I can only wonder if Browns fans, in the fullness of time, will eventually feel shame that their victories came on the back of someone facing so many heinous allegations. When you get desperate enough, your moral calculus changes significantly until you finally win consistently. Especially as someone who has been starved for a contender, you could understand how they’d be so desperate for a winner that they’d ignore their own morality to win. The Texans lost, but not because of Deshaun Watson and considering how his very existence on the football field is an affront to anybody with a decent sense of ethics, that’s as close to a moral victory as we can hope for these days: a loss where the offending alleged criminal didn’t have a single thing to do with any of the points that were scored. Until that glorious day, I guess I will just have to make do with cursing Deshaun Watson until his dying day (or mine, whichever comes first) and hoping something meaningful comes of it. But I would like to think that some day we’ll finally be at a point where having to root against such an allegedly awful person is a thing of the past. I know this kind of diatribe against the NFL is not new, considering how little they care about their fans and the alleged victims of their players. There is no crime their players could allegedly commit that would make the NFL turn its back on them unless we’re talking about gambling, then they’ll jump on that player with both feet. The NFL has a track record of light punishment for players accused of any type of violence against women. As long as their most monstrous players can still bring eyes onto their product, they do not care what crimes their players commit, because it’s still a net gain for the NFL and the team that employs that “misbehaving” superstar. You see, the NFL doesn’t care, and if we’re being really honest, has never cared, about the harm their players have caused in the course of their existence. I say this to condemn the NFL for their, still, impeccable record on how to discipline their millionaires so stuff like this doesn’t happen anymore. It would be just long enough to put the Browns’ season in the wringer just long enough that casual NFL fans would be OK with it being “not just a slap on the wrist” for allegedly sexually harassing and assaulting more than two dozen women - but not long enough that it would, oh I don’t know, deter the next superstar-in-waiting from doing something equally horrendous to another bunch of potential victims. So the NFL knew who the Browns would play when they suspended Watson and they magically decided an 11-game ban - not 10, not 12, but 11, would be the PERFECT punishment for someone who allegedly sexually harassed more than two dozen massage therapists during his time as a Texan. Keep in mind, this suspension happened after the Watson trade to the Browns and the release of the 2022-23 NFL schedule. Their initial suspension of six games, which barely even scratches the surface of what he should’ve faced, got expanded to an 11-game suspension. The NFL knew they were going to suspend Watson the only question was how long. I would, instead, like to dedicate the remainder of this recap to the garbage morality of the NFL, the Cleveland Browns, and capitalism as a whole for making this entire game possible. Instead, I would like to point out that Deshaun Watson was not responsible for a single point that the Browns scored against the Texans today. I’m supposed to tell you that the Browns scored on a punt return, a fumble return for a touchdown, an interception for a touchdown and so many field goals and the Texans scored nothing but field goals and a safety until garbage time where we got a Nico Collins touchdown. This is supposed to be a review of the Cleveland Browns vs Houston Texans game that we just watched.
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