After two weeks of brutal AFC North contests, the battered Cleveland Browns climbed the NFL’s toughest division. For the first time in 15 tries, Cleveland beat their division rivals, the Baltimore Ravens and Pittsburgh Steelers, in consecutive weeks. Those unprecedented wins significantly improved their playoff chances.
- 52.7 percent three and out rate (highest rate this century).
- Opponents have gained zero or negative yards on 43.4 percent of snaps (highest rate this century).
- Allowed only 243.3 yards per game, the fewest since the 2008 Steelers.
- 131.68 Expected Points Added (EPA), 27 more
Rightfully, their godly defensive end now stands as the favorite for Defensive Player of the Year at +100, with Micah Parsons (+230) and T.J. Watt (+340) struggling to keep up.
With their offense running on spare parts, the defense will need to continue their game-wrecking ways. Garrett spoke to their unrelenting resilience:
We’re as tough as it gets. We’re going to be resilient down the stretch. We’re going to be consistent.
We’re going to keep on fighting. Doesn’t matter what happens throughout the game. You’re going to get the very best out of us for 60 minutes or more depending on what happens.
Sadly, due to Joe Burrow’s season-ending injury, the AFC North looks only slightly less daunting. Even with the Cincinnati Bengals likely to drop out, the Steelers, Ravens, and Browns would all be vying for divisional leads if they could transfer to anywhere besides the AFC North.
According to Rahul Mukherjee of Axios, this gulag of a division owns a 67 composite win percentage, roughly 15 points higher than the next closest division (AFC South).
To win the AFC North, the Browns must catch the 8-3 Ravens, who remain a half-game ahead.
ProFootballNetwork ranked the Baltimore Ravens with the second most challenging remaining schedule, behind only the Bengals.
For context, the Browns came in 16th, thanks to games against the Denver Broncos and Chicago Bears.
If they end with the same record, it comes down to divisional wins and losses. For now, they are tied at 3-2, which means the end-of-season contests featuring the Browns in Cincinnati and the Ravens at home against the Steelers may ultimately decide who wins the division.
The NYT simulator put Cleveland’s AFC North chances at just 29 percent, likely due to how well the Ravens have played. More worryingly for Browns fans, it set their Super Bowl chances at just 3 percent.