Browns DT Larry Ogunjobi donates 100,000 meals to local food bank

Browns DT Larry Ogunjobi donates 100,000 meals to the Greater Cleveland Food Bank in support of Feeding America

Larry Ogunjobi is doing what he can to help out folks in greater Cleveland who are in need. The Browns defensive tackle announced via Twitter he is donating 100,000 meals to the Greater Cleveland Food Bank in support of the Feeding America program.

Ogunjobi is the second Browns player in less than 24 hours to make a significant commitment and donation to the food bank, following in the footsteps of quarterback Baker Mayfield and his wife, Emily.

It’s a major gesture of generosity from Ogunjobi, who has earned a little over $1.2 million in his three years with the Browns. That’s not a lot of money by NFL standards, but that doesn’t matter to the big-hearted Ogunjobi.

You can also donate to the Greater Cleveland Food Bank if you can, or also see them if you need assistance in these unusual times.

Browns release DT Devaroe Lawrence with Larry Ogunjobi back from suspension

Browns release DT Devaroe Lawrence to make room for Larry Ogunjobi’s return

The suspension-related roster churning continues for the Cleveland Browns. In order to make room on the roster for Larry Ogunjobi’s return from his 1-game suspension, the Browns released fellow DT Devaroe Lawrence.

It’s a bit of a surprising move considering Lawrence’s more established presence with the team than either Brandin Bryant or Porter Gustin, who were each promoted from the practice squad last week. Lawrence was averaging just under 20 snaps per game for the season and notched eight tackles, zero sacks, one INT and one fumble recovery.

Ogunjobi returns to the starting lineup to face the Steelers after being suspended one game for his role in the brawl at the end of the Week 11 meeting between the two teams in Cleveland.

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12 Browns fined for their roles in the Week 11 brawl with the Steelers

12 Browns fined for their roles in the Week 11 brawl with the Steelers

A total of 12 different Cleveland Browns players received fines for their actions in the brawl at the end of the team’s Week 11 game with the Pittsburgh Steelers.

That total includes Myles Garrett, who received a $45,623 fine for his role as one of the two primary combatants. Steelers QB Mason Rudolph received a $50,000 fine, the largest amount levied.

Larry Ogunjobi was initially fined as well, but his fine was rescinded upon his unsuccessful suspension appeal. The defensive tackle will miss Sunday’s game against the Miami Dolphins.

There were 33 total players fined, as well as $250,000 penalties assessed to both teams. All of the other Browns were fined $3,507 for entering the fighting area. The Steelers had 19 players fined for that same violation.

The full list, courtesy of Tom Pelissero on Twitter:

Why Myles Garrett’s accusation against Mason Rudolph doesn’t hold water

Browns DE Myles Garrett accused Steelers QB Mason Rudolph of using a racial slur. Doug Farrar explains why the story doesn’t hold water.

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During Browns defensive end Myles Garrett’s appeal for the indefinite suspension handed down after he removed Steelers quarterback Mason Rudolph’s helmet and whacked him over the head with it at the end of Cleveland’s win over the Steelers on Nov. 14, Garrett testified that Rudolph used a racial slur against Garrett.

The NFL released a statement in which it said that there was no evidence of this.

“Mason vehemently denies the report of being accused of using a racial slur during the incident Thursday night in Cleveland,” Steelers spokesman Burt Lauten said in a statement. “He will not discuss this accusation any further, and his focus remains on preparation for Sunday’s game against the Cincinnati Bengals.”

Timothy M. Younger, Rudolph’s attorney, said this in a statement: “According to ESPN, in his appeal, Myles Garrett falsely asserted that Mason Rudolph uttered a racial slur toward him, prior to swinging a helmet at Mason’s uncovered head, in a desperate attempt to mitigate his suspension. This is a lie. This false allegation was never asserted by Garrett in the aftermath of the game, never suggested prior to the hearing, and conspicuously absent in the apology published by the Browns and adopted by Garrett.

“The malicious use of this wild and unfounded allegation is an assault on Mason’s integrity, which is far worse than the physical assault witnessed on Thursday. This is reckless and shameful. We will have no further comment.”

Garrett’s suspension was upheld, and he will not play through the rest of the 2019 season, however long that lasts for the 4-6 Browns. However, the reaction to Garrett’s claim was just getting started.

“I just don’t see Myles as someone who would lie or do anything like that,” Browns receiver Odell Beckham Jr. said. “At this point, it is what it is. We’re all just kind of waiting and just hoping that justice is served.”

Jake Trotter, ESPN’s Browns reporter, asked Baker Mayfield and defensive lineman Sheldon Richardson about the accusation.

Richardson’s response is especially interesting, as he was on the field when the incident happened, while Mayfield — who was obviously on the sideline — would have only hearsay evidence to go with.

Was Garrett trying to save his own skin, or is there something to this? I went back and looked at the play in question, and I have serious doubts. I think Rudolph did throw one particular expletive during the play, but it didn’t appear to be directed at Garrett.

Here, as Browns defensive tackle Larry Ogunjobi pushes Rudolph to the ground, cursory lip-reading shows an expletive that starts with B. Not necessarily racial in nature, but also not something I’d want to hurl at the 6-foot-3, 305-pound Ogunjobi. That said, such language is not uncommon during a fracas on the field.

Going back to the progression of the actual play, we can see Garrett slamming Rudolph to the ground, Rudolph trying to pull Garrett’s helmet off, Garrett pulling Rudolph’s helmet off, offensive linemen Matt Feiler (No 71) and David DeCastro (No. 66) coming in to intervene, and referee Clete Blakeman coming in to break the fight up and throw the flag. Unless Rudolph used this slur while he was trying to pull Garrett’s helmet off, Blakeman likely would have heard it, and there’s no way an NFL referee would have let that slide.

Then, we have the post-fight hangout, where Rudolph (No. 2) is standing alone on the field, and Browns defensive lineman Devaroe Lawrence (No. 99) getting Garrett off the field. Had anyone else heard Rudolph say something of that nature, one assumes there would be a line of players eager to discuss it with him.

There’s also the matter of Garrett not saying anything about this until his appeal hearing. In the modern news cycle, it’s difficult to imagine this story not getting out; especially considering the fact that if Garrett or one of his teammates had relayed it, it would have gone some distance in explaining (although not excusing) his actions.

Ian Rapoport of the NFL Network reported on Thursday that in making their determination, the league went though all available audio of the game, including miked-up players, and the reports officials file after each game. In the league’s determination, nothing was seen or heard to be a mitigating factor.

That’s not to say that Rudolph didn’t say something; the evidence we have is circumstantial. But based on what we know and what we can see, it’s difficult to believe.

Garrett, however, is sticking to his story.

Touchdown Wire editor Doug Farrar has also covered football for Yahoo! Sports, Sports Illustrated, Bleacher Report, the Washington Post, and Football Outsiders. His first book, “The Genius of Desperation,” a schematic history of professional football, was published by Triumph Books in 2018 and won the Professional Football Researchers Association’s Nelson Ross Award for “Outstanding recent achievement in pro football research and historiography.”

Larry Ogunjobi loses his suspension appeal, will miss Week 12

Browns DT Larry Ogunjobi lost his appeal and will remain suspended for the Week 12 matchup with the Miami Dolphins

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Browns defensive tackle Larry Ogunjobi had his appellate hearing on Monday with the NFL league office. Ogunjobi was appealing his one-game suspension for his role in the Thursday Night Football brawl at the end of the Browns’ win over the Pittsburgh Steelers.

The league upheld the suspension, meaning Ogunjobi will miss the Week 12 matchup with the Miami Dolphins. His $10,500 fine was rescinded, however.

Ogunjobi pushed Steelers QB Mason Rudolph to the ground after the infamous Myles Garrett helmet attack. He was penalized during the game and ejected for his action.

Garrett’s appeal was heard on Wednesday. No decision has been made yet.

Multiple players suspended for Browns-Steelers fight

Three players, including Myles Garrett, were suspended for their roles in the Steelers-Browns fight on Thursday night.

If you missed the Week 11 contest between the AFC North rivals Pittsburgh Steelers and Cleveland Browns, you missed a complete meltdown at the end of the game. Browns defensive lineman Myles Garrett ripped Steelers quarterback Mason Rudolph’s helmet off and swung it at him, connecting with his head and sparking a melee in the end zone at FirstEnergy Stadium.

A day later and the end result is the suspension of three players – two from Cleveland and one from Pittsburgh — as well as some big fines, according to the NFL.

  • Garrett is suspended indefinitely, which will include the rest of the 2019 season at a minimum.
  • Browns defensive tackle Larry Ogunjobi is suspended for one game.
  • Steelers center Maurkice Pouncey is suspended for three games.
  • Pittsburgh and Cleveland were fined $250,000 each.

There also appears to be some additional punishments coming down the line for other players as the league dives further into what happened during the scuffle.

These suspensions will deal a big blow to both the Steelers’ and Browns’ chances of making the postseason. All three players are starters and have been important pieces of their respective teams. Furthermore, if Garrett’s suspension holds, he’ll end up missing the Week 16 Ravens-Browns rematch that could very well decide Cleveland’s postseason fate.

With their win, the Browns are now 4-6 while the Steelers sit at 5-5. Even if Baltimore were to lose this week to the Houston Texans, the Ravens would still effectively hold a three-game lead over Pittsburgh given their head-to-head tiebreaker from the Week 5 win.

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Myles Garrett suspended indefinitely, at least through the end of the 2019 season

After one of the ugliest incidents in NFL history, Browns defensive end Myles Garrett has been suspended indefinitely.

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Following the incident near the end of the Browns’ win over the Steelers on Thursday Night Football in which Cleveland defensive end Myles Garrett removed Pittsburgh quarterback Mason Rudolph’s helmet and hit him in the head with it, you knew NFL justice was going to come fairly quickly. The incident went viral overnight and gave the NFL several black eyes in the process, so the league fired back as quickly as it could.

As reported by ESPN’s Adam Schefter, Garrett has been suspended indefinitely, which in the league’s purview means that he will not see any on-field action throughout this season and the playoffs. Garrett must speak with NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell before he is to be reinstated next season. In addition, Steelers center Maurkice Pouncey, who came to his quarterback’s defense and was ejected, will be suspended for the next three games, and Browns defensive lineman Larry Ogunjobi, who was also ejected, was suspended for one game. Each team was fined $250,000 for the fracas.

Per the NFL’s statement, “Additional discipline for other players will be forthcoming through the standard accountability process, including those players that left the bench to enter the fight area.”

Rudolph, who appeared to attempt to remove Garrett’s helmet in response to Garrett’s late hit with eight seconds left in the game, was not suspended. Fines have not been ruled out for Rudolph and other players. We also have no word at this point what might happen to Browns safety Damarious Randall, who was ejected halfway through the third quarter after a helmet-to-helmet hit on Steelers receiver Diontae Johnson, who left the field bleeding from his right ear.

This was one of the ugliest games in NFL history, and the fallout is just beginning. Stay tuned to Touchdown Wire for further news as it develops.

Touchdown Wire editor Doug Farrar has also covered football for Yahoo! Sports, Sports Illustrated, Bleacher Report, the Washington Post, and Football Outsiders. His first book, “The Genius of Desperation,” a schematic history of professional football, was published by Triumph Books in 2018 and won the Professional Football Researchers Association’s Nelson Ross Award for “Outstanding recent achievement in pro football research and historiography.”

Larry Ogunjobi suspended 1 game for his role in the Browns-Steelers brawl

Ogunjobi will miss the team’s Week 12 game against the Bengals

Cleveland Browns starting defensive tackle Larry Ogunjobi has been suspended one game for his role in the massive brawl at the end of the team’s Thursday night win over the Pittsburgh Steelers. He will miss the team’s Week 12 contest against the Cincinnati Bengals.

Ogunjobi pushed Steelers QB Mason Rudolph to the ground after the Myles Garrett helmet-swinging incident. He has also been fined an undisclosed amount by the NFL.

Garrett has been suspended indefinitely. Steelers center Maurkice Pouncey has also been suspended three games for punching and kicking Garrett on the ground.

The full initial statement from the NFL announcing the series of suspensions, including Ogunjobi’s:

Baker Mayfield speaks out against Myles Garrett’s violence after crazy TNF ending

What Myles Garrett did to Mason Rudolph was completely unacceptable, and it was right for Baker Mayfield to speak out against it.

Cleveland Browns defensive end Myles Garrett is one of the NFL’s best at his position. He came into Thursday night’s game against the Steeelers with 10 sacks and 15 quarterback hits. And while Garrett’s Browns won this game, they won’t have Garrett on the active roster for a while — Garrett was ejected from the game late in the fourth quarter following a set-to with Steelers quarterback Mason Rudolph.

Garrett took some extra time to take Rudolph down on the play in question with 14 seconds left in the game after Rudolph released the ball. This frustrated Rudolph, who pulled at Garrett’s helmet. This frustrated Garrett, who pulled Rudolph’s helmet off… and then hit Rudolph with his own helmet.

Garrett, Browns defensive lineman Larry Ogunjobi, and Steelers center Mike Pouncey were all ejected from the game, with offsetting penalties. The game was over two plays later, with the Browns winning, 21-7.

That’s the end of the good news for the Browns, who will absolutely face serious disciplinary action from the league sooner than later. Garrett, who engaged in a tactic as brutal as anything you’ll see on a football field, will undoubtedly be suspended multiple games, if not for the entire season.

Throughout the 2019 campaign, the Browns have struggled with issues of consistency and self-control. But this brought things to an entirely new level, and there’s absolutely no excuse for any of it. What Garrett did crosses the lines of football and veers into assault territory.

Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin refused to comment on the incident. During a post-game interview with the NFL Network, Browns receiver Odell Beckham, Jr. saw what Garrett did for the first time, and was visibly shaken.

“It’s inexcusable,” Browns quarterback Baker Mayfield said of Garrett’s actions when asked by FOX Sports’ Erin Andrews. “Rivalry or not, we can’t do that. That’s endangering the other team. That’s inexcusable. The reality is, he’s going to get suspended. It’s inexcusable.”

Yes he will, and yes it is.