1994 Cleveland Browns season | |
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Owner | Art Modell |
Head coach | Bill Belichick |
Home stadium | Cleveland Municipal Stadium |
Results | |
Record | 11–5 |
Division place | 2nd AFC Central |
Playoffs | Won Wild Card Playoffs (vs. Patriots) 20–13 Lost Divisional Playoffs (at Steelers) 9–29 |
Pro Bowlers | FB Leroy Hoard RB Eric Metcalf DE Rob Burnett DT Michael Dean Perry LB Pepper Johnson FS Eric Turner |
All-Pros | OT Tony Jones (2nd team) DT Michael Dean Perry (2nd team) FS Eric Turner (1st team) PR Eric Metcalf (1st team) |
Uniform | |
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The 1994 Cleveland Browns season was the team's 45th season with the National Football League and 49th overall. It was the only season that the Browns qualified for the playoffs under head coach Bill Belichick. The Browns finished as the NFL's number one defense in terms of points surrendered per game (12.8 points per game). In the playoffs, Belichick got his first playoff victory as a head coach in the AFC wild card game against the New England Patriots (who would hire him less than a decade later) by a score of 20–13. The Browns would lose to the Steelers 29–9 in the divisional round.
The Browns would not return to the playoffs again until the 2002 season. This would be the last time the Browns would win a playoff game until the 2020 season.
Additions | Subtractions |
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QB Mark Rypien (Redskins) | LB Clay Matthews (Falcons) |
CB Don Griffin (49ers) | LB Mike Johnson (Lions) |
1994 Cleveland Browns draft | |||||
Round | Pick | Player | Position | College | Notes |
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1 | 9 | Antonio Langham | Cornerback | Alabama | 1993 Jim Thorpe Award |
1 | 29 | Derrick Alexander | Wide receiver | Michigan | 1992 All-American |
3 | 75 | Romeo Bandison | Defensive tackle | Oregon | |
5 | 141 | Issac Booth | Cornerback | California | |
6 | 171 | Robert Strait | Running back | Baylor | |
7 | 203 | Andre Hewitt | Offensive tackle | Clemson | |
Made roster |
Front office
Head coaches
Offensive coaches
| Defensive coaches
Special teams coaches
Strength and conditioning
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Week | Date | Opponent | Result | Record | Venue | TV | Attendance |
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1 | September 4 | at Cincinnati Bengals | W 28–20 | 1–0 | Riverfront Stadium | Tom Hammond, Cris Collinsworth | 52,778 |
2 | September 11 | Pittsburgh Steelers | L 10–17 | 1–1 | Cleveland Municipal Stadium | Tom Hammond, Cris Collinsworth | 77,774 |
3 | September 18 | Arizona Cardinals | W 32–0 | 2–1 | Cleveland Municipal Stadium | Kenny Albert, Ron Pitts | 62,818 |
4 | September 25 | at Indianapolis Colts | W 21–14 | 3–1 | RCA Dome | Jim Donovan, Beasley Reece | 55,821 |
5 | October 2 | New York Jets | W 27–7 | 4–1 | Cleveland Municipal Stadium | Marv Albert, Paul Maguire, Mary Ann Grabavoy | 76,188 |
6 | Bye | ||||||
7 | October 13 | at Houston Oilers | W 11–8 | 5–1 | Houston Astrodome | Gary Bender, Pat Haden, Kevin Kiley | 50,364 |
8 | October 23 | Cincinnati Bengals | W 37–13 | 6–1 | Cleveland Municipal Stadium | Don Criqui, Beasley Reece | 77,588 |
9 | October 30 | at Denver Broncos | L 14–26 | 6–2 | Mile High Stadium | Don Criqui, Beasley Reece, Jim Gray | 73,190 |
10 | November 6 | New England Patriots | W 13–6 | 7–2 | Cleveland Municipal Stadium | Tom Hammond, Cris Collinsworth | 73,878 |
11 | November 13 | at Philadelphia Eagles | W 26–7 | 8–2 | Veterans Stadium | Tom Hammond, Cris Collinsworth, Mary Ann Grabavoy | 65,233 |
12 | November 20 | at Kansas City Chiefs | L 13–20 | 8–3 | Arrowhead Stadium | Marv Albert, Paul Maguire | 69,121 |
13 | November 27 | Houston Oilers | W 34–10 | 9–3 | Cleveland Municipal Stadium | Jim Lampley, Todd Christensen | 65,088 |
14 | December 4 | New York Giants | L 13–16 | 9–4 | Cleveland Municipal Stadium | Kevin Harlan, Jerry Glanville | 72,068 |
15 | December 10 | at Dallas Cowboys | W 19–14 | 10–4 | Texas Stadium | Dick Enberg, Bob Trumpy, Hannah Storm | 64,826 |
16 | December 18 | at Pittsburgh Steelers | L 7–17 | 10–5 | Three Rivers Stadium | Charlie Jones, Randy Cross, Jim Gray | 60,808 |
17 | December 24 | Seattle Seahawks | W 35–9 | 11–5 | Cleveland Municipal Stadium | Dan Hicks, Cris Collinsworth | 54,180 |
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.
AFC Central | |||||||
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W | L | T | PCT | PF | PA | STK | |
(1) Pittsburgh Steelers | 12 | 4 | 0 | .750 | 316 | 234 | L1 |
(4) Cleveland Browns | 11 | 5 | 0 | .688 | 340 | 204 | W1 |
Cincinnati Bengals | 3 | 13 | 0 | .188 | 276 | 406 | W1 |
Houston Oilers | 2 | 14 | 0 | .125 | 226 | 352 | W1 |
Both Vinny Testaverde and falling third-year Bengal David Klingler were picked off twice. Testaverde got the better of the first round of 1994's Battle Of Ohio as he raced the Browns to a 28–13 lead, enough to absorb a Klingler touchdown in the fourth to Darnay Scott. The Browns won 28–20.
The Steelers ended a four-game road losing streak to the Browns as they erased a 10–0 Browns lead with 17 unanswered points. Vinny Testaverde was picked off four times in the 17–10 loss.
Quarter | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
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Cardinals | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Browns | 0 | 3 | 15 | 14 | 32 |
at Cleveland Municipal Stadium, Cleveland, Ohio
Game information | ||
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The Browns hosted Buddy Ryan, now coach of the Cardinals after his tumultuous stay with the Oilers. Ryan had to bear witness as Vinny Testaverde tossed two touchdowns and ran in a third while Jay Schroeder and Jim McMahon combined for just 26 of 58 passes with three interceptions in a 32–0 Browns shutout win.
In a 21–14 Browns win, Testaverde threw three more touchdowns as the game lead tied or changed on every score. Testaverde's scores offset scores by Marshall Faulk and Jim Harbaugh, both destined to be important rivals of Browns coach Bill Belichick in the future.
Eight years after their infamous playoff meeting, the Jets and Browns renewed acquaintances and the Browns raced to a 27–0 lead before Jack Trudeau, subbing for regular starter Boomer Esiason, found the endzone from 24 yards out. Trudeau was picked off twice as well in the 27–7 Browns win. The game was the first meeting as head coaches of Jets coach Pete Carroll and Browns coach Bill Belichick.
On a rare Thursday Night NFL game, the collapse of the Oilers following their 1993 season continued as the Browns clawed out a Vinny Testaverde touchdown, a two-point conversion, and a field goal in the second quarter, offsetting a fourth-quarter score from Billy Joe Tolliver. The 11–8 loss put the Oilers at 1–5 with the Browns now 5–1.
The winless Bengals clawed to a 13–10 halftime lead, then the Browns exploded to 27 unanswered points en route to a 37–13 rout; one touchdown came off a goalline fumble by the Bengals. Former Redskins hero Mark Rypien came in late and completed three of eleven passes.
The Browns remained haunted by the ghost of their two bitter playoff failures to John Elway as Elway led a Broncos offense putting up 457 yards of offense and 26 points to offset two Matt Stover field goals and a touchdown from Mark Rypien. The 26–14 Broncos win was only the third of their season.
Bill Belichick faced his former boss Bill Parcells and got the better of Parcells and second-year quarterback Drew Bledsoe, intercepting him four times as Mark Rypien tossed a one-yard score to Leroy Hoard. The 13–6 outcome put the Browns at 7–2 while the Patriots fell to 3–6 awaiting the Vikings.
The 7–2 Eagles were crushed 26–7 as Randall Cunningham was picked off once and held to just 242 yards of offense; the loss began a season-ending spiral for the Eagles and coach Rich Kotite.
Joe Montana managed only 169 passing yards but still got the better of the Browns 20–13 as three different passers for the Browns managed only 152 yards and a pick.
The Browns completed a season sweep of the Oilers – now under new coach Jeff Fisher – 34–10, limiting the Oilers to 182 yards of offense.
Facing his former team, Bill Belichick saw the Giants unable to reach 300 yards of offense yet still win 16–13, picking off Vinny Testaverde twice while sacking him four times. The game was a penalty-laden affair with 21 combined fouls for 162 yards.
Once again Testaverde couldn't deliver much yardage – just 118 passing yards with one touchdown and one interception – but he did produce enough for a 19–14 win over the defending Super Bowl champions. The Browns picked off Troy Aikman twice while forcing two fumbles. Matt Stover's four field goals were sufficient for the win.
The measuring stick for the Browns has always been the Steelers and once again the Browns came up short, this time 17–7. Testaverde had one touchdown and two picks while Barry Foster rushed for 106 yards and Neil O'Donnell had 175 passing yards and a touchdown. The win locked up the AFC Central for the Steelers, but the Browns nonetheless were also in the playoffs.
Vinny Testaverde scored three times, once on the ground, as five different Cleveland backs combined for over 100 rushing yards and two additional scores in a 35–7 rout of the Seahawks. With vaunted 1993 rookie Rick Mirer faltering, two different Seahawks quarterbacks combined for 229 yards and a pick.
Round | Date | Opponent (seed) | Result | Record | Venue | Attendance | Recap |
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Wild Card | January 1, 1995 | New England Patriots (5) | W 20–13 | 1–0 | Cleveland Municipal Stadium | 77,452 | Recap |
Divisional | January 7, 1995 | at Pittsburgh Steelers (1) | L 9–29 | 1–1 | Three Rivers Stadium | 58,185 | Recap |
Quarter | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
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Patriots | 0 | 10 | 0 | 3 | 13 |
Browns | 3 | 7 | 7 | 3 | 20 |
at Cleveland Municipal Stadium, Cleveland, Ohio
Game information | ||
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The Browns intercepted three passes from New England quarterback Drew Bledsoe and halted an attempted comeback in the final minutes of the game to clinch the victory.
Aided by quarterback Vinny Testaverde's completions to receivers Michael Jackson and Derrick Alexander for gains of 27 and 23 yards, Cleveland moved the ball 74 yards in eight plays on their opening drive and scored on Matt Stover's 30-yard field goal. They got another chance to score when Louis Riddick returned an interception 16 yards to the Patriots 33, but they could only gain one yard on their next three plays and decided to punt.
In the second quarter,r New England took a 7–3 lead on a 60-yard drive that ended with Bledsoe's 13-yard touchdown pass to running back Leroy Thompson. However, Cleveland tight end Brian Kinchen returned the kickoff 24 yards to Brown's 49-yard line and the team quickly drove 51 yards to retake the lead at 10–7, with Testaverde rushing twice for 14 yards and completing two passes for 29 total yards to Jackson on the way to throwing a 5-yard scoring pass to Mark Carrier. New England responded by driving 71 yards in 17 plays to score on a 23-yard field goal by Matt Bahr, tying the game at 10 going into halftime. The key play of the drive was a fake punt on fourth and 10 on the Browns 43, in which punter Pat O'Neill completed a 21-yard pass to Corwin Brown.
Cleveland started the third quarter with a drive to the Pats 17-yard line but lost the ball on an Eric Metcalf fumble that was recovered by Patriots defensive end Mike Pitts, the Browns' only turnover of the game. After forcing a punt, Cleveland drove 79 yards in nine plays. Testeverde completed a 25-yard pass to fullback Leroy Hoard and a 14-yarder to Jackson, while Hoard eventually finished the drive with a 10-yard touchdown run to put the Browns back in front at 17–10.[6]
New England had some success moving the ball on their next two drives, but both ended with Bledsoe interceptions. On the second one, Eric Turner picked off a pass from Bledsoe and returned the ball 28 yards to the New England 36 with seven minutes left in the game. From there, Cleveland managed to run the clock down to 3:36 before Stover's 21-yard field goal gave them a two-score lead at 20–10. However, New England put together a 63-yard drive to score on Bahr's 33-yard field goal with 1:33 remaining. New England then recovered the ensuing onside kick, but after gaining a first down, Bledsoe threw four straight incompletions and the ball was turned back to Cleveland on downs.
Testaverde finished the game 20/30 for 268 yards and a touchdown. His top target was Jackson, who caught seven passes for 122 yards. This was the last postseason win for the Cleveland Browns until the 2020 season.
This was the first postseason meeting between the Patriots and Browns.[3]
Quarter | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
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Browns | 0 | 3 | 0 | 6 | 9 |
Steelers | 3 | 21 | 3 | 2 | 29 |
at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Game information | ||
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Pittsburgh had defeated Cleveland twice during the season and proved to be more than capable of doing so again. Aided by running back Barry Foster's 133 rushing yards, the Steelers controlled the game by scoring on their first three possessions and holding the ball for 42:27. The Steelers finished the game with 424 yards of offense, including 238 yards on the ground, while holding the Browns to a mere 186 total yards.
On Pittsburgh's opening drive, they moved the ball 65 yards in 13 plays to score on Gary Anderson's 39-yard field goal. Cleveland had to punt on their next drive, and Tom Tupa's kick went just 26 yards to the SSteeler's47-yard line. Pittsburgh then went 53 yards in eight plays, including a 21-yard completion from Neil O'Donnell to Ernie Mills, to go up 10–0 on O'Donnell's 2-yard touchdown pass to tight end Eric Green. On the Steeler's next possession, Foster rushed three times for 40 yards as the team drove 74 yards to score on John L. Williams' 26-yard touchdown burst with 9:03 left in the second quarter.
After being completely dominated up to this point, Cleveland finally caught a break when Mark Carrier returned Mark Royals' 43-yard punt 20 yards to the Steelers 30-yard line, leading to Matt Stover's 22-yard field goal to cut the lead to 17–3, but in the closing seconds of the quarter, Steelers cornerback Tim McKyer intercepted a pass from Cleveland quarterback Vinny Testaverde and returned it 21 yards to the Browns 6-yard line. O'Donnell then completed a 9-yard touchdown to wide receiver Yancey Thigpen with 16 seconds left in the first half.
In the third quarter, the Steelers drove 72 yards to go up 27–3 on a 40-yard Anderson field goal. In the final quarter, the Browns took advantage of a 35-yard pass interference penalty on Steelers cornerback Deon Figures, converting it into a score with Testaverde's 20-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Keenan McCardell. But on their next drive, the Cleveland quarterback was sacked in the end zone by Pittsburgh safety Carnell Lake for a safety with 2:45 left in the game.
O'Donnell finished the game 18/23 for 186 yards and two touchdowns. His top receiver was Mills, who caught five passes for 117 yards. This was the first playoff win for Steelers coach Bill Cowher, who had watched his team get eliminated from the playoffs in the first round in each of the past two seasons.
This was the first postseason meeting between the Browns and Steelers.[3]