CLEVELAND — The Cleveland Browns’ Battle of Ohio matchup against the Cincinnati Bengals at FirstEnergy Stadium in Cleveland Sunday is not the hottest ticket in town and the prices on the secondary market bear out that fact.
According to the resale site Stubhub.com, fans looking for tickets to the game between the Browns and Bengals can get in for as low just $8.47. Dozens of other remaining tickets can be purchased for less than $15 per seat.
Why are tickets beyond reasonably priced?
Well, the Browns dropped to 5-7 after last week’s loss at the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Bengals won their first game of the season against the New York Jets in Week 13.
The Browns’ playoff hopes took a huge hit with last Sunday’s 20-13 loss to the Steelers at Heinz Field in Pittsburgh, but while the opportunity to win the AFC North Division is off the table, the team remains mathematically alive in the postseason race.
With only four games remaining in the 2019 regular season, the Browns know they can ill-afford another misstep and enter this week’s matchup with the Bengals well aware of what is at stake.
“We have to realize that no matter what other things are going on, on the outside, we have to have that singular focus,” quarterback Baker Mayfield said. “If we do want to make the playoffs, we have to buckle down and win each game from here on out. It is just plain and simple. We can’t have any slip ups and we have to win.”
The Browns looked poised to complete their first regular-season sweep of the Steelers since doing so three straight times from 1986-1988, but as has been the case often since their return to the National Football League in 1999, they will have to wait until next year to break the streak.
Despite jumping out to a 10-point lead in the second quarter and playing against fourth-string quarterback Devlin “Duck” Hodges and an undermanned Steelers team, the Browns allowed 20 straight points and never recovered on the way to the seven-point loss.
With the latest road loss to the Steelers, the Browns fell to 5-7 on the season, two games in back of Pittsburgh and Tennessee Titans for the No. 6 seed in the AFC.
“That is a huge blow to our chances and just we can’t have any slip ups the rest of the way out, but we realize that if we win out, we have to have some things happen, but we can’t focus on that,” Mayfield said. “We have to win out and do our job.”
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The Browns have to regroup to face a Cincinnati Bengals team that beat the New York Jets for their first victory of the season last Sunday before going on the road in two of the final three weeks, first at Arizona on December 15, and then, at Cincinnati on December 29.
Those road trips bookend the home finale against the AFC North Division frontrunners, the Ravens, who have had more than two months to stew on the 15-point loss the Browns handed them in Baltimore in Week 4.
“We’ve got to win them all, man,” defensive back T.J. Carrie said. “You never know in this league. Winning takes care of a lot of things, though, a lot of ifs, buts and ands, so putting our best foot forward and winning them all is the biggest factor.”