The Cleveland Browns may have hit rock bottom Sunday in Pittsburgh, falling to 1–5 with an offense that has officially become the worst in the NFL. Rookie quarterback Dillon Gabriel, making just his second career start, endured a brutal afternoon. The 5-foot-11, 205-pound rookie faced a relentless, hard-hitting “Blitzburgh” pass rush that punished him from start to finish — hit 17 times, sacked six, and narrowly avoided at least four potential interceptions. Despite completing 29 of 52 passes for 221 yards with no touchdowns or interceptions, the Browns managed just nine points, their 11th straight game under 20, since December 2, 2024, and last year’s Browns team only broke 20 points in only 2 of 17 games, both wins in the 3-14 season.
Gabriel’s receivers didn’t help — several drops passes stalled drives — but the real collapse came up front. The offensive line was a disaster. With starting right tackle Jack Conklin ruled out at halftime with a concussion, both backup tackles looked like turnstiles. Cleveland’s protection completely disintegrated, and head coach and offensive play caller Kevin Stefanski inexplicably abandoned the run early, calling passes on more than 75 percent of snaps.
That left just 17 rushing attempts, including a mere 12 carries for 36 yards by the team’s best offensive weapon, running back Quinshon Judkins. Asking a rookie quarterback to throw 58 times behind a collapsing pocket isn’t strategy — it’s coaching malpractice. The scoreboard and Dillon Gabriel’s battered body told the story.
The Numbers Don’t Lie: Historically Inept Offense
Cleveland’s offense now averages 13.7 points per game, dead last (32nd) in the NFL — and falling. This marks a continued decline from last year’s 15.2 PPG (also 32nd) and puts the 2025 Browns on pace to become one of the lowest-scoring teams in modern franchise history.
Since the Browns’ return to the NFL in 1999, they have finished last in scoring six times and ranked 30th or worse in 11 of 27 seasons. If the current pace continues, the 2025 Browns will post their worst scoring average in 16 years — and their second-worst since the franchise reboot.
Year | Offensive PPG | Rank (out of 32) | Notes |
1999 | 13.6 | 31st | 31/31 Worst, Expansion year under Chris Palmer |
2000 | 10.1 | 31st | 31/31 Worst, Second season, Tim Couch injured |
2005 | 14.5 | 32nd | Worst in NFL, Trent Dilfer / Charlie Frye year |
2008 | 14.5 | 30th | Romeo Crenell last year as Head Coach |
2011 | 13.6 | 30th | Pat Shurmur’s first season |
2017 | 14.6 | 32nd | 0–16 season |
2024 | 15.2 | 32nd | Stefanski’s fifth season |
2025 | 13.7 (as of Oct. 11 | 32nd | On pace for worst since 1999 |
Source: Pro Football Reference
In nearly three decades since their return, the Browns have fielded a top-half offense only five times. This year’s unit isn’t just struggling — it’s trending toward one of the five lowest-scoring seasons in franchise recent history. For a coach once hired for his offensive acumen, that’s an indictment of philosophy, execution, and leadership.
The End of the Road?
Sunday’s loss alone may not end Stefanski’s tenure, but it likely sealed his fate. The Browns are now 4–19 since their Wild Card loss to Houston in January 2024 and on pace for a fourth losing season in six years under Stefanski — a two-time Coach of the Year whose message and methods who seem to no longer connect with his team.
After the Steelers loss, Stefanski again took responsibility but sounded like a broken record:
“I have to be better for this football team. Our coaches have to be better, and our players have to be better,” he said postgame.
He has repeated variations of that line after nearly every loss, acknowledging the offense’s mounting failures without finding a way to fix them. Stephanski is the play caller, head Coach and it’s his offense. His words ring hollow now — the fans have run out of patience only matter of time for owner Jimmy Haslam too.
At this point, for the Browns to do better, it may require doing it without him.
Main Photo Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images
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