2004 Cleveland Browns season

2004 Cleveland Browns season
Head coach Butch Davis
Terry Robiskie (interim)
Home field Cleveland Browns Stadium
Local radio WTAM · WMMS
Results
Record 4–12
Division place 4th AFC North
Playoff finish did not qualify
Pro Bowlers none

The 2004 Cleveland Browns season was the team’s 56th season and 52nd with the National Football League. The Browns were looking to improve on their 5–11 record from 2003 and return to their 2002 playoff position; however, hindered by a tough schedule they regressed further and only won four games. On November 30, Butch Davis resigned as Head Coach and General Manager of the team. He was succeeded by offensive coordinator Terry Robiskie. Robiskie promoted tight end coach Rob Chudzinski to offensive coordinator.

2004 NFL Draft

Draft order Player name Position College
Round Pick
1 6 Kellen Winslow Tight End Miami
2 59 Sean Jones Safety Georgia
4 106 Luke McCown Quarterback Louisiana Tech
5 161 Amon Gordon Defensive Lineman Stanford
6 176 Kirk Chambers Offensive Lineman Stanford
7 208 Adimchinobi Echemandu Running Back California

Staff

2004 Cleveland Browns staff
Front office

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Head coaches

Offensive coaches

Defensive coaches

Special teams coaches

  • Special Teams Quality Control – Marwan Maalouf

Strength and conditioning

  • Head Strength – Buddy Morris
  • Strength and Conditioning – Jerry Rosburg

Senior Assistant Strength and Conditioning – Rob Phillips

Roster

2004 Cleveland Browns final roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Reserve lists


Practice squad


Rookies in italics
Active, Inactive, Practice squad

Schedule

Football statistics site Football Outsiders calculated that the 2004 Browns played the toughest schedule of any NFL team between 1989 and 2013, based on strength of opponent,[1] although Pro Football Reference[2] argues that their schedule was only the fifth-toughest in this span and twelfth-toughest non-strike since 1971.[note 1] The Browns played just one game – their second-last against the Miami Dolphins – against a team with fewer than six wins, and played five against opponents with 12 or more wins, including a total of three against Steeler and Patriot lineups that went 28–2 against their remaining opponents.

Apart from their AFC North division games, the Browns played against the AFC East and NFC East according to the conference rotation, and played the Chargers and Texans based on 2003 divisional positions.

WeekDateOpponentResultStadiumRecordAttendance
1September 12, 2004Baltimore RavensW 20–3Cleveland Browns Stadium1–073,068
2September 19, 2004at Dallas CowboysL 12–19Texas Stadium1–163,119
3September 26, 2004at New York GiantsL 10–27Giants Stadium1–278,521
4October 3, 2004Washington RedskinsW 17–13Cleveland Browns Stadium2–273,348
5October 10, 2004at Pittsburgh SteelersL 23–34Heinz Field2–363,609
6October 17, 2004Cincinnati BengalsW 34–17Cleveland Browns Stadium3–373,263
7October 24, 2004Philadelphia EaglesL 31–34Cleveland Browns Stadium3–473,394
8Bye
9November 7, 2004at Baltimore RavensL 13–27M&T Bank Stadium3–569,781
10November 14, 2004Pittsburgh SteelersL 10–24Cleveland Browns Stadium3–673,703
11November 21, 2004New York JetsL 7–10Cleveland Browns Stadium3–772,547
12November 28, 2004at Cincinnati BengalsL 48–58Paul Brown Stadium3–865,677
13December 5, 2004New England PatriotsL 15–42Cleveland Browns Stadium3–973,028
14December 12, 2004at Buffalo BillsL 7–37Ralph Wilson Stadium3–1072,330
15December 19, 2004San Diego ChargersL 0–21Cleveland Browns Stadium3–1172,489
16December 26, 2004at Miami DolphinsL 7–10Pro Player Stadium3–1273,169
17January 2, 2005at Houston TexansW 22–14Reliant Stadium4–1270,724

Standings

AFC North
W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
(1) Pittsburgh Steelers 15 1 0 .938 5–1 11–1 372 251 W14
Baltimore Ravens 9 7 0 .563 3–3 6–6 317 268 W1
Cincinnati Bengals 8 8 0 .500 2–4 4–8 374 372 W2
Cleveland Browns 4 12 0 .250 2–4 3–9 276 390 W1

Notes

  1. Tougher schedules according to Pro Football Reference in non-strike seasons since 1971 were suffered by, in descending order of toughness, the 2010 Buffalo Bills, the 1975 Browns and 1975 Jets (equal), the 2009 Tampa Bay Buccaneers, the 2010 Miami Dolphins, the 1979 Cincinnati Bengals, the 1977 Kansas City Chiefs, the 1973 San Francisco 49ers, and lastly by the 1991 Phoenix Cardinals and 2015 San Francisco 49ers (equal).

References

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