Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Browns–Steelers rivalry

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First meeting
  
October 7, 1950

Meetings total
  
130

Next meeting
  
To Be Announced


Latest meeting
  
January 1, 2017 Steelers 27, Browns 24

All-time series
  
PIT: 72–58 CLE, 37–27 @ Cleveland PIT, 44–21 @ Pittsburgh

Regular season series
  
PIT: 69–58 CLE, 37–27 @ Cleveland PIT, 42–21 @ Pittsburgh

The Browns–Steelers rivalry is a National Football League rivalry between the Cleveland Browns and the Pittsburgh Steelers. With 130 meetings and counting, it is the oldest rivalry and the most storied in the American Football Conference, surpassing any other rivalry in the conference by at least 5 games. The two divisional foes have a natural rivalry due to the commonalities between the cities, proximity, etc. It is sometimes called the Turnpike Rivalry or Turnpike War because the majority of the driving route between the two cities are via the Pennsylvania and Ohio Turnpikes.

Contents

Similarities between the cities

The rivalry was primarily fueled by the close proximity between the two cities, as Cleveland and Pittsburgh are roughly 135 miles apart. Many fans make the two-hour drive by car to road games. Also, the city of Youngstown, Ohio is roughly located at the halfway mark between the two cities and is within the 75-mile blackout radius for both teams. The Youngstown television market has dual rights to both teams. Both teams have such strong fan bases that neither typically has blackout issues since the current rules were implemented in 1973, although the final two games of the 1995 season were blacked out in Cleveland (the last two prior to the move to Baltimore); one of these games was against their in-state rivals, the Cincinnati Bengals. The Youngstown area fan base remains roughly split 50/50 between the Steelers and Browns.

Businesses

In recent times, Pittsburgh-area businesses have entered the Cleveland market by buying out local Cleveland-area competitors such as Giant Eagle, Dollar Bank, Howard Hanna Realty, and PNC Financial Services acquisition of National City Corp. Among other reasons, some Clevelanders didn't like the idea of a Pittsburgh-based bank buying National City because of the rivalry between the Browns and Steelers. PNC and Giant Eagle are official team sponsors for both teams. In addition, natural expansion has occurred with companies with Western Pennsylvania roots with Vocelli Pizza and Altoona-based Sheetz making successful expansions into the Cleveland market.

Conversely, Eaton Corporation was founded in Cleveland and has long had significant operations in Pittsburgh. Forest City Enterprises owns billions of dollars of Pittsburgh-area real estate. The Cleveland branch of the Federal Reserve includes Pittsburgh in its territory. Cleveland-based Sherwin-Williams has locations throughout Pittsburgh and nationally is one of the top competitors to Pittsburgh-based PPG Industries. Two former Cleveland-based businesses, Picway Shoes and Revco, had locations throughout Pittsburgh before being bought out by Payless ShoeSource in 1994 and CVS/pharmacy in 1998, respectively. National City Bank itself had expanded into Pittsburgh in 1995 through its acquisition of Integra Bank and actually caused antitrust problems when PNC bought National City in 2008, being forced to divest 61 National City branches in Western Pennsylvania. Although First Niagara Bank ultimately bought 57 of the branches, Cleveland-based KeyBank was one of the banks that was considering buying the branches and expanding into Pittsburgh; KeyBank would later acquire First Niagara outright.

Republic Steel, which was based in Cleveland, was the company that suggested to the Steelers that the team use the Steelmark logo on its helmets in 1962. The logo later became the Steelers primary trademark, and is arguably better known with the logo than the steel industry itself.

Coaches and players

The teams have also had various prominent players and coaches with roots in the other team. For instance, former Steelers head coach Chuck Noll is from Cleveland and played linebacker for the Browns. His successor as head coach, Bill Cowher, also played linebacker and special teams for the Browns, and was an assistant coach for the Browns from 1985–88. Cowher was born and raised in Crafton, a suburb of Pittsburgh. Former Browns head coach Marty Schottenheimer is a native of Pittsburgh area suburb Canonsburg, along with his brother Kurt Schottenheimer, who was the Browns special teams coach from 1987–88. Another Browns head coach, Bud Carson also had as his hometown a northern suburb of Pittsburgh and was a longtime Steelers coordinator under Chuck Noll.

Steelers Hall of Famer Jack Lambert is a native Ohioan and attended Kent State University, as did Akron, Ohio native James Harrison. Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger hails from Findlay, Ohio. Former punter Chris Gardocki played for three years for the Steelers, including the Super Bowl XL championship team, after playing five seasons with the Browns from 1999–2003. Former Steelers Offensive coordinator Bruce Arians held the same position with the Browns from 2001–03.

History of the rivalry

The Browns and Steelers first met in 1950, the Browns' first NFL season after dominating the All-America Football Conference. Early on during this period, the Browns were one of the NFL's elite teams and dominated the rivalry. The Steelers did not win their first game against the Browns until 1954.

During that time the Steelers were usually one of the NFL's worst teams. The Browns would go 31–9 against them from 1950–1969.

The rivalry carried over to the newly formed American Football Conference in 1970 as the two teams and then-Baltimore Colts joined the former American Football League teams in the conference as part of the AFL–NFL merger. The newly merged league needed to move three teams from the "old" NFL to the AFC so that the two conferences had 13 teams. (The rest of the "old" NFL teams joined the newly formed National Football Conference.) The NFL tried to get the Steelers to the new conference, but then-Steelers owner Art Rooney initially refused. However, Rooney reconsidered after then-Browns owner Art Modell volunteered the Browns to shift to the AFC, partly because the NFL had offered $3 million as an incentive to move but also on account of the potential for an intrastate rivalry with the AFL's newest team, the Cincinnati Bengals. Not only were the Bengals in the same state as the Browns, but they had been established by Browns founder Paul Brown, whom Modell had a lingering feud with. The financial boost combined with the prospect of losing his most lucrative division rival quickly persuaded Rooney to join Modell in the AFC in order to continue their own rivalry, although the team did lose its rivalry with the cross-state Philadelphia Eagles as a result. Somewhat ironically, although they play in the same state as the Browns, like the Browns, the Bengals currently view the Steelers as their biggest rival.

However, in the 1970s the Steelers had begun to even the playing field with the Browns, led by head coach Chuck Noll, a Cleveland native and former Browns linebacker. By then, the rivalry between the two clubs was more hostile and personal, as evident in the 1976 matchup at Cleveland Municipal Stadium, when Joe "Turkey" Jones tackled Terry Bradshaw with a pile-driving sack. Bradshaw suffered a neck injury from the play, and the footage of the sack has since become immortalized in NFL Films as part of the rivalry.

While the two exchanged victories in the '70s and '80s, by the 1990s the Steelers became the dominant team in the rivalry. Since the Browns' last series sweep in 1988, the Steelers have an overwhelming 39–11 mark against the Browns, enough that in 2007 the Steelers took over the lead in the all-time series (which they currently lead at 70–58) for the first time. During most of this time, Bill Cowher was head coach of the Steelers. Cowher, a native of the Pittsburgh suburb of Crafton, also played linebacker for the Browns (though unlike Noll, Cowher mostly played special teams), and also served as an assistant in Cleveland under Marty Schottenheimer, himself a native of another Pittsburgh area suburb, Canonsburg.

The Steelers also have a 2–0 record against the Browns in the playoffs, with both games taking place in Pittsburgh.

The rivalry took a brief hiatus from 1996–98 due to the Cleveland Browns relocation controversy. When the league was voting on the Browns relocation, Steelers owner Dan Rooney was one of only two owners to vote against the move. In tribute of Cleveland losing the Browns, Steeler fans wore orange arm bands to the final game at Three Rivers Stadium as a sign of mutual respect and sorrow for losing a great rivalry. While Browns fans still consider the Steelers as their main archrival, almost all Steeler fans consider their rivalry with the Baltimore Ravens the spiritual successor to this rivalry due to Art Modell moving his franchise to Baltimore and establishing the expansion Ravens. The recent one-sidedness of this rivalry in favor of the Steelers has influenced this thinking as well. Nevertheless, it is still one of the most heated in the NFL.

Jinx

  • The Three Rivers Jinx. When the Steelers moved to Three Rivers Stadium in 1970, they defeated the Browns 16 straight times before the Browns finally broke through with a win in 1986. The Browns eventually went on to post a miserable all-time mark (5–24, .172) at the stadium from 1970–2000. At Heinz Field (opened 2001), the Steelers lead 15–1. Since the 1970 merger, the Browns are 6–41 at Pittsburgh. Before that, they had won 16 of their first 20 visits (1950–1969).
  • Likewise, the Steelers posted a less-than-spectacular record (14–32, .304) at the Browns' old facility, Cleveland Municipal Stadium, from 1950–1995. At Cleveland Browns Stadium (opened 1999), the Steelers lead 12–4. Since 1974 (their first Super Bowl season), the Steelers lead 19–17 in Cleveland. Beforehand, the Steelers had lost 19 of 24 on the road (1950–1973).
  • Records

  • The greatest defeat in Steelers history occurred on the season opener (September 10) of the 1989 NFL season in Pittsburgh when the Browns won 51–0. Nearly ten years to the day (September 12), when the Browns returned to the league in the 1999 NFL season, the Steelers defeated them in their first game back 43–0, still the revived Browns' worst loss as well as the Steelers' most lopsided defeat ever of the Browns.
  • The game is the most played rivalry in the AFC and fifth most played in the NFL. Among the top 5 NFL rivalries however, the win-loss difference of 12 games (10 regular season games) arguably makes it the most contested in the league.
  • References

    Browns–Steelers rivalry Wikipedia