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Burning Questions

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Will the Browns defense force a turnover in Week 2? | Burning Questions 

Browns look to bounce back against the Jaguars following Week 1 loss 

Burning Questions Week 2 9.13

The Browns look to bounce back from a disappointing Week 1 performance and claim their first win of the 2024 season.

"Spent a lot of time this week getting our offense, defense, special teams, really understanding their assignments so we can go do our job at a high level," head coach Kevin Stefanski said.

Here are three burning questions ahead of the Browns' Week 2 matchup in Jacksonville.

How will the Browns offense develop a rhythm?

The Browns struggled in their season opener to create a rhythm offensively, especially with the seven offensive penalties that had them playing from behind the sticks for a majority of the game. They also only had one first down in the first half of the game but ended the game with 15 total first downs. The Browns struggled to convert on third-down situations, going 2 of 15, and had to punt the ball seven times over the course of the game.

As the Browns prepared for Week 2, they focused on the importance of correcting those offensive penalties and building a rhythm offensively.

"I think penalties make it hard to play any type of offense at the end of the day," offensive coordinator Ken Dorsey said. "So, I think we want to make sure we are going out and doing all the things that we need to do from a technique standpoint to a just being locked in mental standpoint. Whether we're trying to use tempo or hustle, third down, red zone, short yards, or whatever the situation is, we got to make sure we're locked in. Penalties can be mental. They could be physical. There's a lot of different aspects into those things. So, we just got to make sure that we're playing in the right frame of mind with the right techniques."

Check out photos of the team working to prepare for their game this week against the Jacksonville Jaguars at CrossCountry Mortgage Campus

Will the Browns defense force a turnover?

The Browns defense finished the 2023 regular season with 37 total turnovers, averaging over two turnovers per game. Yet, in the season opener, the Browns did not force a turnover against the Cowboys.

"There were times, particularly in the first touchdown drive, that we had opportunities to intercept the ball, and we didn't get it done," defensive coordinator Jim Schwartz said. "There were some other chances for us to get drives stopped and those kinds of things."

CB Denzel Ward found the most success in potential takeaways as he had three passes defensed in Week 1 against the Cowboys. Their corners in Martin Emerson Jr. and Greg Newsome II also each recorded one pass defensed, and DE Myles Garrett forced a fumble that the Cowboys eventually recovered.

Yet, from the front seven through the secondary, the Browns defense knows the importance of creating takeaways. Jacksonville had one turnover in Week 1.

"It's following our keys," LB Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah said. "It's following the quarterback's eyes. As linebackers, not moving too fast or moving too soon. Disruptions of the pocket, whether it's from the outside or the interior, and just locking up our man out with the DBs, keeping the zones right. It's about keeping our keys and following the coach's gameplan."

How will the Browns establish their run game?

Alongside their offensive issues, the Browns struggled to establish the run game in Week 1 against the Cowboys. They finished the game with 93 total rushing yards, with RB Jerome Ford leading with 44 rushing yards on 12 carries.

The Jaguars run defense presents challenges for the Browns run game. In Week 1, the Jaguars limited the Dolphins to 81 rushing yards and one rushing touchdown.

"They're a physical front," Dorsey said. "They're fundamentally and schematically sound and they fly around and so there's a lot of things that go into it. Like I said, kind of early on, this is the ultimate team game and when a defense is able to do something like that the past week, there are multiple factors that go into it. It's all 11 guys on their side operating at a pretty high level against a team like that."

Stefanski said the presence of the run game can shift on weekly basis, depending on their opponent for the week. However, he noted the need to improve schematically in the run game.

"It's not going to be easy," Stefanski said. "This is a very good run defense, particularly with the guys we're talking about that they have up front, but just got to make sure that we put our guys in position to go make plays, and that's true in the run and the pass."

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