Predict the AFC North for yourself
We will preview an NFL division each day for eight days, before presenting final standings, fantasy and statistical leaders, award winners, playoff results and power rankings. This analysis is part of a broader endeavor with FOXSports.com's Fantasy Football.
Rosters and depth charts are up-to-date and as accurate as possible as of June 8, 2008. A schedule of upcoming NFL preview content including links to other previews that have already been posted is located here.
Cleveland Browns (10-6)
The team definitely improved its roster in the off-season. A brutal schedule should give the Browns about the same record as last year, but now it is good enough for the division championship, Cleveland's first since 1989. The Browns average 25.8 points per game (#6 in the NFL) and allow 21.5 points (#11) against a schedule featuring eight games against 2007 playoff teams.
Absolute Record: 12-4
Most Significant Newcomer: Corey Williams, DL - The former Packer will likely lineup at end with newly acquired Shaun Rogers in the middle. Williams has an all-around game that is adept at stuffing the run and sacking the quarterback. He's a perfect 3-4 end. The season simulation gives Williams 41 total tackles and eight sacks.
Biggest Strength: Passing Game - Left tackle Joe Thomas helps to keep Derek Anderson upright long enough to hit play-making targets like Braylon Edwards, Kellen Winslow and Donte' Stallworth.
Most Exploitable Weakness: Depth - All three of those playmakers have histories with injuries (and attitude). The cupboard is pretty bare behind them, so the passing game could quickly become a weakness if one of them goes down. The same could be said for just about every position on the team, especially at running back where an aging Jamal Lewis appears to be the only NFL-caliber back on the roster.
Possible Fantasy Sleeper: Eric Wright, CB - It's rare to go defensive player, but the offense is so star-driven that there are no sleepers there. Wright is a second-year corner out of UNLV who made 76 tackles last season. For 2008, we put him at 86 tackles and three interceptions.
Closest Game: @ Philadelphia (Week 15) - Hosting Pittsburgh in Week 2 and at Philly in December are two big swing games for this Browns team. If Cleveland is intent on contending this year and for years to come, it will need to play its best in games like these.
Fantasy Notables (fantasy rank at position in parentheses): Derek Anderson (5) 3,853 yards, 27 TDs, 15 INTs; Jamal Lewis (11) 1,488 total yards, 14 TDs; Braylon Edwards (2) 95 receptions, 1,400 yards, 9 TDs; Donte' Stallworth (50) 42 receptions, 640 yards, 5 TDs; Kellen Winslow II (2) 87 receptions, 1,035 yards, 7 TDs; Phil Dawson (19) 45/45 XPs, 25/30 FGs
Projected 2008 Results:
| Week | Opponent | Win% | Avg Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Dallas Cowboys | 41 | 22-24 |
| 2 | Pittsburgh Steelers | 51 | 24-18 |
| 3 | @Baltimore Ravens | 74 | 28-21 |
| 4 | @Cincinnati Bengals | 81 | 29-22 |
| 6 | New York Giants | 35 | 22-25 |
| 7 | @Washington Redskins | 63 | 26-23 |
| 8 | @Jacksonville Jaguars | 57 | 22-22 |
| 9 | Baltimore Ravens | 76 | 28-16 |
| 10 | Denver Broncos | 74 | 32-19 |
| 11 | @Buffalo Bills | 65 | 28-25 |
| 12 | Houston Texans | 75 | 30-19 |
| 13 | Indianapolis Colts | 45 | 25-27 |
| 14 | @Tennessee Titans | 68 | 22-17 |
| 15 | @Philadelphia Eagles | 51 | 21-20 |
| 16 | Cincinnati Bengals | 81 | 32-16 |
| 17 | @Pittsburgh Steelers | 42 | 20-28 |
Pittsburgh Steelers (9-7)
It is not a bad season for the Steelers; they just do not quite make the playoffs. Pittsburgh actually has a fairly explosive offense for 2008, but the defense is not what it has been. The schedule is tough, and the Browns are just a little better. The Steelers average 24.7 points per game (#13) and allow 23.2 points (#17) against a schedule featuring eight games against 2007 playoff teams.
Absolute Record: 10-6 - This would suggest that the team is actually better than the Buffalo Bills, which get a Wild Card due to a higher number of non-rounded expected wins, despite also rounding to a 9-7 record.
Most Significant Newcomer: Rashard Mendenhall, RB - This may not be a big breakout year for Mendenhall, but he looks like a future All-Pro and could still be an electric back as a sub and goalline specialist for Willie Parker. This analysis expects Mendenhall to total 1,008 yards from scrimmage and score 10 touchdowns.
Biggest Strength: Running Offense - Alan Faneca may be gone, but this team just added one of the most NFL-ready backs to come out of the draft in years to an attack that finished third in the NFL in rushing in 2007. Receiving deep threat Limas Sweed should also come in and help Santonio Holmes to keep defenses honest.
Most Exploitable Weakness: The Schedule - Again, this is neither a bad team, nor a bad year. It is just a bad schedule (for the Steelers and their fans at least). For a team that won its division in a year when no other team from the division made the playoffs to have to play eight games against playoff opponents from the previous year is astounding. The AFC North plays a round-robin with both divisions in the league that placed three teams in the playoffs in 2007. Adding the Patriots and Chargers to the mix is torturous.
Possible Fantasy Sleeper: Santonio Holmes, WR - Everyone knows who he is, but this, his third season, should be the year that Holmes becomes one of fantasy football's elite receivers. Hines Ward will likely be limited again by age and nagging leg injuries, so Holmes needs to step up. We have him as the 13th best receiver with 65 receptions, 1,091 yards receiving and seven touchdowns.
Closest Game: @ Cleveland (Week 2) - Referenced in the Browns' write-up above, this could be the game that decides the AFC North crown - and it happens in September.
Fantasy Notables: Ben Roethlisberger (8) 3,455 yards, 23 TDs, 10 INTs; Willie Parker (13) 1,500 total yards, 12 TDs; Rashard Mendenhall (33) 1,008 total yards, 10 TDs; Santonio Holmes (13) 65 receptions, 1,091 yards, 7 TDs; Hines Ward (45) 64 receptions, 738 yards, 5 TDs; Heath Miller (9) 52 receptions, 613 yards, 4 TDs; Jeff Reed (11) 42/42 XPs, 26/34 FGs
Projected 2008 Results:
| Week | Opponent | Win% | Avg Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Houston Texans | 69 | 27-15 |
| 2 | @Cleveland Browns | 49 | 18-24 |
| 3 | @Philadelphia Eagles | 54 | 24-23 |
| 4 | Baltimore Ravens | 71 | 29-17 |
| 5 | @Jacksonville Jaguars | 42 | 21-30 |
| 7 | @Cincinnati Bengals | 67 | 28-25 |
| 8 | New York Giants | 37 | 22-25 |
| 9 | @Washington Redskins | 55 | 22-22 |
| 10 | Indianapolis Colts | 33 | 25-28 |
| 11 | San Diego Chargers | 52 | 27-21 |
| 12 | Cincinnati Bengals | 66 | 30-19 |
| 13 | @New England Patriots | 29 | 21-33 |
| 14 | Dallas Cowboys | 37 | 24-28 |
| 15 | @Baltimore Ravens | 62 | 25-21 |
| 16 | @Tennessee Titans | 68 | 23-20 |
| 17 | Cleveland Browns | 58 | 28-20 |
Baltimore Ravens (5-11)
The 2008 version of the Baltimore Ravens is almost exactly the same team that took the field in 2007. They went 5-11 in 2007 - and this is not a team that is "developing." They are simply getting older. The Ravens average 20.0 points per game (#28) and allow 27.2 points (#26) against a schedule featuring eight games against 2007 playoff teams.
Absolute Record: 2-14
Most Significant Newcomer: Ray Rice, RB - The former Rutgers standout is a potential workhorse back who can also catch the ball out of the backfield. Willis McGahee needs protection. Ready or not, Rice should be that guy in 2008. In the simulated season, Rice totals 394 yards and scores four touchdowns.
Biggest Strength: Name Recognition - This defense, with Ray Lewis, Ed Reed, Bart Scott, Trevor Pryce, Kelly Gregg, Terrell Suggs (probably) and others, sounds much better than it is. We will count that as a strength though, because the defense obviously has plenty of experience and good football IQ. It could easily dominate a few games.
Most Exploitable Weakness: Passing Game - Everyone knows that Joe Flacco is the Ravens' answer for the future of their passing attack, but very few people know what that means for 2008. In this analysis, it means that Flacco, Kyle Boller and Troy Smith combine to throw 20 interceptions, while Derrick Mason watches another year of his career pass by.
Possible Fantasy Sleeper: Joe Flacco, QB - When he gets a chance to play later in the season, the Ravens will likely be behind often and have to throw the ball. Expect some mistakes, but he is a definite upgrade over Kyle Boller. In nine starts, the sim gives Flacco 2,094 yards, 12 TDs and nine interceptions. That's 3,722 yards, 21 TDs and 16 interceptions over a 16 game season. Sounds like a step in the right direction.
Closest Game: @ Houston (Week 2) - Both of these teams may be looking for their identities all year. A statistical dead heat in winning percentage, the team that prevails may ultimately be the one with the greater future.
Fantasy Notables: Joe Flacco (28) 2,094 yards, 12 TDs, 9 INTs; Willis McGahee (20) 1,456 yards, 11 TDs; Derrick Mason (32) 82 receptions, 870 yards, 6 TDs; Mark Clayton (39) 75 receptions, 832 yards, 4 TDs; Todd Heap (6) 71 receptions, 764 yards, 4 TDs; Matt Stover (22) 34/34 XPs, 26/29 FGs
Projected 2008 Results:
| Week | Opponent | Win% | Avg Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cincinnati Bengals | 45 | 24-26 |
| 2 | @Houston Texans | 50 | 19-24 |
| 3 | Cleveland Browns | 26 | 21-28 |
| 4 | @Pittsburgh Steelers | 29 | 17-29 |
| 5 | Tennessee Titans | 49 | 20-19 |
| 6 | @Indianapolis Colts | 11 | 17-35 |
| 7 | @Miami Dolphins | 43 | 19-28 |
| 8 | Oakland Raiders | 67 | 29-19 |
| 9 | @Cleveland Browns | 23 | 16-28 |
| 11 | @New York Giants | 17 | 16-29 |
| 12 | Philadelphia Eagles | 24 | 19-26 |
| 13 | @Cincinnati Bengals | 53 | 27-26 |
| 14 | Washington Redskins | 20 | 20-28 |
| 15 | Pittsburgh Steelers | 38 | 21-25 |
| 16 | @Dallas Cowboys | 8 | 16-40 |
| 17 | Jacksonville Jaguars | 33 | 20-26 |
Cincinnati Bengals (5-11)
Off the field issues - not just criminally, but in the locker room, the front office and in scouting - have caught up with this franchise, which has only made the playoffs once in the last 17 years. The truth is, Carson Palmer is capable of leading a team to a deep playoff run, and it may just happen with the Bengals some season; the defense is too inexperienced, and the running game has too many question marks for that season to be 2008. The Bengals average 22.2 points per game (#19) and allow 29.2 points (#31) against a schedule featuring eight games against 2007 playoff teams.
Absolute Record: 2-14 - Winning the first and last games of the season.
Most Significant Newcomer: Keith Rivers, LB - If Chad Johnson does not play all year for the Bengals, this could easily be Ben Utecht. For now though, we will highlight Rivers who has been tabbed to lead this defense in the same manner that fellow USC Trojan, Carson Palmer, has led the offense. Rivers will be one of the more productive rookies in 2008 with 109 total tackles and a sack. He and Jerod Mayo of New England should vie for Defensive Rookie of the Year honors.
Biggest Strength: Palmer - Carson Palmer seems to have "it." And he could use "it" to the fullest if he gets time in the pocket, has any semblance of a running game and has two or three NFL-caliber, healthy receivers on the field with him at all times.
Most Exploitable Weakness: Defense - One of the worst all-around defenses from 2007 has lost its three most productive players - Justin Smith (DE, SF), Madieu Williams (S, MIN) and Landon Johnson (LB, CAR). It is hard not to pick on the whole unit. Linebackers Rashad Jeanty and Ahmad Brooks have shown some good signs, yet neither can stay on the field. Deltha O'Neal, Dexter Jackson, Dhani Jones and John Thornton are all veterans who have had a good year or two each, but none has really stood out as a consistently, above-average NFL player. So, the defense is in the hands of a bunch of kids like Rivers, Jonathan Joseph, Leon Hall, Robert Geathers and Domata Peko who may or may not be in over their heads.
Possible Fantasy Sleeper: Ben Utecht, TE - Carson Palmer has rarely used the tight end in Cincinnati, but now the Bengals actually have one who has produced elsewhere. Utecht's numbers are largely contingent on the play of the wide receivers, but he should get at least 31 catches for 366 yards and three TDs (as he does in the simulated season). Rookie WRs Jerome Simpson or Andre Caldwell could be turned to fill Chris Henry and/or Chad Johnson's voids as well. On the flip side, it is wise to stay away from all Cincinnati RBs.
Closest Game: Baltimore (Week 13) - The two bad teams in the AFC North look to split the regular season series. By now, Joe Flacco should be starting for Baltimore, so it will be a better team and a tougher opponent than in Week 1.
Fantasy Notables: Carson Palmer (6) 4,061 yards, 27 TDs, 17 INTs; Rudi Johnson (37) 949 total yards, 6 TDs; T.J. Houshmandzadeh (9) 114 receptions, 1,217 yards, 7 TDs; Chad Johnson (21) 67 receptions, 1,002 yards, 6 TDs; Ben Utecht (21) 31 receptions, 336 yards, 3 TDs; Shayne Graham (18) 38/38 XPs, 26/31 FGs
Projected 2008 Results:
| Week | Opponent | Win% | Avg Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | @Baltimore Ravens | 55 | 26-24 |
| 2 | Tennessee Titans | 45 | 23-24 |
| 3 | @New York Giants | 19 | 17-32 |
| 4 | Cleveland Browns | 18 | 22-29 |
| 5 | @Dallas Cowboys | 8 | 17-39 |
| 6 | @New York Jets | 36 | 24-32 |
| 7 | Pittsburgh Steelers | 33 | 25-28 |
| 9 | Jacksonville Jaguars | 35 | 25-29 |
| 10 | @Houston Texans | 35 | 23-34 |
| 11 | Philadelphia Eagles | 27 | 21-26 |
| 12 | @Pittsburgh Steelers | 34 | 19-30 |
| 13 | Baltimore Ravens | 47 | 26-27 |
| 14 | @Indianapolis Colts | 15 | 19-35 |
| 15 | Washington Redskins | 29 | 22-28 |
| 16 | @Cleveland Browns | 19 | 16-32 |
| 17 | Kansas City Chiefs | 69 | 28-17 |
Click here to view a schedule of 2008 NFL previews and see others that have been posted.
For details on how we generate the results and the definition of the Absolute Record, click here. To hide the details, click here.For this analysis, each regular season game is simulated 1,000 times, with the sum of the winning percentages of those games being our final predicted record. As can be noted, sometimes a team is "favored" (wins more than 50% of the time) in a different number of our games than the expected record shows. We list this record as the Absolute Record. The assumption of the Absolute Record is that the more likely scenario always happens. Since we know that it does not (see Super Bowl XLII), our expected record (in parentheses next to each team) is far more accurate. Also, especially since we are rounding, it is possible for a team to win a game more often, yet score the same or fewer points on average. In those cases, for Absolute Records, we always take higher winning percentage and are not predicting a tie or a win by an underdog. This is another reason why the expected records are more accurate, as the teams are so evenly matched, the game could easily go either way.
Today we preview the AFC North.
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12-4
Based on their simulated percentages we would be 12-4, I am thinking 10-6 but we will win the division. How about Williams being more significant than Rodgers or Stallworth? Even though the Giants are defending the title I wouldn’t say that will be our toughest game to win, it is at home. I can’t wait to beat Pittsburgh in week 2. Are both the Bengals and Ravens really going to be 5-11?
Every year, a new second-threat seems to emerge in the AFC North, while the Steelers usually hover around the top of the division. i.e. The Ravens were 13-3 two years ago, but horrible last year. Most of the time, it comes down to injuries, where we were very fortunate last season.
We have a tougher schedule this season, more talent, but it’s hard to believe we’ll escape the injury bug two years in a row. Right now, I’m hoping for a 10-6 record too…
Dawgs By Nature - Find out why Pittsburgh still sucks.
by Chris Pokorny on Jun 27, 2008 11:40 AM EDT up reply actions
12-4!?!?
I would love to watch the Browns win 12 games. I can’t believe someone/thing has predicted the Browns actually will.
I think Williams is the safer bet to be the “impact” guy. Rogers has more talent, but he also has been less consistent. I think both will make more of an impact than Stallworth because our offense is already sick.
I agree that the Giants aren’t the team we will have the most trouble with. I say Jacksonville, Dallas, or Indianapolis give us more trouble.
I say we lose to:
Dallas
Jacksonville
Denver
Indianapolis
Philadelphia
Cincinnati or Baltimore or one other team that no one sees coming a la Oakland last year
Pittsburgh
Meaning we end up 9-7 Pittsburgh loses 7 or 8 and we end up winning the division based on some sort of tiebreaker (or outright if Pitt loses 8). Baltimore starts slow, but ends up 7-9, Cincinnati tanks big time.
When predicting I think it’s easier to break up the schedule in quarters, b/c teams usually lose a game they shouldn’t, and often win some they shouldn’t, too. So breaking it down like that, when looking at the schedule I think we’ll go:
2 – 2
3 – 1
3 – 1
2 – 2
10 – 6, division champs.
Now, to contradict my very first sentence, I think 3 of the Bungles/Ravens games as well as Denver and Philly are all gimmes, so I think going 4-6 in the rest of of the games is conservative… Thus making 9-7 the absolute basement.
I see 8-8 as the most likely with the obvious one game either way caveat. We lose to the Cowboys and the Steelers to start the year before beating Baltimore and Cincy. We then lose to the Giants but beat the Redskins. (3-3). Jacksonville beats us but we win the next four to be 7-4 going into losses to the Colts and Titans. (7-6). The next game is the toss-up to me. If we lose to the Eagles we finish 8-8 if we beat them we finish 9-7. That is how I see it anyway.
Proud supporter of the Cleveland.
Your record assumes we go 0-for against the Cowboys, Steelers, Giants, Jacksonville, Colts and Titans… really, 0-7 in those games? Man, I have an incredibly higher opinion of this team. 2-5 would be a huge disappointment in those games, in my opinion, but in your senario it still makes us 10-6 or 11-5.
The Eagles have been a great organization and a factor in the NFC playoff race for years. I don’t see this being the year they suddenly suck. Westbrook, McNabb, and their skill players always are good enough. Their Oline looks good, except against the Giants, but no one looked good against the Giants last year. Their front 7 is always good. They have pretty good CBs in Sheppard, Brown, and Samuel, although Sheppard may be gone soon. Brian Dawkins is still a great safety.
Tennessee has…Vince Young. Haynesworth won’t play hard because it isn’t a contract year anymore. Keith Bullock is pretty good. The rest of their D is pretty bad, and they drafted a bunch of 3-4 guys for a 4-3 D. Their offensive draft was a little better, as they reached bigtime for Chris Johnson, and Lavelle Hawkins might pan out. They have a pretty bad O line, and no real receivers to help Young.
I think we COULD beat either team, but I think we will drop the Philly game, or another comparable one. The Browns will remember who took their playoff spot last year, and take it to the Titans. I can see Jamal going for a bunch of yards in that game.
I think we beat the Steelers once, probably week 2 before Mendenhall and/or Sweed start playing well, and before the Steelers’ Oline can adjust to our new front 3. I also think we drop another game to someone we shouldn’t and either Baltimore or Cincy beat us once.
I really think we beat the Steelers week 2. This team is tough at home, and the Steelers had a weak O-line that lost their best lineman to free agency.
Also, can’t see us losing to the Titans, that offense is pathetic, two scores might do it for us.
Agree about the Titans.
With the Steelers…it’s getting old to get my hopes up and brag that we’ll win, only to always lose :(
Nonetheless, my hopes are already extremely high for that game :D
Dawgs By Nature - Find out why Pittsburgh still sucks.
by Chris Pokorny on Jun 30, 2008 9:42 PM EDT up reply actions
PRIME TIME WEEK 2 BABY YEAH!
My hope is that the Browns get beat by the cowboys and the Steelers so the QB controversy can get started early and in earnest.
Who knows? Maybe this is the year the Brownies finally get over the hump. The real BIG GAME is Week 17 for the Division.
"It was an attrition football game and you know we like that."
Looking at the Brown’s schedule I feel like the OP just about hit the nail on the head with predicting 10-6. To accomplish a second consecutive ten win season we will need to stay healthy and go at least 4 and 2 in our division. In my opinion, the key stretch will be week 7 thru week 12. During this run of games we face only one team that you could argue is better than us on paper… Jacksonville. We need to show that we have progressed past the average teams and are a real contender. Look at that slate of games, Skins, Jags, Ravens, Broncos, Bills and Texans, we need to go no worse than 4 and 2 here.
Ten wins should win the AFC Central because unless the Steelers get better than expected O line play, they are going to have a tough time winning more than 8 or 9 games. The Steelers still have strength at nearly every position but I just don’t see them being able to protect Ben week in and week out with that schedule. If the Steelers are giving up 3 + sacks per game Ben probably won’t make it thru the year.
Baltimore is beginning to rebuild so it’s very doubtful that they will be a threat to the Steelers or Browns this year. Perhaps the most exciting thing (for us NE Ohio residents) about the upcoming Ravens season will be getting a chance to see Troy Smith get some extended playing time. I’d say the Ravens win around 5 games this year.
Cincinnati is always an interesting team (for many reasons….) to follow and a tough team to lay a prediction on. On one hand, their offense can be among the best in the NFL and it’s not out of the realm for them to put up 35 + points several games in a row. However, their defense can give up scores almost as quickly as Carson, Chad and the rest of the offense can score. Throw in the fact that they have basically the AFC version of T.O. and a possible lame duck coach and it’s tough to see the Bungles winning more than perhaps 7 games. One must remember however that with their high powered offense, the Bengals can steal a game from anyone at any time.
Here’s my final prediction
Browns 11-5 host wild card game
Steelers 9-7 possible wild card
Bengals 7-9
Ravens 4-12
The Browns will finally make it back to the playoffs, however, I think 2009 is the year we finally make some noise in the post season. We go defense in next years draft and free agency, shore up the secondary and start making yearly runs at the Super Bowl.
I think you mean the AFC North, not Central.
Great point about Troy Smith. Baltimore has a guy who is mediocre at best and isn’t getting any better in Boller, a rookie who is not ready but appears to be the future franchise QB in Flacco, and the guy that everyone said was too short but has done nothing but win in Smith.
Why would you NOT start Smith this year? At least they should see if he is the “next Derek Anderson”.
Good catch...
10 years later and I still finding myself calling the division the “central” and wonder why we aren’t playing th Houston Oilers twice a year anymore.
Anyway, I’d love to see Troy Smith get some time and do well (except against us of course) but what about these rumors that Favre may go to the Ravens? From what I’ve heard GB has told him they will not facilitate any trade to an NFC team or any team in the AFC that is on their schedule. This seems to rule out Minnesota, Chicago and Tampa Bay. It’s hard to see Favre putting the Ravens in the playoffs as they just have too many holes.
??
As a huge Browns fan I am still absolutley nervous about the season to come. Being a browns fan we should all know about the let downs this franchise has provided us since the expansion. So I dont know about you but with the schedule we have I cant even make a prediction, oh and does anybody remember the 2005 Bengals?? or do they tend to forget that they were the suprise team and now they are absolutley crap…..just a thought not trying to make enemies.
I wouldn’t say the Bengals are absolute crap, they still won 7 games last year and have gone through a number of injuries on defense, their offensive line and even Carson Palmer was rushed back from surgery.
That said this team is better on paper than the Bengals were and are far far better than any Browns team since the return in 1999. You are right that as Cleveland fans, we should be cautiously optimistic, but there is no doubt that we should be excited for the season ahead and expect big things.

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