ON THE SHELVES SOON

Coming soon, from the young sportswriter who wrote the book (which I’m reading now and am very impressed with) on the Kardiac Kids, it’s Sundays in the Pound: The Heroics And Heartbreak of the 1985-89 Cleveland Browns.

I’ve been thinking for months it was inevitable that a book on this bittersweet era would be written. I only wish I had been on the ball enough to do it myself. It’s that whole 20-years-ago nostalgia cycle, plus some interesting parallels with the current Browns: a 3-4 defense, a hard-charging back wearing 34, and — until our veteran “mentor” flaked on us — an absolutely uncanny quarterback situation.

Here’s the synopsis:

A look at the last championship seasons of the Browns

Before Art Modell moved the team to Baltimore, and before the frustrating expansion years and countless front office mistakes of the twenty-first century, there were the Browns of the late 1980s. The years 1985 to 1989 saw the Cleveland Browns explode out of a decade and a half of inconsistency and mediocrity to win four American Football Conference Central Division titles and make the playoffs five straight years. Twice they came within inches of a Super Bowl appearance, led by an unforgettable cast of characters Cleveland embraced and still cherishes. These teams are perhaps the most memorable in the history of Cleveland professional sports.

Sundays in the Pound traces quarterback Bernie Kosar’s winding path from Youngstown to Florida to Cleveland, explains why there was so much more to running back Earnest Byner than one unforgotten fumble, and reveals how cornerback Hanford Dixon created a canine phenomenon in the endzone stands that has persevered to this day. Author Jonathan Knight delves into “the Drive” and “the Fumble”; examines the fairy-tale performance of an aging veteran quarterback who directed the Browns through the snow and into the playoffs in his final game at the old, cavernous Cleveland Stadium on Lake Erie’s shoreline; and recounts an epic playoffs saga in which the Browns staged one of the greatest comebacks in the history of Cleveland sports.

Cleveland Browns fans throughout the country fondly remember the “Dawg Days,” and they will welcome Sundays in the Pound.

Based on the table of contents, it looks to be structured similar to Kardiac Kids, which (though I’m now halfway through it) is very well-researched. Should be a very good read, and I bet it will sell quite well. Guess it’s time to update the Browns Bibliography