Browns vs. Giants: How to watch, listen, stream the Week 15 game

The Browns are back in prime time

The Browns are back on prime time for the second week in a row. After Monday night’s loss at home to Baltimore, Cleveland looks to get back to the winning ways in New York against the Giants.

It’s a game rife with playoff implications for both teams. The Giants trail Washington by a game in the NFC East, but New York would win the division in the case of a tie by virtue of sweeping the Football Team this year. The Browns are looking to stay atop the AFC Wild Card standings.

Cleveland Browns (9-4) at New York Giants (5-8)

  • 8:15 p.m. ET
  • MetLife Stadium, New York

The game is a nationally televised matchup on NBC. Mike Tirico slides into the booth next to Cris Collinsworth with Al Michaels unavailable due to COVID-19 protocols.

Live streaming

Radio

The Browns flagship stations in Cleveland are 92.3 The Fan, 98.5 WNCX, and 850 AM WKNR.

The full list of Browns radio affiliates around Ohio and the midwest includes over 25 stations. Check the local availability here via the Browns official site. 

On SiriusXM NFL Radio, the Browns home feed will be broadcast on Channel 225 and streaming on Channel 807.

Odds

The Browns are 6.5-point favorites on the latest line at BetMGM. That’s up from the 4.5-point opening during the week.

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

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Browns elevate OL Michael Dunn from the practice squad

This is Dunn’s second time with a standard elevation

The Cleveland Browns elevated offensive lineman Michael Dunn from the practice squad to the active roster for Sunday night’s matchup with the New York Giants.

Dunn will fill in the opening along the line with starting right guard Wyatt Teller ruled out with an ankle injury. Veteran Chris Hubbard will start in place of Teller, which opens the door for Dunn to step up as depth. Like Hubbard, Dunn is capable of playing both tackle and guard.

This is the second time Dunn has been elevated to the active roster for game day. He also played up in Week 9. In Week 11, Dunn was elevated as a COVID-19 replacement, which doesn’t count against his promotion opportunities.

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Baker Mayfield knows beating Giants ‘would mean a ton’ to Odell Beckham Jr.

Beckham is injured and will miss the revenge game against his old Giants team

Odell Beckham Jr. can only watch on Sunday as his Cleveland Browns play against his old team, the New York Giants. What was supposed to be a triumphant return to New York for the Browns’ wideout will have to wait.

Or he can live vicariously through his teammates. Quarterback Baker Mayfield seems fine with bearing that weight.

“This one would mean a ton to (Beckham),” Mayfield told reporters this week. “Not necessarily in a revenge way, but whenever you play a team that you are familiar with — I had the same thing in college going back and playing Texas Tech — it means a lot to you. We are going to play for him because he is one of our guys so we need to do that.”

Beckham spent his first five seasons with the Giants and became a superstar in the bright lights of New York. He’s had two uneven, injury-laden seasons with the Browns since the blockbuster trade, and he’s on injured reserve now after tearing his ACL in Week 7.

It appears to be a much bigger deal for New York media that Beckham isn’t playing than it is for the 9-4 Browns themselves. But Mayfield spoke for many teammates who want to help their injured mate enjoy the return trip to New York.

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Behind Enemy Lines with Giants Wire to break down Week 15

Behind Enemy Lines with Giants Wire to break down Week 15

Cleveland heads to New York for the first of two straight games in the same stadium. Up first is a meeting with the Giants in Week 15.

New York is 5-8 but still very much alive for the NFC East title. The Giants have some injury issues under head coach Joe Judge, but they’ve proven successful over the last few weeks after a miserable start.

Where are the Giants at now, and how much of a threat are they to the Browns? For answers to those questions, as well as an update on some former Browns now on Big Blue, I turned to Giants Wire and editor Dan Benton for a few questions about the matchup.

New York rattled off four wins in a row before falling to Arizona last week. What was the biggest key to the successful surge?

It was really all about steady improvement from the entire team. The Giants had been grinding away all season and felt like they were always this close to winning games, and that four-game stretch was when things finally came together. They were outcoached and outclassed against Arizona, but that may have been an exception to the rule rather than the rule itself. They’re the youngest team in the league and have a first-time head coach, new staff, new systems and were thrown into the fire without a full offseason and no preseason — it was a recipe for disaster so for the team to even be where they are is a testament to Joe Judge & Co. They need to shake that Arizona loss off and get back to focusing on the fundamentals and playing disciplined football.

What’s going on with Daniel Jones at QB, both short-term and for the future?

Prior to that terrible game in Arizona where the offensive line surrendered nine QB hits and six sacks of a one-legged quarterback, Daniel Jones had been performing at a high level. Analytically, he was a top 10 quarterback league-wide and had strung together some of the highest-graded games of his career. He was among the league’s most elite rushing quarterbacks and his actual completion percentage was higher than his expected completion percentage, which speaks volumes about his accuracy considering Giants wide receivers average league-low separation (over 1.20 yards below the league average per route run).

What Jones needs to do now is swallow some pride, sit on the bench and heal up. And what the Giants need to do is find him some wide receivers that can create more than 1.55 yards of separation and actually catch the football. Hard to find success in this league when your skill position players can’t separate and then are top seven in dropped passes.

How are the former Browns, Jabrill Peppers and Kevin Zeitler, faring for the Giants?

For Kevin Zeitler, it’s about what you’d expect. He’s a consummate professional and his play is consistently above average. He’s never really going to blow anyone away as the elite of the elite, but he’s a reliable rock at right guard and by far the team’s best offensive lineman. As far as Peppers is concerned, phew… Where do we begin? Thank goodness general manager Dave Gettleman demanded him as part of the Odell Beckham Jr. trade. Paired with Logan Ryan, Peppers is having his best season as a pro and deserves consideration as both a Pro Bowler and All-Pro. He’s just an absolute wrecking ball on the field defensively, contributes on special teams and has evolved into a locker room leader. He’s really everything you’d want in a player across the board.

What matchup with the Browns favors New York the most, and which one scares you from a Giants perspective?

Prior to James Bradberry landing on the Reserve/COVID-19 list, I would have said Patrick Graham vs. Baker Mayfield was the Giants’ best matchup. As physically gifted as Mayfield is, he’s still adjusting to reading defenses and no coordinator disguises his defense better than Graham. That will still be the case come Sunday night, but having a true lockdown CB1 really helps things along. Without Bradberry, the Giants’ corner depth is nearly nonexistent and limits what the team can do in the secondary. As far as the Browns’ advantage, that one is simple: Myles Garrett vs. Andrew Thomas and Cam Fleming. Good luck to whichever quarterback is under center for New York.

Who wins and why?

Without James Bradberry, optimism has left the room. Add in that Daniel Jones now has two bum legs and things are not shaping up well. If he can’t play, Colt McCoy steps in and I simply don’t have enough faith in him to carry the team in a potential shootout. It’s a bad situation for the Giants. Going with Cleveland in this one and it has the potential to get ugly.

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Jarvis Landry: ‘I was not opposed’ to the Browns firing Freddie Kitchens

Landry spoke for a lot of teammates who weren’t sad to see Freddie leave

One of the lasting memories of the Cleveland Browns frustrating 2019 campaign came in the Week 15 loss to the Arizona Cardinals. Wide receiver Jarvis Landry animatedly argued with head coach Freddie Kitchens with several very interested Browns players watching closely.

Kitchens is now gone, while Landry is having a strong season on the vastly improved Browns. They’ll face off in New York on Sunday with Kitchens taking over the play-calling duties for the Giants with OC Jason Garrett sidelined with COVID-19.

Landry diplomatically expressed his approval of the team moving on from Kitchens.

“I was not opposed to it,’’ Landry said on Thursday when asked if he wanted Kitchens to get fired by Cleveland last year. “I can only do my job and trust that the staff and the organization are going to be able to put somebody in place, whether that continued to be Freddie or Coach Kevin (Stefanski) as it is now obviously, to make sure that we can get on the right track and be a winning football team.”

When pressed, Landry elaborated a little more on his rocky relationship with Kitchens’ coaching and the disappointing 2019 season on the whole.

“It definitely was a frustrating season for a lot of people,’’ Landry said. “That’s just kind of how the NFL is. It’s kind of how it works. Each game you go into, it is any given Sunday, anybody can beat you and you have to play your ‘A’ game. I do not want to go back too much into last year, but I just did not think that the season ended the way that anybody wanted it to.”

Don’t expect any grandiose gestures by Landry or the Browns, not in the manner of presenting the ball to Hue Jackson in the infamous Bengals incident in 2018. But do expect the Browns players to try and take out some pent-up frustration against their old coach.

Freddie Kitchens will run the Giants offense vs. the Browns

Giants OC Jason Garrett is sidelined with COVID-19 so Kitchens takes over

Sunday night’s matchup with the New York Giants just got a little spicier. Former Cleveland Browns head coach Freddie Kitchens will be calling the offense for the Giants in place of New York offensive coordinator Jason Garrett.

Garrett has been diagnosed with COVID-19 and will miss the game. The Giants announced they are turning over the play-calling to Kitchens, who serves as the team’s tight ends coach, in his absence.

Kitchens was the Browns head coach in 2019 and did not perform well. His Browns finished a disappointing 6-10 and the offense often seemed to be hammering square pegs into round holes.

In addition to the unexpected change of course on the coaching front, the Giants also are still unsure if starting quarterback Daniel Jones will play. Jones is battling injuries to his lower leg. Another former Brown, Colt McCoy, will start if Jones can’t play.

Browns Week 15 game vs. Giants moved to Sunday Night Football

The Browns-Giants game gets flexed to primetime

The Browns are getting some well-deserved respect from the NFL broadcast partners. Per ESPN’s Adam Schefter, Cleveland’s Week 15 matchup with the New York Giants has been moved to a primetime game.

Originally set as a 1 p.m. ET kickoff, the NFL flexed the Browns-Giants game to the Sunday Night Football slot on NBC. The regularly scheduled matchup for SNF, Dallas versus San Francisco, takes over the 1 p.m. slot.

Cleveland is 9-3 and could conceivably clinch a playoff berth in the Giants matchup. New York has won four in a row to surge to first place in the NFC East, albeit with a 5-7 record.

It will be the second national audience in a row for the Browns, who play the Baltimore Ravens on Monday Night Football in Week 14.

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