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Steelers-Browns on 'Thursday Night Football': What We Learned from Cleveland's 24-19 win

Cleveland Browns 24, Pittsburgh Steelers 19

FULL BOX SCORE



  1. Winston finished off snowy thriller but not without late scares. When Jameis Winston tumbled into the end zone – his first rushing score in three years – on fourth down early in the fourth quarter, Huntington Bank Field erupted in a snow-globe frenzy. The Browns led, 18-6, with 12 minutes left, and Winston looked like the hero. He was (sort of) but not without nearly coughing it up with a fumble and interception after that, giving the Steelers a shocking 19-18 lead in terrible conditions. Cleveland’s defense made one critical stop late, and Winston made a critical third-down conversion to set up Nick Chubb ’s second touchdown of the night. Winston looked downright commanding at times prior to the late-game flubs. And Chubb got to score twice against the team he was hurt against last season. In a wild, fun game, the Browns finally had something to smile about again, even if the fourth quarter looked like it was slipping away from them.
  2. Tomlin’s game management hurts Steelers in damaging loss. Mike Tomlin watched his Steelers claw back in the snow and take the lead late. But his curious game management at the ends of both halves might have helped deal the Steelers a tough blow to their playoff positioning. With the Browns potentially facing a fourth-and-1 with just under two minutes remaining and the Steelers leading, 19-18, Tomlin opted to accept a penalty, moving the Browns back five yards, but making it third down again. Jameis Winston burned the Steelers with his first third-down conversion of the night, leading to the go-ahead TD. Not only did another minute burn off the clock, but the Browns led by five, not one (had they kicked a field goal). There were some signs that this could be a trap game. The Steelers were coming off a massive win Sunday over the Ravens. It was a short-week game on the road against a nothing-to-lose Browns club. And the anatomy of an upset was playing out with the Steelers’ first-half script: missed field goal, turnover on downs, field goal, fumble, end of half. Tomlin earned some criticism for that last possession; he allowed nearly 40 seconds to run off the clock on defense. The final two minutes of both halves were costly for the Steelers.
  3. Browns defense looked great early, held on late. Sure, the Browns’ offense has been a disappointment this season. But the defense was expected to be the bedrock unit, and that simply hadn’t been the case entering Week 12. Perhaps the weather played a factor in the Browns’ success Thursday night, but they were arguably more effective when the field conditions were better earlier in the game. The Steelers certainly tripped on some rakes offensively, but the Browns brought the heat with their first-half pass rush – four sacks, including three by Myles Garrett , who also had a strip that led to a Browns field goal. The Steelers drove for touchdowns after back-to-back Browns turnovers, but the maligned Browns defense got one huge stop on a quick three-and-out that took only one minute off the clock. That was enough to set up Cleveland’s go-ahead score, and Russell Wilson’s Hail Mary fell harmlessly into the snowy field.
  4. Fields package gave Steelers’ offense a late lift. Justin Fields entered on the Steelers’ first third-down snap, six plays into the game, but it was blown dead for a false start and Fields came out on third-and-6. On their second possession, Fields came on for a fourth-and-2 play, but it was a mess from the start, and he was tackled for a 2-yard loss and a turnover on downs. Nothing doing. But when the Steelers came back to Fields in the fourth quarter, down, 18-6, he gave them an instant spark with a 30-yard run. Later, Fields’ throw drew a roughing-the-passer flag, helping the Steelers to a big touchdown. The Steelers needed something. Russell Wilson started the game 11 for 11 passing for 147 yards and had a key fumble recovery, but the Steelers were stuck on three points at the half. He was also sacked four times in the first half. Wilson struck on a beautiful deep ball to Calvin Austin III to put the Steelers up late, and he was incredible on third downs (11 for 12, 198 yards, TD), but the pass protection was an issue. Dan Moore struggled with Myles Garrett all night, and the Steelers gave up yards with pre-snap penalties.
  5. Can Winston be the Browns’ bridge QB in 2025? Winston did a lot of good things Thursday night. He also almost coughed the game up with two critical late mistakes. But overall, he has been a breath of fresh air in Cleveland during a heavy, dark season. Winston led the upset over the Ravens then struggled against the Chargers. He played well Sunday in the loss to the Saints and started well Thursday night before the late heel turn. It’s always going to be a ride with Winston. But it’s quite clear he’s a better stylistic fit for Kevin Stefanski’s offense, and the players seem to feed off his energy and enthusiasm. How do you not smile when Winston is making snow angels after the game with the Amazon Prime postgame crew? There are also the results. Winston is 2-2 as a starter; Deshaun Watson won one of his seven starts. And from a distance, the 2025 QB options in free agency and the 2025 ¹ú²úÍâÁ÷ÍøDraft don’t appear all that appealing. Winston might make the most sense, even knowing that he can be a wild card.


Next Gen Stats Insight for (via ¹ú²úÍâÁ÷ÍøPro): Jameis Winston completed 5 of 6 passes on the run (8+ MPH) for 97 yards amid snowy conditions in the Browns' Week 12 win over the Steelers. On all other passes, Winston was 13 of 21 for 122 yards with an interception.

¹ú²úÍâÁ÷ÍøResearch: The Browns and Steelers combined for 16 points and one TD in the first three quarters, but they combined for 27 points and four TDs in the fourth quarter in Week 12. 

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