ready for Indianapolis. If you do anything different, chances are you will be sorry the next week.”

It’s a mantra that his players parroted in the locker room yesterday.

“We are excited, but there are more games left,” guard Joe Andruzzi said. “You can’t focus on this one. You have to put it behind you and you have to go on to the next one.”

Despite years of success as an assistant, Crennel was passed over for several head coaching jobs. At times, he wondered if he would ever get his chance.

Crennel, who doesn’t regularly wear any of the five Super Bowl rings he earned with New England and the New York Giants, has taken a workmanlike approach in Cleveland. He’s preached patience for a team that went 4-12 last season while displaying a quiet confidence the team will gradually improve.

His first victory as a head coach won’t change that outlook.

“This week will be the same,” he said. “Let’s do it right on the practice field and in the classroom, and hopefully we can get it right in the game.”

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