Neither JJ or PB were the type to walk on eggshells around anyone. People usually walked on eggshells around THEM. They just couldn't accept the fact that neither Jones nor Art would walk on eggshells around their coachSaban wrote:All true, except that the Western Conference was weaker than usual during the mid 50's as the eastern champion won the NFL title games by big scores (56 to 10 in 1954, 38 to 14 in 1955, and 47 to 7 in 1956), and the 49ers were weaker after 1954, the Rams were weaker after 1955, and the mighty Detroit Lions fell all the way to last place in 1955.Jay Z wrote:It's better to be in the championship than not.
But sometimes competition is harder than others. The 1963 Packers were 11-2-1. That was better than the 1961, 1965, and 1967 championship teams. But the Bears were better that year.
For the second half of the 1950s and all of the 1960s, the Western Conference was better than the Eastern Conference. The teams rarely played each other, but the West won the "season series" nearly every year, and most of the championship games. Was finishing second in the West worse than finishing first in the East? Apples and oranges.
The Cleveland Browns lost championship games in 1951 and 1953 after only losing one game during both of those seasons. Both losses were close (24 to 17 in 1951 and 17 to 16 in 1953) and the Browns had to play both of those games in the other teams ballpark despite having the best record.
Owners do have the right to fire coaches, but I doubt that Brown or Johnson were the type of guys that would "walk on eggshells" around their bosses. One thing is that Modell wanted Brown to put Ernie Davis in a game even though he had a terminal illness. Brown refused, and this is one of the things that caused friction between them. I think that I would be with Brown on that one.
Brown said, in his book, that he did not see Speedie for 17 years after Mac left for Canada. I don't expect that Brown would look up his former players after they were gone, but he was friendly with some players that stayed in touch like Otto Graham and Mike McCormack. Brown died in 1991,so I doubt that he could have kept Speedie out of the HOF, but I guess that anything is possible.
Speaking of McCormack, Brown said in his book, that Mike said that Brown was the finest coach that he had ever played for and yet he didn't think that the Browns would ever win another championship with Brown as coach and Modell as owner. Brown said that the part of "and Modell as owner was" truncated. So, believe what you want. Vince Costello said that players that trashed Brown after the firing were given pay raises. Could be, but I don't really know any of this stuff for sure.
Art supposedly wanted more input in the day to day football operations. I don't know whether he did or not once Collier took over, but whatever he did, it was pretty good. Cleveland had 11 straight winning seasons after firing Paul Brown. Only one championship, but it's debatable whether Paul Brown could have topped that. He had more and more difficulty getting through to his Cleveland players, especially Jim Brown. He seemed to do all right in the late 60's and 70's
From the 1991 article.
“Quite honestly, I think Paul Brown is the reason,” Graham said. “Paul wasn’t the type of guy you crossed. He would never forget it.”
Speedie talked with Brown only once after leaving Cleveland. It was at the East-West Shrine game in 1977.
Said Speedie: “I went up to him and said, ‘Hi Paul, I’m Mac Speedie. He said, ‘Yes, I know. You’re the one who went to Canada.’ Twenty five years later and he still hadn’t forgiven me.”