American Football Wiki
1978 Cleveland Browns season
Head Coach Sam Rutigliano
Home Field Cleveland Stadium
Results
Record 8–8–0
Place 3rd AFC Central
Playoff Finish did not qualify
Timeline
Previous Season Next Season
1977 1979

The 1978 Cleveland Browns season was the team's 29th season with the National Football League. After nearly three years of struggling offensively - and not making the playoffs -- while posting just one winning record under ultra-strict, disciplinarian head coach Forrest Gregg, the Browns in 1978 decided to take a softer approach to liven up their attack - and their team.

They did so by hiring a virtually unknown assistant at the time, New Orleans Saints receivers coach Sam Rutigliano, to replace Gregg, who was fired with one game left in the 1977 season. Rutigliano was the fourth head coach hired by Art Modell in his 18 years as club owner to that point, and it marked the first time Modell had not promoted from within the organization to fill the spot.

Although it took a while for things to develop, the idea of bringing in someone from the outside nonetheless worked. With Rutigliano, who was as progressive, innovative and forward-thinking of an offensive mind as there was in the game at the time, running the show, the once-stagnant Browns attack scored 30 or more points four times in eight games in the second half of that season.

More importantly, Rutigliano was able to jump-start the career of embattled quarterback Brian Sipe, which would pay huge dividends for the team two years later when he won the NFL MVP award and led the Browns to the AFC Central title. He finished with 21 touchdown passes and 15 interceptions in 1978 for a quarterback rating of 80.7, by far his best numbers in his five seasons with the Browns.

The Browns started well, winning their first three games over the 49ers (24-7), Bengals (13-10 in overtime) and Falcons (24-16). They then stood 4-2 after beating the Saints 24-16 three games later.

But in the process of the Browns offense getting revved up, the defense soon started to come unglued. Yes, the Browns were scoring a lot of points in those final eight games, but they were giving up a lot, too. In fact, they surrendered 34 or more points in three successive games at the very end of the year.

The end result was an 8-8 finish in which the Browns were outscored by 22 points overall, 356 to 334, in the first year that the NFL expanded from a 14 to a 16-game regular season. The Browns top draft choice that year, future Hall of Fame TE Ozzie Newsome, fresh off of a NCAA National Championship with Paul "Bear" Bryant's Alabama Crimson Tide team, had a solid rookie season, snaring 38 passes for 589 yards and two TDs.

Offseason[]

NFL Draft[]

The following were selected in the 1978 NFL Draft.

Round Overall Player Position School/Club Team
1 12 Clay Matthews Linebacker USC
1 23 Ozzie Newsome Tight End Alabama
2 39 Johnny Evans Punter North Carolina State
3 67 Larry Collins Running Back Texas A&I
3 68 Mark Miller Quarterback Bowling Green
4 103 Pete Pullara Offensive Guard Tennessee-Chattanooga
5 122 Keith Wright Wide Receiver Memphis St.
6 149 Al Pitts Center Michigan State
8 205 Jesse Turnbow Defensive Tackle Tennessee
9 234 Jon Kramer Guard Baylor
10 261 Brent Watson Offensive Tackle Tennessee
11 290 Larry Gillard Defensive Tackle Mississippi State
12 317 Leo Biedermann Offensive Tackle California

[1]

Personnel[]

Staff / Coaches[]

1978 Cleveland Browns final staff
Front Office
  • Owner and President – Art Modell
  • Executive Vice President/General Manager – Peter Hadhazy

Head Coaches

Offensive Coaches

  • Quarterbacks – Jim Shofner
  • Offensive backfield – Jim Garrett
  • Receivers – Rich Kotite
  • Offensive line – Rod Humenuik
  Defensive Coaches
  • Defensive line – Buck Buchanan
  • Linebackers – Dick MacPherson
  • Defensive backfield – Chuck Weber

Special Teams Coaches

  • Special Teams – John Petercuskie
  • Film Coordinator - Ed Ulinski
  • Athletic Trainer - Leo Murphy


Roster[]

1978 Cleveland Browns roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

  • 83 Ricky Feacher
  • 85 Dave Logan
  • 33 Reggie Rucker
  • 89 Keith Wright KR/PR

Tight ends

Offensive linemen
  • 69 Leo Biedermann T
  • 62 George Buehler G
  • 63 Barry Darrow T
  • 54 Tom DeLeone C
  • 73 Doug Dieken T
  • 61 Greg Fairchild G
  • 68 Robert Jackson G
  • 65 Henry Sheppard G
  • 79 Gerry Sullivan G/C
  • 51 Leo Tierney C

Defensive linemen

  • 66 Earl Edwards DT
  • 64 Joe Jones DE
  • 70 Mack Mitchell DE
  • 72 Jerry Sherk DT
  • 78 Mickey Sims DT
  • 74 Mike St. Clair DE
  • 71 Jesse Turnbow DT
Linebackers
  • 52 Dick Ambrose MLB
  • 60 Bob Babich MLB
  • 55 Dave Graf OLB
  • 59 Charlie Hall OLB
  • 86 Gerald Irons OLB
  • 56 Robert Jackson MLB
  • 57 Clay Matthews OLB

Defensive backs

  • 28 Ron Bolton CB/FS
  • 27 Thom Darden FS
  • 21 Oliver Davis CB
  • 47 Ricky Jones SS
  • 40 Tom London CB
  • 20 Tony Peters SS
  • 24 Randy Rich CB
  • 22 Clarence Scott CB

Special teams

  • 12 Don Cockroft K
  •  8 Johnny Evans P/QB
Reserve lists

Vacant - none

Practice/Taxi Squad Vacant - none


Rookies in italics

[2]

Regular season[]

Schedule[]

Week Date Opponent Result Record Attendance
1 September 3 San Francisco W 24–7 1-0
68,973
2 September 10 Cincinnati W 13–10 (OT) 2-0
72,691
3 September 17 at Atlanta W 24–16 3-0
56,648
4 September 24 at Pittsburgh L 15–9 3-1
49,573
5 October 1 Houston L 16–13 3-2
72,776
6 October 8 at New Orleans W 24–16 4-2
50,158
7 October 15 Pittsburgh L 34–14 4-3
81,302
8 October 22 at Kansas City L 17–3 4-4
41,157
9 October 29 Buffalo W 41–20 5-4
51,409
10 November 5 at Houston L 14–10 5-5
45,827
11 November 12 Denver L 19–7 5-6
70,856
12 November 19 at Baltimore W 45–24 6-6
45,341
13 November 26 Los Angeles W 30–19 7-6
55,158
14 December 3 at Seattle L 47–24 7-7
62,262
15 December 10 NY Jets W 37–34 8-7
36,881
16 December 17 at Cincinnati L 48–16 8-8
46,985

Game Summaries[]

Week 1: vs. San Francisco 49ers[]

Week 1: San Francisco 49ers at Cleveland Browns;– Game summary
1 2 3 4 Total
49ers 0 7 0 0 7
Browns 7 7 0 10 24

at Cleveland Municipal Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Game information
First quarter
  • CLE – Greg Pruitt 2 yard rush, (Don Cockroft kick), Browns 7-0.

Second quarter

Third quarter

No Scoring

Fourth quarter

  • CLE – Reggie Rucker 69 yard pass from Brian Sipe, (Don Cockroft kick), Browns 21-7.
  • CLE – Don Cockroft 23 yard field goal, Browns 24-7.

Top passers

Top rushers

Top receivers

  • SF – Terry LeCount - 5 receptions, 63 yards
  • CLE – Reggie Rucker - 3 receptions, 113 yards, TD

Standings[]

Template:1978 AFC Central standings

References[]

  1. 1978 NFL Draft Listing – Pro-Football-Reference.com. Archived from the original on 2009-07-25. Retrieved on 2009-07-23.
  2. 1978 Cleveland Browns starters and roster. Pro-Football-Reference.com.

External links[]