| Cleveland Browns Team History
  The 
                  Cleveland Browns were born in 1944 when Cleveland businessman 
                  Arthur B. McBride acquired a franchise in the new All-America 
                  Football Conference that would begin play in 1946. McBride's 
                  first act after acquiring the team was to hire Paul Brown, who 
                  had been a very successful high school, college and service 
                  coach, as coach and general manager. 
 The teams of the AAFC basically were of comparable quality to 
                  those of the NFL but, in the first 10 years of post-World War 
                  II pro football, the Cleveland Browns proved to be the best 
                  in either league. With such all-time greats as quarterback Otto 
                  Graham, fullback Marion Motley and tackle-kicker Lou Groza leading 
                  the way, Cleveland won all four AAFC championships and amassed 
                  a 52-4-3 winning record. When the AAFC folded after the 1949 
                  season, many insisted a major reason was the Browns' dominance 
                  that eliminated any viable competition.
 
 The AAFC-NFL settlement called for the Browns, San Francisco 
                  49ers and Baltimore Colts to join the NFL. Many NFL diehards, 
                  still not convinced the Browns were for real, expected Cleveland 
                  to fail badly when they played against the established NFL teams. 
                  But the Browns quickly proved their domination was no fluke 
                  by opening the 1950 season with a stunning 35-10 victory over 
                  the defending NFL champion Philadelphia Eagles. Cleveland then 
                  won the NFL Eastern Conference championship for six straight 
                  years from 1950 to 1955 and NFL titles in 1950, 1954 and 1955.
 
 The Browns won another divisional title in 1957, a year that 
                  saw the great running back from Syracuse, Jim Brown, join the 
                  team. In his nine-season career, Jim Brown rushed for 12,312 
                  yards, a lifetime record that stood for more than 20 years.
 The Paul Brown era ended after the 1962 season and he was replaced 
                  by a former assistant, Blanton Collier. Collier gave the Browns 
                  their last NFL championship in 1964, when they defeated the 
                  Baltimore Colts, 27-0.
 
 The Browns reached the post-season playoffs 22 times in their 
                  first 40 years in the NFL. In addition to their four NFL championships 
                  between 1950 and 1964, they won 11 NFL Eastern Conference championships, 
                  three NFL Century Division titles and AFC Central Division championships 
                  in 1971, 1980, 1985, 1986, 1987 and 1989.
 
 In 1961, Arthur B. Modell purchased the Browns for a then-unheard-of 
                  price of $4 million. From the start, he was recognized as one 
                  of the NFL's more progressive leaders. But Modell stunned the 
                  pro football world in 1995 when he announced that he would transfer 
                  his Cleveland franchise to Baltimore to begin play in 1996.
 
 Determined to keep the team in Cleveland, Browns fans and Cleveland 
                  city officials orchestrated an unprecedented grass-roots campaign 
                  to block the move. The NFL quickly responded and, working with 
                  city officials, developed a unique solution that not only provided 
                  for a new state-of-the-art stadium, but guaranteed the return 
                  of pro football to Cleveland by no later than 1999. Additionally, 
                  Art Modell agreed to relinquish the "Browns" name, 
                  colors and team history to the new owner of the suspended franchise.
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