Search results
cincyjungle.com
Paul Brown
- Paul Brown was the team's namesake and first coach.
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Cleveland_Browns
Cleveland Browns Head Coach History: A list of all the head coaches in Cleveland Browns history
- Year-by-Year Results
Year-by-Year Results - Browns Head Coach History | Cleveland...
- Legends
Legends - Browns Head Coach History | Cleveland Browns ...
- Pro Bowl
Pro Bowl - Browns Head Coach History | Cleveland Browns ...
- Ring of Honor
Cleveland Browns Ring of Honor: Former Cleveland Browns...
- Year-by-Year Results
People also ask
Who was the first Browns coach to win a season?
Who was the first NFL head coach?
How many men have coached the Browns since 1999?
How many Browns coaches have won Coach of the Year awards?
Their first head coach was Paul Brown, who coached for 17 complete seasons. Brown is also the franchise's all-time leader for the most regular season games coached (214), the most regular season game wins (158), the most playoffs games coached (14), and the most playoff game wins (9).
# [8]NameTerm [n 2]Regular Season(gc)182020 –present671716–8162016 – 201840Cleveland Browns Head Coaches. Listed below are the Cleveland Browns Head Coaching Records. Figures are sorted by number of wins. Active coaches are listed in bold. Regular Season and Postseason games are included in each coach's totals.
NameSeasonsGmsWPaul Brown1950-62169115Blanton Collier1963-7011979Sam Rutigliano1978-849947Marty Schottenheimer1984-887746With Graham gone and the quarterback situation in flux, the Browns ended 1956 with a 5–7 record, Paul Brown's first losing season as a professional coach. In the next year's draft, the team selected Jim Brown out of Syracuse University .
- Early Life and Playing Career
- Coaching Career
- Personal Life
- External Links
Stefanski graduated from St. Joseph's Preparatory School in 2000 and the University of Pennsylvania in 2004. Stefanski played defensive back while at Penn, being named the Quakers Freshman of the Year in 2000. He was part of the only undefeated Penn team of the decade and was twice an All-Ivy Leagueselection.
Minnesota Vikings assistant
Stefanski joined the Minnesota Vikings in 2006 as an assistant to then-head coach Brad Childress. In 2009, he was promoted to assistant quarterbacks' coach, where he would serve until the 2013 season and had coached quarterbacks such as Brett Favre and Christian Ponder. Despite the Vikings' ups and downs during his tenure, Stefanski survived 3 coaching changes (Childress, Leslie Frazier, and Mike Zimmer). In 2017, after the termination of Scott Turner, Stefanski was promoted to coach the Viki...
Cleveland Browns
On January 13, 2020, Stefanski signed a five-year contract to become the 18th head coach of the Cleveland Browns, two days after the Minnesota Vikings lost in the NFC playoffs. On September 13, 2020, Stefanski lost his head coaching debut to the Baltimore Ravens by a score of 38–6. The loss marked the 16th consecutive Week 1 without a win for the Browns. On September 17, Stefanski recorded his first career win as a head coach in the 35–30 win against the Cincinnati Bengals. On December 6, Ste...
Stefanski and his wife Michelle have three children together. He is the son of NBA executive Ed Stefanski. He is a devout Roman Catholic.[citation needed]
Media related to Kevin Stefanskiat Wikimedia CommonsAll-time AV Leader: Clay Matthews 125 AV. Winningest Coach: Paul Brown 158-48-8. Checkout the Cleveland Browns Records, Top 12 Leaders, League Ranks, history and more on Pro-Football-Reference.com.
Over his twenty-five years of coaching his teams compiled a cumulative win/loss record of 213-104-9. During his career he was a head coach for twenty-five seasons, first with the Cleveland Browns . He led the Browns for seventeen seasons, compiling a record of 158-48-8.