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BOX SCORE
PITTSBURGH (AP) -- If they accomplish nothing else in their expansion season, the Cleveland Browns have mastered the art of the improbable comeback.
| | Browns rookie Tim Couch passed for 199 yards and two touchdowns. |
Tim Couch, sacked repeatedly and unable to lead Cleveland past midfield most of the game, threw two touchdown passes and Phil Dawson hit a 39-yard field goal as time expired as the Browns stunned the Pittsburgh Steelers 16-15 Sunday.
The upset was one of the most remarkable in the 49-year history
of the Rust Belt rivalry. It was made all the more improbable by
the Steelers' 43-0 opening-night romp in Cleveland, when the Browns
(2-8) had only two first downs.
"This had to tear the living hearts out of the Pittsburgh Steelers," defensive tackle John Jurkovic said. "Too bad for them."
The loss, the fifth in their last six home games, could prove catastrophic to the Steelers' playoff hopes. And their eardrums.
"If we don't get better, there's not going to be any playoffs
for the Pittsburgh Steelers," safety Lee Flowers said. "We've
been up and down, up and down all year. Nobody's pointing fingers,
but it's time for us to start playing."
Flowers said coach Bill Cowher didn't blow up but, "You know
how he is. I'm sure we'll hear it tomorrow. You can't come in here
Monday not expecting to get yelled at."
The Steelers (5-4), who had won three straight, dismissed
suggestions they took Cleveland lightly. But Flowers bragged
beforehand how they could easily pad their defensive statistics.
They did, sacking Couch six times while building a 15-7 lead
with 10:10 left on Kris Brown's third field goal. But the Browns (2-9), who hadn't crossed midfield since driving 80 yards for a
touchdown on their opening possession, got a huge break when John
Thierry intercepted Kordell Stewart's screen pass and returned it 8 yards to the 15.
"That play's been very effective for us, but they were looking for it and they fell right into it," Steelers tackle Wayne Gandy said.
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GAME NOTES |
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Steelers CB Chad Scott (sprained right knee) and CB Deshea
Townsend (concussion) were injured, forcing third-team CB Jason Simmons to play the second half.
Cleveland's Kevin Johnson had five catches for 73 yards.
Pittsburgh's Kris Brown kicked field goals of 41, 32 and 47 yards, and is 15-of-16 in his rookie season.
Cleveland's rookie quarterback Tim Couch has been sacked 35 times.
Steelers C Dermontti Dawson (hamstring) missed his third
straight game.
The Browns had only five interceptions in 10 games before intercepting Stewart twice on Sunday.
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Karim Abdul-Jabbar ran to the 5, where Couch hit fullback Marc Edwards on a swing pass two plays later to cut it to 15-13 with 5:12 remaining. The Steelers kept the lead when Travis Davis and Earl Holmes stacked up Abdul-Jabbar inches short of the goal line on the 2-point attempt.
A key penalty helped the Browns during the decisive drive, which
came two weeks after Couch's 56-yard TD pass on the last play upset
the New Orleans Saints for Cleveland's first win since returning to
the NFL.
"The game in New Orleans was a tough way for them to lose," Couch said. "But we earned this one."
Couch's teammates said he was remarkably composed before the final drive.
"I could see that gleam in his eye," Abdul-Jabbar said. "He
kept talking to the guys and telling them we were going to pull it
out. He has a lot of poise for a young quarterback."
Couch, who was 18-of-28 passing for 199 yards, found Darrin Chiaverini for 23 yards, and 15 yards were tacked on when reserve linebacker Mike Vrabel smacked Couch with a forearm to the helmet.
Three plays later, with the Browns scrambling to get lined up
with no time outs, Dawson directed a kick into a stiff wind just
inside the left upright for the Browns' first victory in eight
games against Pittsburgh since 1993.
"The wind was really blowing. I thought if it was inside the
25, it would be realistic," Dawson said. "The wind was coming out
of the tunnel. The only thing you can do is aim down the middle and
hit it as hard as you can."
He did, and the aftershock might be felt in Pittsburgh for
weeks. As they left the field, the Steelers -- 1-3 at home this
season -- were showered with boos.
"The fans have a right to be upset," linebacker Earl Holmes said.
Only a week before, the Browns were embarrassed 41-9 by the
Baltimore Ravens, who abandoned Cleveland after the 1995 season and
left the city without an NFL team for three years.
Sunday's turnaround was reminiscent of 1989, when the Browns
beat the Steelers 51-0 in Pittsburgh in the opener, only to lose to
the Steelers 17-7 in Cleveland.
Until the dramatic finish, the Steelers dominated defensively,
holding the Browns to two first downs after Couch led a five-play
opening drive finished off by his 35-yard scoring pass to Kevin Johnson with 2:35 gone.
Couch's fumble inside the Browns 10 led to Pittsburgh's only
touchdown, Richard Huntley's 5-yard run in the third quarter. The 2-point attempt failed as Stewart was tackled on a keeper.
Stewart never did find a groove, going 15-of-32 for 137 yards -- his fourth straight game under 150 yards. Jerome Bettis carried 26
times for 99 yards.
"This one really hurts," Stewart said. "This one will be real hard to digest."
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