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Browns Outplay the Jets Everywhere Except Special Teams and Quarterback — and Lose Anyway

The Cleveland Browns somehow found a way to lose a game they completely controlled.

Despite holding the New York Jets to just 54 total passing yards, forcing multiple turnovers, and unveiling a noticeably improved offensive game plan under new coordinator Tommy Rees, the Browns fell 27–20 in a game that felt like a rerun of every heartbreaking loss this franchise seems destined to relive.

Browns Outplay the Jets Everywhere Except Special Teams and Quarterback — and Lose Anyway

Nov 9, 2025; East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA; New York Jets quarterback Justin Fields (7) is tackled by Cleveland Browns defensive tackle Maliek Collins (96) at MetLife Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

Defense: Dominant and Deserving Better

The box score doesn’t lie — Cleveland’s defense was lights out.

If you remove the Jets’ single big play — a 42-yard touchdown from Justin Fields to Breece Hall — New York’s remaining five completions totaled 11 yards. That’s not a typo: five completions for 11 yards of offense.

Myles Garrett recorded his 11th sack of the season, Mason Graham leveled Fields with a near-strip, and Rodney Hickman’s interception set up a Browns touchdown. Fields finished 6-of-11 for 54 yards, 1 TD, 1 INT, and took three sacks for –12 yards — good for a 16.0 QBR and 60.4 passer rating.

The defense gave up only 13 of the Jets’ 27 points. The rest came from self-inflicted wounds.

Special Teams: The Collapse Continues

The nightmare began — and effectively ended — in two minutes of chaos.

A kickoff return touchdown and a punt return touchdown in rapid succession erased a potential 14–0 Browns lead and flipped momentum entirely. Those 14 points handed the Jets the lifeline they needed.

This is not a one-time issue. It’s at least the second — maybe third — game this season that catastrophic special teams breakdowns have cost Cleveland a win. For a team built on defense and efficiency, that’s inexcusable.

As one fan put it online: “Special Teams should not cost you the game — but for the Browns, it always seems to.”

Offense: A Better Plan, Same Quarterback Problem

For much of the night, the Browns’ offense actually looked functional. Rees’ debut brought creativity, rhythm, and a balanced approach. The Browns scored two offensive touchdowns — both on play-action — to Jerry Jeudy and David Njoku.

But Dillon Gabriel remains the anchor dragging this offense down.

His final line — 17 of 32 for 167 yards, 2 TDs, 0 INTs — looks fine until you watch the tape. He took six sacks for – 47 yards, several on third down. He held the ball too long, missed open reads, and threw multiple “hospital balls” over the middle that could’ve gotten receivers decapitated.

A few of his passes looked like they came from a middle school clinic, floating short or sailing high with no zip or precision. And when the game mattered most — 4th and 1 in Jets territory — he lined up in shotgun and took another sack.

Rees gave him the blueprint. Gabriel couldn’t execute it.

The Final Sequence and Familiar Excuses

Some will point to the defensive offside penalty with under a minute left as the turning point. But that assumes Gabriel was capable of taking the team 80 yards in under a minute — a notion that’s, frankly, laughable.

Once again, the Browns were the better team everywhere — dominating on defense for most of the night, showing progress on offense, but faltering at quarterback on key third- and fourth-down plays and completely collapsing on special teams.

And that’s all it takes to lose in the NFL — just a handful of plays. The margin between winning and heartbreak in Cleveland remains as thin, and as painful, as ever.

After the game, Head Coach Kevin Stefanski delivered his usual postmortem:

“We have to do a better job.”

Hearing it again feels like salt in a wound that never closes. For Browns fans, it’s the same hollow refrain week after week — a cycle of hope, heartbreak, and déjà vu.

Being a Browns fan has become like being a spouse in an abusive marriage — you cling to the hope that things will get better, only to find a new way to get hurt.

Bottom Line

The Browns’ defense was dominant. The offense looked improved under Rees. But Dillon Gabriel’s inconsistency and catastrophic special teams play made it all meaningless.

In a league decided by a handful of plays, Cleveland found the worst possible way to lose — again. And until something changes at quarterback, special teams, or the man in charge, it’s hard to believe the ending will be any different next week.

Main Image: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

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