CLEVELAND (AP) — Baker Mayfield threw two touchdown passes, Nick Chubb ran for two scores and 124 yards and the Cleveland Browns gave coach Kevin Stefanski his first NFL victory Thursday night by beating the Cincinnati Bengals 35-30 on the NFL’s 100th birthday.
Mayfield connected with Odell Beckham Jr. on a 43-yard scoring pass in the first half, and the Browns (1-1) rebounded from an atrocious performance last week in Baltimore, where they were roughed up 38-6 by the Ravens and looked mostly inept in Stefanski’s debut.
Things went much more smoothly against the Bengals (0-2) and No. 1 overall pick Joe Burrow, who threw three TD passes and showed incredible poise in just his second game.
Burrow’s third TD pass — a 9-yarder to Tyler Boyd with 43 seconds left — pulled the Bengals within five, but the Browns recovered the ensuing onside kick and ran out the clock.
Mayfield made it a priority to get the ball early to Beckham, who had only three catches for 22 yards in the opener. Beckham finished with four catches for 74 yards.
Mayfield completed 16 of 23 passes for 219 yards and one interception.
Kareem Hunt had a TD catch, ran for a score and rushed for 86 yards for Cleveland.
Burrow finished 37 of 61 for 316 yards. He was sacked three times, and had an unfortunate moment when he tried to call timeout and had the ball snapped past him. But the reigning Heisman Trophy winner matched Mayfield pass for pass and showed why the Bengals believe he can turn them around.
Fittingly, the matchup between Ohio’s teams came as the NFL officially turned a century old. It was on Sept. 17, 1920, when an agreement during a meeting in Canton laid the groundwork for what became a multi-billion-dollar business and America’s most popular sport.
There were 6,000 fans inside 68,000-seat FirstEnergy Stadium for Cleveland’s home opener after the Browns were granted a variance by the state of Ohio to have a gathering larger than COVID-19 regulations allow.
Fans stayed socially distanced, masked for the most part and brought needed energy after both teams played in empty stadiums in Baltimore and Cincinnati a week ago. Some of the loudest cheers came after Beckham’s TD.
Mayfield’s scoring strike to Beckham in the second quarter was the kind of play the Browns envisioned the pair making more often.
After faking a handoff, Mayfield rolled left to buy time before lofting a perfect throw down the sideline to Beckham, who beat Bengals cornerback William Jackson III to give the Browns a 14-3 lead.
Burrow kept the Bengals in it with a 23-yard TD to C.J. Uzomah in the second quarter, but Cincinnati’s defense couldn’t slow down the Browns and Mayfield tossed a 6-yard TD pass to a wide-open Hunt to give Cleveland a 21-10 lead.
The Browns pushed it to 28-13 in the third quarter on Chubb’s second TD run, which came after Myles Garrett stripped Burrow near the goal line and Cleveland recovered.
100 CANDLES
The NFL traces its beginnings to a meeting in Canton, Ohio, on Sept. 17, 1920. Commissioner Roger Goodell offered a toast to the league’s big birthday.
“To the more than 25,000 players who’ve ever played in this league: Your talent and tenacity are forever etched in our memories,” he said. “To the players of today: From the superstars adding to their legacies, to the dynamic young players blazing new trails – you are the backbone of the NFL. To the most loyal and passionate fans anywhere: The NFL would be nothing without you. ”
STREAK STOPPED
Due to the coronavirus, Bengals owner and president Mike Brown didn’t travel and missed his first regular-season game since 1968.
The 85-year-old Brown told the team’s website that not going was “wrenching.”
Brown had attended 824 consecutive games. The only one he had missed previously was in 1991, when he skipped a preseason game to be with his dying father, coaching great Paul Brown.
INJURIES:
Bengals: Uzomah was carted off with a right Achilles tendon injury after making a catch in the fourth.
Browns: DE Adrian Clayborn went out with a hip injury in the second quarter. He sacked Burrow before going out.
UP NEXT
Bengals: Visit the Philadelphia Eagles on Sept. 27.
Browns: Host the Washington Football Team on Sept. 27. Cleveland leads the series 33-12-1.