1982 Cleveland Browns season

The 1982 Cleveland Browns season was the team's 33rd season with the National Football League.

1982 Cleveland Browns season
OwnerArt Modell
Head coachSam Rutigliano
Home fieldCleveland Municipal Stadium
Local radioWHK
Results
Record4–5
Division place8th AFC
Playoff finishLost Wild Card Playoffs
(at Raiders) 10–27
Pro BowlersLB Chip Banks

The Browns were among eight teams that qualified for the playoffs during this strike shortened season, and became one of only six teams to ever qualify for the playoffs despite having a losing record.[1][2][3] The Browns and the Detroit Lions from the same year are the only two teams with a losing record to qualify as wildcards. In the first round of the NFL playoffs, Cleveland lost to the Los Angeles Raiders 27–10.

The Browns' first round draft pick, rookie sensation linebacker Chip Banks earned 6.5 sacks in just nine games.

NFL draft

The following were selected in the 1982 NFL Draft.

1982 Cleveland Browns Draft
RoundSelectionPlayerPositionCollegeNotes
13Chip BanksLinebackerUSC
231Keith BaldwinDefensive endTexas A&M
487Dwight WalkerRunning backNicholls State
5115Mike BaabCenterTexas
6162Mike WhitwellDefensive backTexas A&M
8199Mark KafentzisDefensive backHawaii
8204Van HeflinTight endVanderbilt
8211Bill JacksonDefensive backNorth Carolina
9227Milton BakerTight endWest Texas A&M
10255Ricky FloydRunning backSouthern Miss
11282Steve MichutaQuarterbackGrand Valley State
12310Scott NicolasLinebackerMiami

[4]

Personnel

Staff / Coaches

1982 Cleveland Browns staff

Front office

Head coaches

Offensive coaches

Defensive coaches

Special teams coaches

Strength and conditioning

Roster

1982 Cleveland Browns roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

rookies in italics

Schedule

WeekDateOpponentResultRecordVenueAttendance
1September 12at Seattle SeahawksW 21–71–0Kingdome55,907
2September 19Philadelphia EaglesL 21–241–1Cleveland Municipal Stadium78,830
September 27Cincinnati BengalscanceledCleveland Municipal Stadium
October 3at Washington RedskinsRFK Stadium
October 10at Los Angeles RaidersLos Angeles Memorial Coliseum
October 17Baltimore ColtsCleveland Municipal Stadium
October 24at Pittsburgh SteelerspostponedThree Rivers Stadium
October 31Houston OilerscanceledCleveland Municipal Stadium
November 7New York GiantsCleveland Municipal Stadium
November 14at Miami DolphinsMiami Orange Bowl
3November 21New England PatriotsW 10–72–1Cleveland Municipal Stadium51,781
4November 25at Dallas CowboysL 14–312–2Texas Stadium46,267
5December 5San Diego ChargersL 13–302–3Cleveland Municipal Stadium54,064
6December 12at Cincinnati BengalsL 10–232–4Riverfront Stadium54,305
7December 19Pittsburgh SteelersW 10–93–4Cleveland Municipal Stadium67,139
8December 26at Houston OilersW 20–144–4Houston Astrodome36,559
9January 2at Pittsburgh SteelersL 21–374–5Three Rivers Stadium52,312
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.

Season Highlights

Week 1 at Seattle

Less than nine months after closing the 1981 season in Seattle, the Browns return to the Kingdome and defeat the Seahawks 21–7. Mike Pruitt accounts for 136 of Cleveland's 200 rushing yards and scores two touchdowns. The Browns sack Dave Krieg eight teams, three by rookie linebacker Chip Banks.

Week 3 vs. New England

In their first game after the 1982 NFL strike that wiped out almost half the regular season, The Browns fight their way through a heavy Cleveland fog and beat New England, 10–7, on Matt Bahr's 24-yard field goal as time expires. Bahr's winner comes three plays after Browns safety Clinton Burrell recovers a fumble by Mark van Eeghen at the Patriots' 20.

Week 5 vs. San Diego

James Brooks scores two touchdowns and Dan Fouts completes 18-of-23 passes as San Diego pounds the Browns 30–13, at Cleveland. Despite the loss, Brian Sipe completes 14 straight passes and stretches his overall streak to a club-record 33. He also surpasses the 20,000-yard career mark. Tight end Ozzie Newsome catches a career-high 10 passes and extends his streak of consecutive games with at least one reception to a club-record 45.

Week 7 vs. Pittsburgh

Hanford Dixon intercepts three passes and the Browns keep their playoff hopes alive with a 10–9 win over Pittsburgh at rainy, muddy Cleveland Stadium. The poor conditions affect Steelers quarterback Terry Bradshaw more than Paul McDonald, who starts his first game in place of the slumping Sipe. Nose tackle Bob Golic enjoys a big game with eight tackles and one sack.

Week 8 at Houston

The Browns escape with a 20–14 win, thanks to critical fumbles by running back Earl Campbell. The first comes at the Cleveland 4 and the second sets up the Browns' winning touchdown in the fourth quarter. Dave Logan scores one TD on a 56-yard pass from McDonald and Charles White scores the winner on a 1-yard run.

Postseason

RoundDateOpponent (seed)ResultRecordVenueAttendanceRecap
Wild CardJanuary 8, 1983at Los Angeles Raiders (1)L 10–270–1Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum56,555Recap

Standings

AFC Central
WLTPCTDIVCONFPFPASTK
Cincinnati Bengals(3)720.7783–16–2232177W2
Pittsburgh Steelers(4)630.6673–15–3204146W2
Cleveland Browns(8)450.4442–24–3140182L1
Houston Oilers180.1110–41–5136245L7
#TeamWLTPCTPFPASTK
Seeded postseason qualifiers
1Los Angeles Raiders810.889260200W5
2[a]Miami Dolphins720.778198131W3
3[a]Cincinnati Bengals720.778232177W2
4[b][c]Pittsburgh Steelers630.667204146W2
5[b][c]San Diego Chargers630.667288221L1
6[c]New York Jets630.667245166L1
7New England Patriots540.556143157W1
8[d]Cleveland Browns450.444140182L1
Did not qualify for the postseason
9[d]Buffalo Bills450.444150154L3
10[d]Seattle Seahawks450.444127147W1
11Kansas City Chiefs360.333176184W1
12Denver Broncos270.222148226L3
13Houston Oilers180.111136245L7
14Baltimore Colts081.056113236L2
Tiebreakers

References

External links