BEREA, Ohio (AP) -The last time they played on a Monday night, the Cleveland Browns wore hideous brown pants unlikely to ever be seen again.
The fashion faux pas was hardly the most humiliating thing that happened.
The New York Giants made the Browns look silly on national TV.
“They embarrassed us,” Cleveland linebacker Andra Davis said Monday. “So that’s going to give us a little extra fire.”
Back on Aug. 18, the defending Super Bowl champions scored 30 unanswered points in the first half – 16 in a span of 76 seconds – against the Browns in a preseason game. Cleveland (1-3) lost quarterback Derek Anderson to a concussion and four other starters to injuries that night and haven’t been the same team since.
Now coming off their bye week and as healthy as they’ve been in a month, the Browns face a daunting Monday night rematch with the Giants, who improved to 4-0 on Sunday with a 44-6 win over the Seattle Seahawks.
Davis grimaced as he recalled Cleveland’s prime-time debut dud in 2008.
they did well, and everything we did, we did wrong,” he said. “It gave the world a false sense of what we know we can do. This is a good opportunity to show the world that we’re definitely way better than what we put out there in preseason.”
The Browns, whose lone win came against Cincinnati on Sept. 28, used last week to heal physically and soothe some mental bruises they’ve already absorbed during a rough first four games of the season. Coach Romeo Crennel dismissed his players last Thursday, giving them a three-day break from football for the first time since they opened training camp in July.
Crennel expects to have linebacker Willie McGinest (groin), right tackle Ryan Tucker (hip surgery) and wide receiver Donte’ Stallworth (quadriceps) back for the Giants. McGinest has missed the past two games and Stallworth has yet to play in the regular season after signing a seven-year, $35 million free agent contract.
Return specialist Joshua Cribbs is also closer to 100 percent. The Pro Bowler, who has been slow to recover from a high ankle sprain sustained while returning a kickoff in the exhibition loss to the Giants, said the lopsided loss can be a motivator this time around.
“We took that to heart,” Cribbs said. “They embarrassed us. That will add an extra chip on our shoulder. We want that win most of all. We’re looking for some payback.”
lay any worse than they did during their second preseason game. They rallied to lose only 37-34, a final that only looked respectable on the scoreboard. When New York’s starters and Cleveland’s starters were on the field, it was a colossal mismatch made more dramatic because of the Browns’ self-destructive play.
They were penalized for 98 yards in the first quarter alone, but still managed to take a 3-0 lead on Phil Dawson’s 56-yard field goal.
Less than 10 minutes later, the Browns trailed 30-3.
Later, Browns general manager Phil Savage describes the meltdown as “that spell of 5 to 10 minutes where we lost our minds.”
Cleveland gave up two first-quarter touchdown passes to quarterback Eli Manning, who found Domenik Hixon both times for a 14-3 lead. Then, during a mind-numbing stretch, the Browns came completely unglued as the Giants blocked a punt out of the end zone for a safety, Hixon returned the ensuing free kick 82 yards for a TD and New York safety James Butler scooped up a botched handoff to Jamal Lewis and went 95 yards for a score.
“Everything went wrong, everything,” Davis said. “It was crazy. And the injuries.”
Lewis hurt his hamstring trying to catch Butler after the fumble, and on Cleveland’s first possession after the Giants blew it open, Anderson sustained a concussion on a sack by Osi Umenyiora.
n, with the emphasis suddenly on getting to the Sept. 8 opener against Dallas without expanding its injury list.
Only now, though, are the Browns getting well, and by the time kickoff comes around on Monday, they should be more complete than at any time this season. Feeling better is nice, but the Browns will need to play at a level they haven’t come close to yet in order to bring down the Giants, who are off to their best start since 1990.
Along with a much-needed win, the Browns gained some confidence with their win over Cincinnati. Potentially, a victory over the Giants in Cleveland’s first regular season Monday night appearance since 2003 would bring even more.
“It could definitely turn the season around to beat the Super Bowl champs and do it on national television,” Davis said. “We’ll be ready to go.”
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