What’s Wrong With the Tribe ?

Is "everything" an acceptable answer?
Is “everything” an acceptable answer?

Right now the panic and visions of 2011 and 2012 are swirling through all Tribe fan’s heads. That is understandable for a traumatized fan base and a struggling franchise. I have previously posted that THIS Cleveland Indians team is worthy of your support. I see absolutely NO reason to change that stance and this post is the real “reality check” for Indian fans.

It is very easy and trite to say “Here we go again” as the team struggles and Don Kelly (a .190 hitter) crushes a three run homer off Justin Masterson to give the Tigers a 4-1 lead. Now there is a very high percentage chance that the Tigers will sweep from the Tribe and we will be fading away 2 games below .500. Others will tell me “Well, there is your reality check. We stink.” I will tell you that, as long as we play this bad, you will look like a genius and I will look like an idiot. When the team begins to move forward again, you will be no where to be found with your “reality” check and I will be enjoying baseball again. I prefer enjoying baseball.

I am not blind to the obvious about this version of the Cleveland Indians. From the very early days in Spring Training when all were praising the virtues of our bullpen, I was telling you cracks are developing in that bullpen. Unfortunately, the crack is now a hole and we need to be creative about patching it up. Most fans certainly knew that Mark Reynolds was not a reliable third baseman and we were secretly hoping he would never play there. We also knew that our starting pitching was a serious question mark and that counting on Ubaldo is like playing Vegas. We all felt the team would hit fairly well and be able to score runs but that Nick Swisher was not a “savior” level player to carry us to the promised land. All of these things are true and I do not support this team through rose colored glasses.

But when even solid and lifelong Tribe fans begin to question the quality of this team compared to the 2011 and 2012 versions and are questioning whether or not Francona is as good a manager as we thought he would be, it is clearly a traumatized fan base squealing out again in pain. I am in pain as well and see no end in sight to the pain. But that is the beauty of baseball. Teams will look lost for games at a time (as the Indians certainly do now), and suddenly for no apparent reason will begin to play solid again. For an individual hitter, maybe it means a bloop hit they didn’t expect to get. Or a pitcher makes a bad pitch with the bases loaded and the batter pops up instead of slamming a homer. Maybe the other team gets sloppy and walks guys, makes an error, and you bloop one in to score two. Maybe it is just luck. But, as those things start to happen again and they always do, the team relaxes and things start to fit together. Instead of the dribbler being thrown away by your defense, he throws a seed to the first baseman to get the out. Two bloops are followed by a blast and you are up 3-0. A starting pitcher steps up and throws a 3 hit shutout and you win 2-0. Next thing you know, as Manager Brown says “You call that a winning streak.”

Baseball, more than other “physical” team sport, is a game that relies on all pieces of the team to either complement each other or for one piece to “carry” the other ones. Unless either hitting or starting pitching is “smoking hot”, the team will not win unless defense and bullpen pitching is exceptional and some good fortune comes their way. Baseball is a team skill game that cannot be compensated for by brute force. Football, hockey, and even basketball can be influenced by physical play. Therefore when you get mad or frustrated you can at least pancake a guy into the ground, battle for rebounds and commit hard clean fouls, or slam a guy into the boards and rattle his chain. All of these things can clearly influence a game because you can do them more than once. In baseball, when you get mad and play frustrated, you often fail at the plate, on the mound, or in the field. The key is to relax and to let your personal skill take over. Do something you have done for your whole life with confidence and a blind eye to failure. Don’t try to do too much, stay within yourself and rely on your teammates to keep things going if you have a single instead of a home run. This is ABSOLUTELY easy to talk about and difficult to do. That is why team meetings about these types of things often don’t work. The only way they work is if the team is more relaxed after the meeting than they were before.

That is also where fans come into play. I would argue that a great enthusiastic crowd at a baseball game that comes with positive instead of negative energy will relax a baseball team. If the team comes home to boos and negative chatter and empty seats, we will be now another component of the team to be dysfunctional. I don’t imply by that the team will respond with a winning streak simply because fans show up and have positive energy. But to give up an entire season and all the money spent (FINALLY) by the ownership before the season is even half way gone makes absolutely no sense. The Indians now are 2 games below .500 as I write this and we have just lost the game to Detroit. That is not exactly like being 15 games below .500 and out of the race. The reality check is that, if we give up on a vastly superior team with a chance to sustain some winning for a few years this early, we are reacting emotionally and acting like we don’t understand baseball. I have strongly supported the Cleveland fans as knowledgeable and insightful fans. I think we will show that when the team finally comes home. I certainly will do that and I hope you will too.

A team is never as bad as they are when they are losing in bunches and never as good as they are when they are winning in bunches. The 2013 Cleveland Indians have shown both and are still not out of the race by a long shot. They are probably a .540 – .560 team with an outside chance to make the playoffs. As time goes on, we will see that develop and they will be much more fun to watch and support. Right now, it is downright sickening.

CAVS GET FIRST PICK !! (now what?)

cavs logo from TV Like most Cavs fans I was very happy that we were fortunate enough to get the first overall pick in the 2013 NBA draft. Now comes the hard part. What does Chris Grant do with the many assets the Cavs are fortunate enough to have acquired over the past 3 years? And I think that is the key question after this fortunate draft lottery result. This off-season for the Cavs goes far beyond “What do the Cavs do with the first pick in the draft?” As I outlined in my support of the Indian’s off-season, they put together a “package” of moves that resulted in plugging holes, securing the weakest areas of the team other than starting pitching (power, right-handed hitting, outfield), and not sacrificing the future. It was done with a combination of strategic trades, free-agent signings, and good use of their young talent. This is exactly the approach that the Cavs must take. So what they do with the first pick in the draft is just one part of the bigger puzzle.

I think that all of us need to be realistic about what can and cannot be done by the Cavs or predicted by the media and fans. Since the Cavs have won the first pick, there are even more rumors and predictions about what they might do. I have learned one thing by watching the Cavs management and Chris Grant over the past three years. No fan or media member will have any idea about what Grant will do until it is about done. All of you who are watching the rumor mills daily to get a clue about the Cavs will be terribly disappointed when none of the rumors ever sniff reality. I used to follow them until I realized that I was wasting my time with Chris Grant at the helm. For those of us who want the Cavs to succeed, that is probably a good thing.

It is also going to be a bit tough to trade out of the first pick and get full value in this draft. Without a clear number one superstar pick, the market for that pick might not be what it would be in most years. Plus, it is rare for any NBA team to trade the number one pick. I think the odds are that we keep the pick and use it. Although I will be interested to hear the many fan initiated “trades” of the first pick, don’t expect the Cavs to pull off a series of 4 draft moves that includes trading the first pick. They are fun to talk about but rarely realistic. If the Cavs do trade the pick, it will be big news.

The main thing going for the Cavs is that I think they have more flexibility and options than virtually any team in the NBA. Because of that, Grant needs to remain focused and very strategic to upgrade the roster significantly and not sacrifice the future. The cap space, multiple draft pics in this draft and beyond, our young talent pool, AND the power of having the number one pick this year all factor into what Grant can do to build the Cavs into a perennial power house. If he uses the “assets” he has acquired wisely, it will be a great future for the Cavs. If squandered, we will end up as a perennial middle of the road team with little hope of a title.

The Cavs are giving hints to everyone about their short-term and long-term objectives. Repeated references to the long three years of suffering by Cavs fans and that they don’t want to be going back to the lottery again all points to this off-season being very active and different from recent ones. Some veteran acquisitions are likely but it is not clear by what means they will accomplish that task or how far they will go to get them. Obviously, it has to be trades or free agency but the market might determine what approach they take. In my opinion, every attempt to add via free agency as opposed to trading away valuable young players should be explored. Free agency may not be a realistic possibility to add impact talent in Cleveland, but we need to explore it aggressively. If it looks impossible, then the trade route might be the only way.

There are many thoughts about how to approach free agency this off-season. Some feel we should avoid it altogether because it will limit the Cavs flexibility moving forward. Others feel we should add some “middle of the road” free agents and save most of the cap space. A few think we should go after big free agents and try to add impact talent. Most fans, in my opinion, think we should save virtually all our cap space to make a monster push for free agents in 2014. Many pointing to the possibility of LeBron using his early opt out option and returning to the Cavs. That is the thinking that bothers me the most. If the Cavs employ ANY strategy that includes counting on LeBron returning in 2014, it will end in devastation and embarrassment. Don’t misunderstand, I am not against him returning if he really wants to do so and is willing to sign a contract without another “coronation” ceremony tour of the NBA. But I think the chances of that happening are slim and none.

Since I favor free agency as the best way to add veteran talent and not trading away the young talent we have worked so hard to acquire, I think the Cavs should strongly consider trying to add one impact free agent this off-season if at all possible. Even adding two and using most of our cap flexibility would be acceptable if it were the right two. Sadly, there are few SF free agents that will be available over the next two years that will really solve our problem there. So, again, creativity will be key. I am actually opposed to adding “complementary” free agents this off-season just to make the playoffs. To me, that is wasting cap space. We tried adding a bunch of complementary free agents when LeBron was here and we all know how that worked out. Pay big and go big seems right to me.

If we take the impact free agent approach, there really are not very many other than the “gang” that could exercise their opt-out option in 2014. That is a circus I really don’t want to join. So a couple of names that might fit the bill and are not aging is Al Jefferson and Andre Iguodala. Maybe, if it is clear to both of them that we are trying to add them both, they might consider it. We would have to clear some cap space to do this, but we could do that. We still would have some cap space coming free in 2014 and would not use our mid-level exception. So complementary pieces could be added if needed later. Iguodala would solve our SF problem and improve our defensive presence. Jefferson would be a great starter along side Andy and our rotation of Thompson/Zeller/Jefferson/Varejao would be solid and potentially championship caliber. We would still have Miles and Gee to back up Iggy this year but, eventually, we will need to let them go and add a young backup SF to develop. I am fully aware that this would likely not be possible as Iguodala probably will not exercise his early termination option. If he does not, we could still clear enough cap space for making a run at Deng in 2014. And, yes, there is always that other guy.

If the Cavs could take that approach, they would still have all of their picks this year and not trade Waiters or Thompson. They could afford to take McLemore with the first pick and the rotation of McLemore, Waiters, Irving and Ellington would be solid and possibly spectacular. Waiters would need to play the backup point guard minutes, but I think he could do that effectively. Of course, that is an 11 deep rotation so one or two of those names would not be playing regularly.

The Cavs could use the other picks to move up and pick up a developmental Center who has great potential. There are a ton of them in this draft. Or maybe we find that small forward to develop. Or a back-up point guard. If we take this approach, we actually can draft to develop a few players instead of depending on them.

This is only one way to accomplish our goal of making the playoffs in 2013-14 and not mortgage the future. There are dozens of other, probably better, options to consider going forward. Strategic trades with teams needing to clear cap space and having players that fit our needs are also possible. I personally favor strategies that do not include trading any of our four top draft picks in the last two drafts. If we could get Jefferson for only money with a PER of 20.99 last year instead of trading a ton to get Aldridge with a PER of 20.45, it just makes sense to me. Both are very good players. Jefferson is just a bit below Aldridge in my view. The critical variable in all of that is if no impact free agent will sign with us. That is a variable that I can not accurately weigh before the Cavs actually try.

So let’s buckle up and enjoy the ride. I have a distinct feeling that Grant will start to push hard to fill the Cavs holes and secure the Cavs future. I only hope that he makes the right moves and saves whatever he needs to for 2014. Not with the idea of signing back the one who left but with the idea of making the Cavs a championship caliber team for years to come.

Follow me at @cwins_jim on twitter and we will keep an eye on this together. I am looking forward to it and welcome your comments and questions.

An open letter to Cleveland Indians Fans

An Open Letter to Tribe Fans

May 20, 2013

Dear Indians Fan,

Hey our team is in first place! I know what you are thinking, “We’ve done this the past two years and have fallen flat on our faces. It is just going to happen again. I’ll wait until August and September to see if they can keep it up.” Well, what if I could convince you that this isn’t a mirage and that the team will stay this competitive for the rest of the year. Would you catch the Indian Fever now and get down to the ballpark for this series with the Motor City Kitties? I’ll do my best!

The biggest strength of this club is the offense. “What?!? I thought our bullpen was our best asset!” I love our bullpen, but after watching 40 games I’m on board with this offense. Yes, they strike out a lot, but they also walk a ton. They are top ten in both categories. (10th in Ks and 8th in walks). They are #1 in OPS, 7th in AVG, and 2nd in HR. Why the offensive explosion? The lineup is full of guys who have been there and done that. In the past we were always hoping that guys would live up to their potential. This group has a track record, we know what to expect from them and they have expectations for themselves. Instead of the pressure of trying to make a name for themselves, they just go out and play the game. Also, the lineup is versatile. It has more interchangeable parts than this guy. Michael Brantley has hit just about everywhere in the lineup. Aviles has played all over the diamond. While Giambi is hitting .188 he has 12 RBI in 48 AB. Swisher was brought in to play first and filled in out in right field when Bourn went down. They have dealt with injuries beautifully and have continued to build continuity.

The question mark is and always has been starting pitching. It seems to me that this coaching staff has done outstanding work building this group up and working out some of the kinks. Ubaldo has been very good for the past 3 weeks. He has stayed in control of his mechanics and is PITCHING instead of throwing. (The rose must be in the front.) Masterson looks, sounds and has been pitching like a true ace. McAllister is developing a pitch (split/change) at the Major League level and has looked darn good doing it. Kluber struggled against the Tigers but so do most fifth starters. Kazmir other than his hiccup today is doing the job we want him to do. Now the biggest question is “Will this hold up?” I say it does. The bullpen has struggled lately but I will still take it against anyone.  Best part is, it hasn’t cost us a game yet.

“Thanks for the info but you still haven’t sold me on why I should believe.” Ok I’ve been holding this card until the end but it looks like you are forcing my hand.  Terry Francona. That’s it. He is a World Series champion manager. He has been there, done that and know how to get it done.  He does a lot of little things behind the scenes that make the difference in this ball club. He refuses to look ahead. He won’t even throw the media a quote to put in their paper about the upcoming stretch of baseball. He gets his staff to the ballpark early on a getaway day in Philly to set the tone. He never panicked early on when Kipnis and Cabrera were struggling. He hasn’t overreacted to big days from the bench guys and rode their hot streak into the ground. He hasn’t run the same reliever out there no matter what the situation. He has shown trust in his players and I think after this stretch it is time to trust our team!

There are a ton of reasons to stay home. This, cheaper food and also this are great reasons. But come on, for one night get down to the park, stand and cheer for your team and be a part of the ride. Enjoy the good times while there here and get ready for an Indian Summer!

 

CWinsChris

@cybelieves

“Cleveland Wins” blog – Looking ahead to the next few months.

This Sports Blog Will Not Quit
This Sports Blog Will Not Quit

Over the past couple of weeks the writers at Cleveland Wins have concentrated on the Browns because of the recent NFL draft and the beginning of a new Minicamp soon. Plus, Cleveland fans never seem to get enough of the Browns. But as the weather gets hotter and the NBA season draws to a close, our attention will turn more completely to the Indians and Cavs.

With the draft lottery to come and the actual NBA draft after that, there will be plenty to cover for the Cavs. Look for more draft player analyses and strategic commentary on the direction the Cavs should go this off-season. Much of the material has already been developed and just hasn’t reached the blog yet. We hope you like our NBA draft commentary and discussions on the Cavs. Much of our material is meant to be thought provoking and to create a bit of controversy.

With the baseball season now in full swing, you will see more and more commentary on our Tribe. They have been playing well of late and we might have something to say about that as well. This is starting out as a very interesting season for the Indians and I think we should all take a close look at this team and support them.

Again, I would welcome your comments and appreciate your support. Have fun with Cleveland Wins and there is more good stuff coming soon. We don’t have a large enough writing staff to add new material daily, but our plan is to increase the frequency of posts for you to enjoy. However, we will not just put out a blog post for the sake of adding content. We will be sure to have something interesting to say first!

I would also like to point out that www.waitingfornextyear.com is an excellent blog and something you should check out daily. Their content updates faster and the quality is excellent. They also have links to other good sports sites.  Another good site for Cavs content is www.realcavsfans.com. I think the premier site for pure Indians content is www.indiansbaseballinsider.com. Tony and his crew do a fabulous job. There are many other good blogs out there and Cleveland Wins hopes to be one of your “go to” sites on the web.

Rob Chudzinski will get no free pass with fans

Brownie image

Up to this point, Rob Chudzinski has flown well below the radar screen with the Browns fans. That is about to change as we approach our next minicamp and the focus turns more clearly to the team. Needless to say the Browns fans and media have had so much to worry about off the field they have had little chance to look elsewhere. The curmudgeon (as I affectionately call him), Joe Banner, has taken the heat off Chud in this early phase of the new Browns regime. Our owner has also done a great job of assisting in keeping the focus off Chudzinski. Now I personally wish he had chosen another path to do that but what do I know?

In my Browns draft analysis (thank you to the hundreds who read that) I outlined why we, as fans, have solid reasons to distrust the front office as we enter this newest “reboot” of the “new” Browns history. Joe Banner, Mike Lombardi, Jimmy Haslam and everyone above Chudzinski now must prove their worth for the fans to get behind them. Haslam has the additional burden of just staying out of jail and/or remaining the owner of the team. This was not how I, and I suspect most of you, expected things to go as the initial burst of enthusiasm with our new owner sizzled through the atmosphere. We expected a solid owner beyond reproach with an unbridled enthusiasm for the Browns and flair for success. His status began to stutter as he started “his” Browns with the hiring of Joe Banner. Adding Mike Lombardi simply added to the skepticism as did his abrupt “departure” from the Browns because of his “love” for Pilot Flying J. All of this happened even before the bombshell hit with the FBI raid, which we all now know likely prompted Haslam’s shift of focus. So any “free pass” that existed for all of them drifted away as easily as a tumbleweed in a windy old Texas town. We now root for all of them to overcome their obstacles and succeed because it is our only option as fans.

Rob Chudzinski and the team is the only logical way for the Browns to start to wash away the dirt and cleanse the organization. We all know that it is the wins and losses on the field that ultimately determines their success or failure. So Chudzinski sets in the unenviable position of being the only logical redemption for the rocky and perilous start of the Joe Banner era and the easiest one for him to blame if things don’t go well. He has a proven Head Coach standing right below him running the Browns offense and a defensive coordinator that might be a bit more committed to his rise up the coaching ranks then the Brown’s success. Now don’t misunderstand my intentions in pointing out the obvious, this all could work out fabulously! But to think the Toledo St. John’s graduate will get a free pass because he was a lifelong Browns fan and Ohioan is unrealistic and flies in the face of the obvious organizational stress created by Haslam and Banner. My point here is that even the fans can not ignore how critical Chudzinski’s performance is to their hopes and dreams about the Browns not just in 2013 but beyond.

In my opinion, Rob Chudzinski is a good person and football man. He has all the street cred in Cleveland to be a thunderous success. Ohioan, Brown’s fan, successful player at Miami University, and a proven assistant coach on the professional level. He is clearly all business and has every incentive possible to be a success with the Browns. That is a great script going into this job. However, those high expectations often have the opposite effect in a town that is starved for a winner and craves redemption for itself. Now in my mind Cleveland needs no redemption, but I think the stress of the “Cleveland Curse” affects all fans and how they view their teams even if they choose to deny it. So as we analyze in advance this backdrop for Chud, it becomes clear why a free pass is not only unlikely but virtually impossible. This is especially true because the Browns still dominate the hearts and minds of Cleveland sports fans despite their recent long run of futility.

Now let’s take a brief look at the 2013 Browns and see how this all will, and should, fall in Chud’s lap. First and foremost among Brown’s fans is the QUARTERBACK position. As I have sat as a season ticket holder ever since the reboot of the Browns, I am amazed still at how much fury and anger and rare cheers are raised by the quarterback position. I have NEVER sat in the stands where the starting quarterback has been even supported by the majority of the fans. Now I have often heard the backup quarterback touted as the answer but rarely the starter. It is almost as if we as fans set up a self-fulfilling prophesy about the Browns quarterback position. Although I personally believe this has been caused by more than the actual player picked for the position, it is a fact that we have never had a quarterback that was successful enough to quell the hoards of naysayers. So therein lies Chud’s nearly insurmountable problem. Find a quarterback that can lead your team to victory. So what does he have to work with? An aging second year player that is talented but unproven learning a new system that is apparently not an easy one to master. An aging veteran player who has a fair number of NFL starts under his belt but never a track record of proven success. A third year player who has been third string QB his entire career and barely whiffed the field as a starter late last year. WOW. Now that is something to be really excited about! If we all agree that the quarterback position is the most important player in today’s NFL, this looks to me like a setup for failure.

But, despite the fact that the odds are stacked against him, Chudzinski can prevail and come out of this as a savior instead of a failure. The key for him is making the right choice of the limited options and designing the offense that can play best to the strengths of the “winner”. This is not exactly the same for each player available. I will not go into the analysis of each quarterback’s strengths and weaknesses but we all know Weeden isn’t very mobile, doesn’t like to drop back, does not throw accurately on the run, but has a big arm. So with all this in mind, it is no wonder that Chud has wisely withheld the naming of his starting quarterback. The reasons are simple. He does not know who his starter should or will be. I am certain he has an idea in his head but is intelligent enough to know he needs to see them on the field, in pads, and hitting. This means that he might not name his starter even going into the preseason. We all know that this will rile the media and ignite the fans. This, in turn, intensifies the focus on the single most important decision in Chud’s young head coaching career. Since this has been the refrain of Browns fans and media ever since the ousting of Kosar by the now “genius” coach Bill Belichick, I see no reason for it to change under Chudzinski.

So instead of analyzing the team’s “keys to success” for winning a ball game, let’s look at the keys to success for Chudzinski to succeed in this most important decision:

1) Pick the right guy !! With the limited options and variables, not an easy task. Look at the best choice for the ENTIRE season instead of the safest choice for the first few games. It takes great skill to predict success going forward. Good luck.

2) Avoid the stupidity of our previous head coach and design the offense from game one specifically for the strengths of your choice.

3) Leverage the brilliance you have on your staff for offensive innovation, Norv Turner, to the utmost! Never let your ego get in the way of making the right decision even if it did not come from you.

4) Coach your choice “up” once you make it and stick by him until it is clear you were wrong. Your best chance to succeed is building the confidence of whomever you choose instead of breaking it down hoping for the “toughness” of your choice to overcome your negativity.

5) Deflect and parry the stones and swords that will come from the media with even the slightest failure. They are relentless, you need to be as well.

6) If your choice CLEARLY does not work hard enough to learn what you and Norv are trying to teach or exert the leadership necessary to lead your team, change your choice before changing point number 4 above. In other words, always follow point number 4 but change quarterback’s quickly when you are proven wrong.

7) If you ever need to change your choice by way of injury or your free will, redesign the offense to reflect that change immediately. Might be good to design one for each choice and save it in your archives, you never know who you will have next.

Now if Chud makes that choice right and follows the “keys to success” above, there is still no guarantee that his offense will resemble anything more than a 3 and out wonder. So now he needs to turn to the rest of the offensive cards he has been dealt. Now returning to our front office, it is clear they decided to let the offense “rot” in it’s own pot by barely stirring the soup on the stove.

It is well known that Chudzinski and Norm’s offenses have often featured the tight end. Well, we got two back-up players in free agency and have one remaining that probably can catch but will not scare anyone as a blocker. That is a very weak group from which to choose and play. Maybe they will surprise us, but I am not holding my breath on that one. So again Chud needs to rely on his and Norm’s innovation and ability to redesign to strengths. The addition of Bess is a big one considering his success in third down conversions. Often that territory is reserved for the tight end in Chud’s offenses. In this offense, there will need to be more emphasis on slot and wide receiver conversions of third downs. He can succeed with this, but it will not be easy unless Cameron can really blossom this year.

The wide receiver corps, in my view, is the deepest and best we have had since before 1999. The off season additions of Nelson and Bess compliment the more explosive and raw talent of Little, Gordon and Benjamin. We have other pieces and parts with quality at that position as well in Norwood and Cooper but I think the numbers game will make it tough for both of these players to make the team or be a significant factor in the offense. This position should work out fairly well for Chud.

The offensive line, clearly the strength of the offense, still has significant deficiencies that were not effectively addressed in the draft. We are not a very good “run blocking” team up the middle. Our guards seem more suited to pass protection and mobility blocking schemes. They also don’t really have the feet for a true “pulling” offense even though they seem better in space than power blocking. This is a significant problem for Chudzinski because they can not use Richardson to their advantage in borderline pass/run third downs. Again, this is often the area for a quality tight end to come through, but that does not seem available right now. So the deficiency at guard will be one that I thinks tugs the offense down throughout the year. I just hope it is not a poisonous problem. Greco did look decent and hopefully Pinkston can come back strong, but I have little hope for Lauvao who I think is simply waiting for a better player to come along.

I have absolutely no concern about Richardson who has the ability to be a dominant back in the NFL. I just hope that Chudzinski recognizes that Richardson, despite his size and toughness, runs better in space like a scat back instead of plowing up the middle like a fullback. The effective use of Richardson, not on display in 2012 because of injuries and offensive scheme paralysis, will be the key to any success Chud might have with this offense. He had better make the decisions correct in this area as he must with the quarterback.

So, when we add up all the ingredients left out of the soup for Chudzinski and Turner, it becomes clear that this will be a monumental task for this brain trust to develop an effective and efficient offense. Without that, Horton’s aggressive and gambling defense will turn a possible strength of the team into a huge liability. Horton’s defense will score and turn the ball over more than previous versions for the Browns, but it will result in big scoring plays for the opposition when the players can not execute precisely. That makes it critical for the offense to be reliable, ball controlling, and effective.

In the end, the responsibility of making all of this work is the head coach. The Browns fans and media have no incentive to give the “Haslam/Banner” era 5 more years to succeed. They don’t need to necessarily make the playoffs but they need to show huge improvement in scoring and wins to succeed in 2013. Anything less will be another dismal failure and some nails in Chudzinski’s coffin. Banner will decide if the nails are enough to close it and the Browns fans won’t have enough energy to pry open the lid.