Browns in race to avoid ignominious 0-16 season

Browns in race to avoid ignominious 0-16 season

LOS ANGELES - The Cleveland Browns are running out of time, but quarterback Robert Griffin III says they'll battle to the end of the season to avoid joining the 2008 Detroit Lions in 0-16 NFL ignominy.

Quarterback Robert Griffin III of the Cleveland Browns passes during their game against the Cincinnati Bengals at FirstEnergy Stadium on December 11, 2016 in Cleveland, Ohio

"I think guys are going to fight all the way through to the finish," Griffin said of the Browns' determination not to join the 2008 Lions as the only teams since the league expanded to a 16-game schedule in 1978 to finish without a victory.

The expansion Tampa Bay Buccaneers went 0-14 in 1976.

Griffin will be making his third straight start when the Browns play the Chargers in their final home game of the season on Saturday. They close the season against the Steelers in Pittsburgh.

Griffin was sacked five times in Browns' loss to the Buffalo Bills last weekend -- taking the total of sacks surrendered by Cleveland this season to 53.

Although Griffin said the team wasn't feeling extra pressure to avoid the dreaded 0-16, he acknowledged that "everybody is aware of it."

The struggles of the Browns stand out in even sharper relief after Cleveland celebrated the NBA championship of the Cavaliers in June, and the Indians' run to the World Series in 2016.

But coach Hue Jackson says their predicament -- the Browns have lost six straight games by at least 13 points and have been out-scored by a league-leading 188 points -- isn't due to lack of effort.

"There are some things we have to do much better. But I can never question if our guys are trying and playing hard," Jackson said Monday.

"Do I think we can play better? Yes I do, but I do not think by any stretch it is an effort issue."

Unfortunately for the Browns, as their defeats pile up, their opponents become even more determined not to be the first to fall to them.

That's certainly true of the Chargers, who have produced back-to-back losing seasons and will miss the playoffs for the seventh time in eight years.

"We've got to find a way to win this one," head coach Mike McCoy said.

A lot of people are pulling for the Browns, however, and that includes members of that hapless 2008 Lions team.

"I feel for them," linebacker Ryan Nece, who played on that Detroit team, told the Detroit Free Press this week. "I'm actually hoping that they find a way to get a win, because just to be able to get that monkey off their back in the next two games, I think will be tremendous for them."

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