Author: John Blake (Page 7 of 68)

Where’s Joe?

At 6’5″, wide receiver Joe Jurevicius ordinarily is not tough to spot on a football field. Unless he’s in a Browns uniform. After Week 5, he has caught just 6 passes. Granted, one of them was for a touchdown and he has been bothered by bad ribs. A poor offensive line doesn’t help matters much either. Without time, Charlie Frye can’t throw to anybody. Some of the blame can arguably be placed on the line but there’s really no excuse for not getting Jurevicius involved in the offense more. Yet another mistake by much-hated Maurice Carthon.

For whatever reason, the Browns continue to try to get the ball to Dennis Northcutt, who continues to drop passes. Carthon and the offense hardly is even looking in Joe’s direction. After seeing Jurevicius catch the fade route for a touchdown against the Raiders, I was partly in a sense of shock. I almost forgot he was still on our team. Here’s a guy who caught 10 touchdowns last season with the Seahawks. Reuben Droughns and Jerome Harrison each have more receptions this season than Jurevicius. Terry Pluto comments on, among other things, #84’s lack of presence in the offense.

Forget cloning the fullbacks and put wide receiver Joe Jurevicius on the field more often. The guy was good enough to be a regular for the Seattle Seahawks, catching 10 touchdown passes for a team that went to the Super Bowl.

But he has been behind Dennis Northcutt in the past two games.

Don’t even ask why… it’s sort of like the fullback option pass.

You want a couple of inches for a first down? Throw the ball to Jurevicius. He’s 6-foot-5, 232 pounds. He catches nearly everything he touches.

Even the diplomatic Frye said they need to involve Jurevicius more into the offense. Most fans were saying the same thing Sunday.

Numerous times during the Carolina game, I couldn’t help but notice Jurevicius being given a 10-yard cushion on a few occasions. Just throw the ball right to him right after the snap and let him pick up some yards. Same goes for every other Browns receiver. If you see a large cushion being given by the defender, throw it to them right away the way Jake Delhomme utilized Steve Smith. It’s almost an easy 5 yards. Force the defense to tighten up the coverage and set them up for the deep ball. With Carthon at this point, I can only shake my head at his boneheaded offensive philosophy.

Turnovers, penalties doom Browns

Offensively, the game started out promising with the Browns marching down the field for a field on their first possession. However, a quick Carolina interception return for a touchdown off the hands of Dennis Northcutt was the turning point. The Panthers took hold of the momentum and never looked back, beating the Browns 20-12 Sunday afternoon.

The Panthers’ front four, especially Julius Peppers, disrupted the Browns and put pressure on Charlie Frye for most of the day. The offensive line also committed some key holding penalties that kept the Browns from getting into any sort of offensive rythym. Joshua Cribbs gave the team a spark with a couple of big returns but the Browns unfortunately had to settle for field goals.

Tribe cruises to another victory

The Indians got three solo home runs, two by Casey Blake, as they wiped away the Devil Rays for the third straight night. The teams had to endure another rain delay but it didn’t seem to matter as the Tribe eased to a 6-1 win. Ryan Garko, Victor Martinez, and Blake all had two hits apiece and Shin-Soo Choo homered for the first time since his grand slam in Boston. Jake Westbrook was solid once again. He allowed the lone run through seven innings as he earned his 15th win of the season. Westbrook, who finished the 2006 campaign with a 4.17 ERA, has a $6.1 million option for next season and after performances like this, it would be in the Indians’ best interest to pick it up.

“I expect [Westbrook] to be back,” Wedge said before Saturday’s game.

Baxter still ailing

Cornerback Gary Baxter will miss his second consecutive game this Sunday with a pectoral strain.

“My arm feels kind of weak, like it’s not a part of my body sometimes,” he said. “I’m doing everything I can to rehab, lift weights and get some strength.”

Cosey Coleman and Brian Russell were upgraded to probable and several others remained questionable but still participated in all the drills. Willie McGinest and Kellen Winslow, Jr. were held out parts of the team practice. Crennel has said in regards to those two that he wants to take it easy with them and make sure they are ready for Sundays and not do too much with them during the week. It would undoubtedly be a huge loss if Winslow and McGinest are unable to go but I hope the coaching staff is just being extra cautious with them.

Indians walk to victory

The Tribe barely had to take the bat off of their shoulders to win this one. With the game tied at 1 in the bottom of the ninth, all the Indians had to do was watch as two Tampa Bay relievers combined to walk four batters to give the Tribe a 2-1 win. Jhonny Peralta let ball four pass with the bases loaded for his second RBI of the night.

“That was a professional at-bat by Jhonny,” Michaels said. “That was a tough situation. With one out and that guy throwing 175 mph, it was a good at-bat.”

In his second major league start, Indians pitcher Brian Slocum got the win as he struck out five in six innings. The Tribe only managed five hits but it was all they would need as they won for the sixth time in their last seven games. It wasn’t your typical last at-bat dramatic victory, but the Tribe will take what they can get. They have put together a nice string of wins here at the end of the season and have a chance to finish on a very positive note.

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