1966 Cleveland Browns season

The 1966 Cleveland Browns season was the team's 17th season with the National Football League. They finished just 9–5, their worst record since 1962, and failed to make the playoffs for the first time since 1963.

1966 Cleveland Browns season
Head coachBlanton Collier
Home fieldCleveland Stadium
Local radioWERE
Results
Record9–5
Division placeT-2nd NFL Eastern
Playoff finishDid not qualify
Pro BowlersNone

Season summary

Save for a devastating 16–6 upset loss to a Pittsburgh Steelers team that would finish just 5–8–1, the Browns offense scored points in bunches. In later years, Browns players from that era said the 1966 team had the best offense—even better than the one in 1964, when the club won the NFL championship—and there's evidence to support that contention. The flurry of points started in the opener when the Browns blew out the Washington Redskins 38–14. It continued in a stretch of five straight games in which they lost 34–28 to the St. Louis Cardinals, beat the New York Giants 28–7, routed the Steelers 41–10, turned back the Dallas Cowboys 30–21 and crushed the expansion Atlanta Falcons 49–17.

Then, as they were finishing the season, the Browns outscored the Giants 49–40 and walloped the Cardinals 38–10.

The Browns scored 403 points in all, averaging a healthy 28.8 per contest. Even in the game that eventually did in their playoff chances—a 33–21 loss to the Philadelphia Eagles in the next-to-last week—they were able to score a decent number of points. Quarterback Frank Ryan was as good – or better – than he was in any of his previous three seasons as the full-time starter, including 1964, when he helped lead the Browns to the NFL championship. He threw for a career-high 2,974 yards and had better than a 2-to-1 ratio of touchdown passes (29) to interceptions (14). He also posted his second-best quarterback rating at 88.2.

NFL Draft

The following were selected in the 1966 NFL Draft.

RoundOverallPlayerPositionSchool/Club Team
114Milt MorinTight EndMassachusetts
229Rick NortonQuarterbackKentucky
461Pete DurankoDefensive EndNotre Dame
574Randy SchultzRunning BackNorthern Iowa
578Dan FulfordEndAuburn
690Jim BattleTackleSaginaw Valley
693Fred HoaglinCenterPittsburgh
7109Leroy CarterFlankerGrambling
8123Tom TalagaEndNotre Dame
9139Jack GregoryDefensive EndDelta St.
10153Monte LedbetterWide ReceiverNorthwestern St. (LA)
11169Tony FireTackleBowling Green
11183Rich CzapTackleNebraska
13199Jim BoudreauxTackleLouisiana Tech
14213Pete LammonsTight EndTexas
15229Bob EllisDefensive EndMassachusetts
16243David RayKickerAlabama
17259Gene ModzelewskiTackleNew Mexico St.
18273Charlie HarrawayRunning BackSan Jose St.
19289Karl SingerTacklePurdue
20303Joe PetroDefensive BackTemple

[1]

Exhibition schedule

Week Date Opponent Result Attendance
1 August 6, 1966 at Los Angeles Rams L 16–6
63,285
2 August 14, 1966 at San Francisco 49ers W 28–17
27,867
3 August 20, 1966 at Atlanta Falcons W 42–3
48,548
4 August 26, 1966 Baltimore Colts L 24–17
83,418
5 September 3, 1966 vs. Pittsburgh Steelers
  (at Birmingham)
W 13–10
23,590

There was a doubleheader on August 26, 1966 Redskins vs Vikings and Colts vs Browns.

Regular season schedule

Week Date Opponent Result Record Attendance
1 September 11 at Washington Redskins W 38–14 1–0
48,643
2 September 18 Green Bay Packers L 21–20 1–1
83,943
3 September 25 St. Louis Cardinals L 34–28 1–2
74,814
4 October 2 at New York Giants W 28–7 2–2
62,916
5 October 8 Pittsburgh Steelers W 41–10 3–2
82,687
6 October 16 Bye
7 October 23 Dallas Cowboys W 30–21 4–2
84,721
8 October 30 at Atlanta Falcons W 49–17 5–2
57,235
9 November 6 at Pittsburgh Steelers L 16–6 5–3
39,690
10 November 13 Philadelphia Eagles W 27–7 6–3
77,698
11 November 20 Washington Redskins W 14–3 7–3
78,466
12 November 24 at Dallas Cowboys L 26–14 7–4
75,504
13 December 4 New York Giants W 49–40 8–4
61,651
14 December 11 at Philadelphia Eagles L 33–21 8–5
58,074
15 December 17 at St. Louis Cardinals W 38–10 9–5
47,721
  • A bye week was necessary in 1966, as the league expanded to an odd-number (15) of teams (Atlanta); one team was idle each week.

Week 1

1 234Total
Browns 7 01021 38
Redskins 14 000 14

[2]

Week 6: at Atlanta

Week 6: Cleveland Browns at Atlanta Falcons – Game summary
1 2 34Total
Browns 14 7 72149
Falcons 0 10 0717

at Atlanta Stadium, Atlanta, GA

  • Date: October 30
  • Game time: 1:30 p.m. EST
  • Game weather: 58°F, relative humidity 62%, round (wind) 10 MPH
  • Game attendance: 57,235
  • TV announcers (CBS): Frank Glieber (play–by–play) and Warren Lahr (color commentator) (second half)
Game information

Week 12 at Cowboys

Week Twelve: Cleveland Browns (7–3) at Dallas Cowboys (7–2–1)
1 2 34Total
Browns 0 14 0014
Cowboys 6 7 6726

at Cotton Bowl, Dallas, Texas

  • Date: November 24
  • Game attendance: 80,259
  • Box Score

Standings

NFL Eastern Conference
W L T PCT CONF PF PA STK
Dallas Cowboys 10 3 1 .769 9–3–1 445 239 W1
Philadelphia Eagles 9 5 0 .643 8–5 326 340 W4
Cleveland Browns 9 5 0 .643 9–4 403 259 W1
St. Louis Cardinals 8 5 1 .615 7–5–1 264 265 L3
Washington Redskins 7 7 0 .500 7–6 351 355 L1
Pittsburgh Steelers 5 8 1 .385 4–8–1 316 347 W2
Atlanta Falcons 3 11 0 .214 2–5 204 437 L1
New York Giants 1 12 1 .077 1–11–1 263 501 L8

Note: Tie games were not officially counted in the standings until 1972.

Personnel

Roster

1966 Cleveland Browns roster
Quarterbacks

Running Backs

Wide Receivers

Tight Ends

Offensive Linemen

Defensive Linemen

Linebackers

Defensive Backs

Special Teams

Rookies in italics

[3]

Staff/Coaches

1966 Cleveland Browns staff
Front Office

Coaches

Offensive Coaches

  Defensive Coaches

Strength & Coditioning

  • Athletic Trainer - Leo Murphy
  • Equipment Manager - Morris Kono

[4]

References

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