1957 Cleveland Browns season

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1957 Cleveland Browns season
Head coachPaul Brown
Home fieldCleveland Stadium
Local radioWGAR
Results
Record9–2–1
Division place1st NFL Eastern
Playoff finishLost NFL Championship
(at Lions) 14–59

The 1957 Cleveland Browns season was the team's eighth season with the National Football League. They were 9–2–1 in the regular season and won the Eastern Conference title, but lost the championship game to the Detroit Lions, 59–14.[1][2][3][4]

Season summary[edit]

The Browns missed the playoffs the previous season, ending ten straight years of league championship game appearances. The Browns came storming back in 1957 to finish 9–2–1 and win the Eastern Conference title by a relatively healthy margin over the defending world champion New York Giants (7–5). The Browns took care of business against the Giants, "bookending," as it were, their arch rivals. They beat New York 6–3 in the season opener and then edged them again 34–28 in the finale. The Browns also posted two shutouts on the year, 24–0 over the Pittsburgh Steelers and 31–0 over the Chicago Cardinals.

The Eastern foe the Browns had the most trouble with was fourth-place Washington (5–6–1). Cleveland edged the Redskins 21–17 and then had to settle for a 30–30 tie in the rematch. The Browns fell to Detroit 20–7, making them 0–3 against the Lions in the regular season since joining the NFL in 1950.

Although they had a rookie All-American running back out of Syracuse by the name of Jim Brown, the Browns were by no means an offensive juggernaut overall. The future Hall of Famer was outstanding, rushing for 942 yards and nine TDs, but he was the only real standout that year. Tommy O'Connell, who had taken over for retired Hall of Famer Otto Graham in 1956 and was the quarterback during the 5–7 finish that year, had the job for most of the way in 1957 as well. He and rookie Milt Plum combined for just 1,873 yards passing 12 touchdowns with 14 interceptions.

Schedule[edit]

Exhibition[edit]

Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance
1 August 14 at Detroit Lions L 10–20 0–1 Briggs Stadium 40,150
2 August 24 vs. Pittsburgh Steelers W 28–13 1–1 Rubber Bowl 26,669
3 September 1 at San Francisco 49ers L 17–21 1–2 Kezar Stadium 32,840
4 September 6 at Los Angeles Rams L 14–20 1–3 Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum 45,011
5 September 14 Detroit Lions W 23–7 2–3 Cleveland Municipal Stadium 34,369
6 September 20 at Chicago Bears L 3–29 2–4 Wrigley Field 47,354

Regular season[edit]

Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance
1 September 29 New York Giants W 6–3 1–0 Cleveland Municipal Stadium 58,095
2 October 5 at Pittsburgh Steelers W 23–12 2–0 Forbes Field 35,570
3 October 13 Philadelphia Eagles W 24–7 3–0 Cleveland Municipal Stadium 53,493
4 October 20 at Philadelphia Eagles L 7–17 3–1 Connie Mack Stadium 22,443
5 October 27 at Chicago Cardinals W 17–7 4–1 Comiskey Park 26,341
6 November 3 Washington Redskins W 21–17 5–1 Cleveland Municipal Stadium 52,936
7 November 10 Pittsburgh Steelers W 24–0 6–1 Cleveland Municipal Stadium 53,709
8 November 17 at Washington Redskins T 30–30 6–1–1 Griffith Stadium 27,722
9 November 24 Los Angeles Rams W 45–31 7–1–1 Cleveland Municipal Stadium 65,407
10 December 1 Chicago Cardinals W 31–0 8–1–1 Cleveland Municipal Stadium 40,525
11 December 8 at Detroit Lions L 7–20 8–2–1 Briggs Stadium 55,814
12 December 15 at New York Giants W 34–28 9–2–1 Yankee Stadium 54,294
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.

Standings[edit]

NFL Eastern Conference
W L T PCT CONF PF PA STK
Cleveland Browns 9 2 1 .818 8–1–1 269 172 W1
New York Giants 7 5 0 .583 6–4 254 211 L3
Pittsburgh Steelers 6 6 0 .500 5–5 161 178 W1
Washington Redskins 5 6 1 .455 4–5–1 251 230 W3
Philadelphia Eagles 4 8 0 .333 4–6 173 230 L2
Chicago Cardinals 3 9 0 .250 2–8 200 299 L1
Note: Tie games were not officially counted in the standings until 1972.

Postseason[edit]

Round Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance Recap
Championship December 29 at Detroit Lions L 14–59 0–1 Briggs Stadium 55,263 Recap

NFL Championship Game[edit]

1 2 3 4 Total
Browns 0 7 7 0 14
Lions 17 14 14 14 59

Scoring

  • DET – FG Martin 31
  • DET – Rote 1-yard run (Martin kick)
  • DET – Gedman 1-yard run (Martin kick)
  • CLE – Brown 29-yard run (Groza kick)
  • DET – Junker 26-yard pass from Rote (Martin kick)
  • DET – Barr 19-yard interception (Martin kick)
  • CLE – Carpenter 5-yard run (Groza kick)
  • DET – Doran 78-yard pass from Rote (Martin kick)
  • DET – Junker 23-yard pass from Rote (Martin kick)
  • DET – Middleton 32-yard pass from Rote (Martin kick)
  • DET Cassady-yard pass from Reichow (Martin kick)

Awards and records[edit]

  • Jim Brown, NFL rushing leader, 942 yards
  • Tommy O’Connell, NFL leader, passing yards, (1,229)

Milestones[edit]

  • Jim Brown, First Rushing Title

References[edit]

  1. ^ Johnson, Chuck (December 30, 1957). "Rote's passes, play calling smash Cleveland, 59 to 14". Milwaukee Journal. p. 7, part 2.
  2. ^ Sell, Jack (December 30, 1957). "Lions crush Browns, 59 to 14, to win title". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. p. 18.
  3. ^ Jones, Eddie T. (December 30, 1957). "Browns show off collapsing defense". Toledo Blade. Ohio. p. 11.
  4. ^ Maule, Tex (January 6, 1958). "All hail the lusty Lions". Sports Illustrated. p. 8.

External links[edit]