1968 Cleveland Browns season

1968 Cleveland Browns season
General managerHarold Sauerbrei
Head coachBlanton Collier
Home fieldCleveland Stadium
Local radioWHK
Results
Record10–4
Division place1st NFL Century
Playoff finishWon Eastern Conference Championship Game
(vs. Cowboys) 31–20
Lost NFL Championship
(vs. Colts) 0–34

The 1968 Cleveland Browns season was the team's 19th season with the National Football League. The Browns made it to the playoffs for the 2nd straight year thanks to an 8-game winning streak. Quarterback Bill Nelsen replaced Frank Ryan as the starting quarterback prior to week 4 of their season.

Veteran wide receiver Paul Warfield had the best season of his entire career catching 50 passes for 1,067 yards and scoring 12 touchdowns.

Season summary

The Browns had enjoyed some recent success, qualifying for the 1965 season NFL Championship Game, in which they lost to the Green Bay Packers 23–12. They finished 9–5 in 1966 and '67, making the playoffs in 1967. The Dallas Cowboys blew them out 52–14 in the Eastern Conference Championship Game. The Browns retooled their roster entered the 1968 season and sought to reestablish themselves as series title contenders. After a slow start in which they lost two of their first three games and three of their first five, the re-tooled Browns won eight in a row before falling 27–16 to the St. Louis Cardinals in a meaningless game in the regular-season finale. The result was a 10–4 mark, the Century Division crown (by the slimmest of margins over the 9–4–1 Cardinals) and a spot in the conference title game again opposite those same Cowboys.

Only this time, the Browns advanced, beating Dallas 31–20 to get to the league title game against the Baltimore Colts. The Colts were returning to Cleveland Stadium, where they were had been stunned by the Browns 27–0 in the championship contest four years before. The Colts got revenge with a shutout victory of their own, 34–0, and advanced to Super Bowl III.

The key to the Browns' turnaround in 1968 was the insertion of Bill Nelsen at quarterback early in the season. Nelsen had been acquired in an offseason trade with the Pittsburgh Steelers. He replaced Frank Ryan, who had been the team's starting quarterback since 1963 and lead the team on its playoff run in 1964. By 1968, though, Ryan was struggling with shoulder problems. Nelsen made an impact right away, helping to beat the Colts 30–20 to hand Baltimore its only loss in a 13–1 season.

Offseason

NFL draft

The following were selected in the 1968 NFL Draft.

Round Overall Player Position School/Club Team
1 21 Marvin Upshaw Defensive end Trinity
2 47 John Garlington Linebacker LSU
3 64 Harry Olszewski Guard Clemson
3 66 Reece Morrison Running back Texas State
4 104 Wayne Meylan Linebacker Nebraska
5 131 Mike Wempe Tackle Missouri
5 134 Jackie Jackson Running back Clemson
6 152 Nate James Defensive back Florida A&M
7 186 Dale Brady Running back Memphis
8 212 Tom Schoen Defensive back Notre Dame
9 238 David Porter Defensive tackle Michigan
10 255 James Greer Defensive end Stephen F. Austin
10 267 Alvin Mitchell Defensive back Morgan State
11 293 Jim Alcorn Quarterback Clarion
12 319 Tom Beutler Linebacker Toledo
13 348 Terry Sellers Defensive back Georgia
14 374 Edgar Whipps Running back Jackson State
15 400 Bob Baxter Flanker Memphis
16 429 Dick Sievert Defensive end Wisconsin-River Falls
17 455 Wayne McDuffie Center Florida State

Personnel

Roster

1968 Cleveland Browns roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

rookies in italics

Staff/Coaches

1968 Cleveland Browns staff
Front office

Coaching staff

Offensive coaches

  Defensive coaches

Strength & Coditioning

  • Athletic Trainer - Leo Murphy
  • Equipment Manager - Morris Kono

Exhibition schedule

Week Date Opponent Result Attendance
1 August 9 at Los Angeles Rams L 21–23 64,020
2 August 18 at San Francisco 49ers W 31–17 26,801
3 August 24 at New Orleans Saints L 27–40 70,045
4 August 30 at Buffalo Bills W 22–12 45,448
5 September 7 Green Bay Packers L 9–31 84,918

There was a doubleheader on September 7, 1968 Lions vs Jets (AFL) and Packers vs Browns.

Regular season schedule

Week Date Opponent Result Record Attendance
1 September 15 at New Orleans Saints W 24–10 1–0 74,215
2 September 22 at Dallas Cowboys L 7–28 1–1 68,733
3 September 29 Los Angeles Rams L 6–24 1–2 82,514
4 October 5 Pittsburgh Steelers W 31–24 2–2 81,865
5 October 13 St. Louis Cardinals L 21–27 2–3 79,349
6 October 20 at Baltimore Colts W 30–20 3–3 60,238
7 October 27 Atlanta Falcons W 30–7 4–3 67,723
8 November 3 at San Francisco 49ers W 33–21 5–3 31,359
9 November 10 New Orleans Saints W 35–17 6–3 71,025
10 November 17 at Pittsburgh Steelers W 45–24 7–3 41,572
11 November 24 Philadelphia Eagles W 47–13 8–3 62,338
12 December 1 New York Giants W 45–10 9–3 83,193
13 December 8 at Washington Redskins W 24–21 10–3 50,661
14 December 14 at St. Louis Cardinals L 16–27 10–4 39,746

Game summaries

Week 7: vs. Atlanta

Week 7: Atlanta Falcons at Cleveland Browns – Game summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Falcons 0 0 077
Browns 7 13 3730

at Cleveland Stadium, Cleveland, Ohio

  • Date: October 27
  • Game time: 1:30 p.m. EST
  • Game weather: 45 °F (7 °C), relative humidity 63%, round (wind) 17 mph
  • Game attendance: 67,723
  • TV announcers (CBS): Frank Glieber (play–by–play), Eddie LeBaron (color commentator) and John Fitzgerald (sideline reporter)
  • [1]
Game information

Playoffs

Round Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance Recap
Eastern Conference December 21 Dallas Cowboys W 31–20 1–0 Cleveland Municipal Stadium 81,497 Recap
NFL Championship December 29 Baltimore Colts L 0–34 1–1 Cleveland Municipal Stadium 80,628 Recap

Standings

NFL Century
W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
Cleveland Browns 10 4 0 .714 4–2 7–3 394 273 L1
St. Louis Cardinals 9 4 1 .692 5–0–1 8–1–1 325 289 W4
New Orleans Saints 4 9 1 .308 2–4 3–7 246 327 W1
Pittsburgh Steelers 2 11 1 .154 0–5–1 1–8–1 244 397 L5

Note: Tie games were not officially counted in the standings until 1972.

Awards and honors


This page was last updated at 2023-10-05 02:38 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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