Browns may need to take ‘next man up’ to extremes vs. Raiders
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[December 17, 2021] "Next
man up" is a favorite adage of every football coach.
But "next 20 men up?"
That's the predicament the Cleveland Browns are in for Saturday's
game against the Las Vegas Raiders, due to a COVID-19 outbreak that
likely will leave the Browns without their starting quarterback,
their backup QB and their head coach, among others.
The Browns learned Wednesday that starting quarterback Baker
Mayfield and head coach Kevin Stefanski tested positive and landed
on the reserve/COVID-19 list. On Thursday, backup QB Case Keenum
reportedly went on the COVID list after testing positive, leaving
fourth-year quarterback Nick Mullens as the probable starter for
Saturday.
As of Thursday evening, the Browns had 20 players on the COVID list,
including at least 11 starters, according to cleveland.com.
Yet the Browns (7-6), who start Week 15 outside the AFC playoff
picture after Sunday's 24-22 home victory over AFC North leader
Baltimore, are projecting confidence in the face of mounting odds.
"That is where we are," Stefanski said. "We have been here before. I
do not feel much different than I felt yesterday in terms of
everybody has to step up depending on who is available."
Cleveland is in the NFL's enhanced protocols, which means daily
testing for all tiered personnel, and full-time masking. The Browns
held separate walk-throughs on Wednesday for offense, defense and
special teams.
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If Mayfield and Keenum can't play Saturday, Mullens
would start his 17th NFL game, with special-teams coordinator Mike
Priefer as interim coach and offensive coordinator Alex Van Pelt
calling plays.
All of Mullens' starts came for the San Francisco 49ers from
2018-20.
Priefer and Van Pelt guided Cleveland to a 48-37 first-round playoff
win at Pittsburgh in January when Stefanski was sidelined due to
COVID-19.
"I think the guys proved last year they don't need me," joked
Stefanski.
Meanwhile, the Raiders (6-7) are pretty much in win-or-else mode
after an embarrassing 48-9 defeat Sunday at Kansas City dropped them
three games out of first in the AFC West with four games remaining.
To sneak into a playoff berth, the Raiders probably
need to win out and get help down the stretch. But one thing that
interim coach Rich Bisaccia says won't enter the equation is
frustration or disappointment after such a poor performance.
"I think it's a wasted emotion," he said. "I'm just trying to look
at from my perspective, as coaches, ‘What can we do better? How can
we help them, put them in better situations or better positions to
help them play a little better?'
"I think all the emotions are just feelings that we have of what we
didn't do very well and how we'd like to fix them."
Las Vegas has lost five of its last six games after going into its
bye week at 5-2. Sunday's blowout to the Chiefs featured nine
penalties, five turnovers and four sacks in a comprehensive
meltdown.
The Raiders own a 14-10 advantage in the all-time series with the
Browns, including a 16-6 victory last year in Cleveland.
--Field Level Media
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