Browns vs. Steelers: How to watch, listen, stream the Week 11 matchup

Browns vs. Steelers: How to watch, listen, stream the Week 11 matchup

Week 11 kicks off for the Cleveland Browns a couple days earlier than normal with the Thursday Night Football special in FirstEnergy Stadium. The Browns host the Pittsburgh Steelers in a critical AFC North matchup.

Game info

Pittsburgh Steelers (5-4) at Cleveland Browns (3-6)

Thursday, November 14, 8:20 p.m. ET

FirstEnergy Stadium, Cleveland

Line: The Browns are 2.5-point favorites

Watch

The game will be broadcast nationally on the NFL Network and on FOX. Joe Buck and Troy Aikman will have the call.

Listen

The full list of Cleveland Browns radio network affiliates for 2019:

AKRON
WAKR – 1590 AM
WONE – 97.5 FM

CANTON
WHBC – 94.1 FM/1480 AM

CELINA
WKKI – 94.3 FM

CLEVELAND
WKNR – 850 AM
WKRK – 92.3 FM
WNCX – 98.5 FM

COLUMBUS
WTOH – 98.9 FM

CORRY (PA)
WWCB – 1370 AM

DAYTON
WZLR – 95.3 FM/101.1 FM

DOVER
WJER – 1450 AM

ERIE (PA)
WPSE – 1450 AM/107.1 FM

FOSTORIA
WFOB – 1430 AM

GENEVA
WKKY – 104.7 FM

JAMESTOWN (NY)
WQFX – 103.1 FM

LIMA
WWSR – 93.1 FM

MANSFIELD
WRGM – 1440 AM
WVNO – 106.7 FM

MARIETTA
WJAW – 100.9 FM

NORMAN (OK)
KREF – 1400 AM

SANDUSKY
WMJK – 100.9 FM

TULSA (OK)
KAKC – 1300 AM

UHRICHSVILLE
WBTC – 1540 AM/101.9 FM

WHEELING (WV)
WKKX – 1600 AM/98.1 FM

WOOSTER
WQKT – 104.5 FM

YOUNGSTOWN
WKST 1200 AM

The game will also be available on Sirius XM satellite radio and the NFL Game Pass audio option on TuneIn Radio and other apps. The Browns will be on channel 205 on Sirius.

Live stream

fuboTV (try it free)

Browns.com will have a stream.

The game is available on NFL Game Pass. If you can watch the game locally you will not be able to legally stream it, however.

Tale of the Tape: Browns vs. Steelers in Week 11

A statistical breakdown of the matchup between the host Cleveland Browns and the Pittsburgh Steelers for Week 11

How do the Cleveland Browns and the Pittsburgh Steelers match up statistically heading into Thursday night’s game at FirstEnergy Stadium?

Here are some significant points from the tale of the tape between the two AFC North rivals.

Offense

The Steelers hold the edge in scoring average, 21.4 per game to the Browns’ 19.0.

Perhaps the biggest advantage the Browns have is in running the ball. Nick Chubb and the Cleveland rushing attack ranks 2nd in yards per carry at 5.2. Pittsburgh ranks 28th at just 3.5. In yards per game, the Browns average 123.9 (13th) to the Steelers and their 83.2 (27th).

Neither team is good in the red zone or on third downs. The Browns convert just 31.2 percent of third downs, just below Pittsburgh’s 36.1. Cleveland is better in the red zone, believe it or not, with a 46.7 TD rate to the Steelers’ 39.1 on the season.

Turnovers

One big area where the Steelers hold an advantage is turnovers. Pittsburgh is second in the NFL with 26 forced takeaways. Their overall plus-13 turnover ratio is also second-best (to New England in both categories).

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Cleveland sits near the bottom at minus-8 overall. The team has gone two weeks in a row without a giveaway, but a lack of forced turnovers from the defense — just nine on the season, or averaging one per game — hasn’t helped the ratio rise up very high.

Defense

The Browns rank 21st in PPG allowed at 24.6, well below the Steelers at No. 10 in allowing 20.1 points per game.

In pass defense, the Steelers also crack the top 10 with a QB Rating allowed of just 82.8 (6th). Cleveland’s 99.4 QB Rating allowed ranks 22nd. The interceptions for both teams factors in here.

The gap is narrower in yards per pass attempt, where the Steelers still have the advantage, 6.4 to 7.0. Both teams are in the middle of the NFL pack with those figures. Cleveland allows a lower completion percentage, 63.6 to Pittsburgh’s 64.7.

The two teams diverge in run defense. Pittsburgh is a full yard per carry better than the Browns, 3.9 to 4.9.

Ball security at a premium against the Steelers defense

The Steelers have at least 3 takeaways in 5 consecutive games

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Looking for a reason why the Pittsburgh Steelers have won four games in a row and surged into the AFC’s No. 6 seed even though Ben Roethlisberger has been on injured reserve since Week 3? The answer is easy.

Takeaways.

Pittsburgh’s defense has been masterful at getting the ball back from opposing offenses. The Steelers have 26 takeaways in nine games, one behind league-leading New England. That includes an NFL-high 12 fumble recoveries. Pittsburgh has at least three takeaways in each of its last five games.

One of the big keys is Minkah Fitzpatrick. Trading their 2020 first-round pick to Miami for the versatile defensive back has proven eminently worthy. Fitzpatrick has five takeaways of his own in the last three weeks, scoring two touchdowns on returns. He’s exactly what the doctor ordered for coordinator Keith Butler’s defense.

Cleveland’s own ball security has dramatically improved since the bye week. Sure, there were the three consecutive snaps in the loss to New England where the Browns infamously gave the ball away. Those are the only three giveaways in the three weeks since the break.

Baker Mayfield has thrown just one interception, the botched shovel pass to Jarvis Landry in the Patriots game, in his last 111 pass attempts. Mayfield remains No. 2 on the season with 12 picks thrown, but he’s been much better at not putting the ball at risk of late. His receivers haven’t volleyball set the ball to a defender in weeks, too.

 

3 things the Browns must clean up to keep on winning

Freddie Kitchens and the Browns still have issues to clean up despite beating the Buffalo Bills. Here are 3 prominent ones.

Beating the Buffalo Bills was great. The Cleveland Browns desperately needed a win, and they got one in Week 10. And while the team did several things well, including a focus on doing the little things better, there is still ample room for improvement from coach Freddie Kitchens and his Browns team.

If the Browns wish to keep the winning spirit when the Pittsburgh Steelers visit FirstEnergy Stadium on Thursday night, they need to do three things better than they did against the Bills.

Bad coaching decisions

Buffalo got a safety with Baker Mayfield getting sacked in the end zone on a terribly designed play for the situation. The Browns went empty backfield and had no immediate quick outlet for Mayfield if he faced pressure. High-risk plays and formations were not what the game script called for in that situation, and it cost the Browns two points.

Kitchens got snookered into a timeout at the end of the third quarter by some smart gamesmanship from the Buffalo offense. Josh Allen never had any intention of snapping the ball before the quarter was going to expire, but Kitchens bought into the sell job and burned a valuable timeout.

A later stupid call — the failed shovel pitch to Kareem Hunt that was overruled as an incomplete pass instead of a Bills TD — is a terrible idea. Mayfield has struggled with the timing and execution on those types of plays all year, and he’s throwing it to a player making his season debut. Bad, bad idea.

Those are the type of rookie coaching gaffes that need to stop. Kitchens is often too cute or doesn’t take the broader sense of the game flow and possible negative outcomes to mind.

The red zone offense remains brutal

The Browns would have handily run away with this game had they been more effective in the red zone in the first half. A series of slow-developing, obvious run plays were easily snuffed out by the Bills defense. What could have been three touchdowns instead resulted in one TD, one FG and one epic fail on fourth-and-goal from the Buffalo 1-yard line.

The Browns got those extra opportunities inside the Buffalo 2 because of defensive penalties. Two of those came on the exact same play, an out move to the corner by Odell Beckham Jr. where he was the only receiver on a route under consideration.

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Kitchens put the blame on the offensive line not performing its collective job well. He’s not wrong — the Bills defensive line dominated the line of scrimmage on those failed Nick Chubb tosses and handoffs — but the slow-developing handoffs and obvious pitch directions are too easy to defend, too.

Creating takeaways

Cleveland’s defense was really good at creating takeaways in 2018. The Browns forced 31 turnovers in 2018, second-most in the NFL. That has not carried over into the first half of 2019.

Only four teams have fewer takeaways than the Browns’ nine through Week 10. Those teams are all bad, too: Atlanta, Miami, Cincinnati and Denver. This week’s opponent, the Pittsburgh Steelers, has 11 takeaways in the last three weeks and 26 in nine games.

The playmakers on the defense need to do a better job of getting after the ball and creating more opportunities to take it away. Cornerback Denzel Ward had a chance to make a pick on the first Bills pass of the game in Week 10, but instead of playing the interceptable ball, he was flagged for pass interference. Those are the kind of plays the Browns defense needs to make.

Snap count notes: Browns primary defense played together a lot vs. Bills

Snap count notes: Browns primary defense played together a lot vs. Bills, and Kareem Hunt makes a splashy debut

The Cleveland Browns defense was on the field for 69 snaps against the Buffalo Bills in the team’s nice 19-16 win in Week 10. The primary 11 played together in those 69 snaps a lot more than usual.

Cornerback T.J. Carrie did not start the game. Juston Burris did instead. But Carrie qualified as one of the primary 11, playing 51 of the 69 reps to Burris’ 11. Every other defensive starter played at least 53 snaps, or at least 75 percent of the game. That includes Chad Thomas, who filled in for the injured Olivier Vernon at defensive end. Thomas played a career-high 54 reps in his first career start.

Also of note on defense: rookie Sione Takitaki took over the No. 3 LB role from Adarius Taylor. The third-rounder played 11 reps, while Taylor was seen exclusively on special teams.

On offense, Kareem Hunt’s return was a prominent one. The running back played 38 of the 74 offensive snaps. Hunt joined Nick Chubb (58 reps) on 28 of those for a 2-back look. To put that into perspective, the Browns did not have more than one RB on the field for a single snap in Week 9.

Rashard Higgins played 33 of the 74 snaps and caught his only passing target for the game-winning TD. KhaDarel Hodge played seven, and the Browns ran on six of those reps.

Backup OL Justin McCray played four snaps as an extra blocker in the short-yardage package. Damion Ratley and D’Ernest Johnson each saw exactly one rep on offense.

Studs and duds from Browns’ 19-16 victory over Bills

Studs and duds from the Browns’ 19-16 victory over the Bills

The Cleveland Browns finally won a home game and despite the low offensive output, they even beat the spread. Much of the postgame discussion will be surrounding the poor play-calling in the red zone and even more specifically the goal line, but the Browns actually beat Buffalo in a fairly solid fashion. Cleveland won the time of possession and total yards battle. With that said, a few players really stood out, with some in a more positive light than others.

Stud: Jarvis Landry

Landry is one of the most polarizing Cleveland players, with a huge portion of the fan base screaming about how below average he is, but he plays hard and not just as a receiver. He has also proved to be an extremely valuable blocker, which was evident on Demetrius Harris’ fourth-and-1 conversion as Landry’s block secured the first down. Landry also finished as the leading receiver on the day with nine receptions for 97 yards and one touchdown.

Dud: Chris Hubbard

With all of the discussion surrounding Greg Robinson on the other side, Hubbard is the worst starting offensive lineman. His best play was a false start penalty that forced Freddie Kitchens to kick the field goal instead of going for it. That’s right, Hubbard’s best play was his penalty. It is one thing to get beaten or physically dominated, but Hubbard has plays where he fails to even place a hand on a defender.

Stud: Nick Chubb

Chubb is the centerpiece of this offense and breaks tackles at a stunning rate. Everyone knew what the game plan for Cleveland was going to be and it didn’t matter as Chubb still hammered out 116 rushing yards on 20 carries. Chubb failed to reach pay dirt, but it was not for a lack of trying. The plan appears to be to utilize Hunt in more of the receiving role, which should allow him to be fresher throughout the game.

Dud: Morgan Burnett

Burnett was the team leader in tackles with seven and had a statistically pleasant day, but the aging defensive back got worked over. He tallied almost all of his tackles by chasing down receivers who had beaten him. Burnett was the target on nearly every big play allowed through the air.

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Baker Mayfield: win over Bills ‘can get us going here’

Browns QB Baker Mayfield believes the Week 10 win over the Buffalo Bills ‘can get us going here’

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A composed, measured Baker Mayfield addressed the media after the Cleveland Browns’ 19-16 win over the Buffalo Bills. Wearing a knit cap and an approachable demeanor, the Browns QB described how he believes the win can launch something big for the team.

“We didn’t play perfect by any means,” Mayfield said. “We can still learn from the film and move forward and improve. But having a tight victory against a great team is something that we needed — especially at home.”

Mayfield played well in the win. He completed 26 of his 38 pass attempts, netting 238 yards and two TDs. It was the first game of the season where Mayfield threw for multiple touchdowns. He did not turn the ball over, either.

The second-year QB seemed relieved at the win as he continued,

“We kind of got the monkey off our back with that one. First one, at home, in game nine is not something usually that happens but it can get us going from here.”

The Browns don’t get long to savor the victory. They host the rival Pittsburgh Steelers, winners of four in a row, on Thursday Night Football this week.