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・ 1949 Latvian SSR Higher League
・ 1949 LFF Lyga
・ 1949 Little League World Series
・ 1949 Los Angeles Dons season
・ 1949 Los Angeles Rams season
・ 1949 LSU Tigers football team
・ 1949 MacRobertson Miller Aviation DC-3 crash
・ 1949 Major League Baseball All-Star Game
・ 1949 Major League Baseball season
・ 1949 Chicago Cardinals season
・ 1949 Chicago Cubs season
・ 1949 Chicago Hornets season
・ 1949 Chicago White Sox season
・ 1949 Cincinnati Reds season
・ 1949 Claxton Shield
1949 Cleveland Browns season
・ 1949 Cleveland Indians season
・ 1949 College Baseball All-America Team
・ 1949 College Football All-America Team
・ 1949 college football season
・ 1949 Commonwealth Prime Ministers' Conference
・ 1949 Copa del Generalísimo Final
・ 1949 Cotton Bowl Classic
・ 1949 Coupe de France Final
・ 1949 Cupa României Final
・ 1949 Czechoslovak First League
・ 1949 Davis Cup
・ 1949 Delta Bowl
・ 1949 Detroit Lions season
・ 1949 Detroit Tigers season


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1949 Cleveland Browns season : ウィキペディア英語版
1949 Cleveland Browns season

The 1949 Cleveland Browns season was the team's fourth and final season in the All-America Football Conference (AAFC). The Browns finished the regular season with a 9–1–2 win–loss–tie record and beat the San Francisco 49ers to win their fourth straight league championship. In the season's sixth game on October 9, 1949, the 49ers stopped the Browns' professional football record unbeaten streak after 29 games. The streak started two years before on October 19, 1947, and included two league championship games and two ties.
Cleveland made numerous roster moves before the season, adding tackle Derrell Palmer, linebacker Tommy Thompson and defensive back Warren Lahr, all of whom remained with the team for many years afterward. It was clear even before the season began, however, that the AAFC was struggling and might not survive beyond the 1949 season. The regular season was shortened to 12 games and a new system where the top four teams would participate in a two-week playoff was put into place.
The Browns began the season with a tie against the Buffalo Bills, but won their next four games. Following their loss to the 49ers in the sixth game of the season, the Browns won all but one of their remaining regular-season games, another tie with the Bills. The team finished atop the AAFC standings and faced the Bills in a league semifinal that they won, 31–21. The Browns then beat the 49ers in the championship game, shortly after AAFC and National Football League (NFL) owners agreed to a deal where the Browns, 49ers and Baltimore Colts would merge into the NFL starting in 1950 and the rest of the AAFC teams would cease to exist.
Browns players including quarterback Otto Graham, end Mac Speedie and linebacker Lou Saban were named to sportswriters' All-Pro lists after the season, while head coach Paul Brown was named AAFC coach of the year by ''Sporting News''. Graham led the league in passing for the third time in a row, while Speedie was the league leader in yards and receptions. Fullback Marion Motley was the AAFC's all-time leading rusher. While the Browns were successful in the AAFC, winning all four of its championships, many people doubted that they could match up against NFL teams. Cleveland went on to win the 1950 NFL championship.
==Offseason and roster moves==

The Browns finished the 1948 season with a perfect record and defeated the Buffalo Bills to win the AAFC championship for the third time in a row. Head coach Paul Brown made several adjustments before the 1949 season, including bringing in halfback Les Horvath, a former Los Angeles Rams player who had won the Heisman Trophy in 1944. He also signed tackle Derrell Palmer and linebacker Tommy Thompson. Palmer, who came in a trade with the New York Yankees and Thompson, a rookie who had played at the College of William & Mary, helped solidify the team's defense for the next five seasons. Defensive back Warren Lahr, who had been signed in 1948 but sat out the season with a broken leg, saw his first play in 1949 and became a star in the defensive secondary for 11 years.
Even before the season began, signs had emerged that the AAFC was struggling financially. After suffering from poor attendance in the previous season, the Brooklyn Dodgers dissolved and some of its players joined the cross-town New York Yankees as part of a partial merger. Other AAFC teams were allowed to sign players who did not join the Yankees, and the Browns added tackle Joe Spencer. Team owners agreed to several other changes in an attempt to address the league's difficulties. The regular-season schedule was reduced from 14 to 12 games, and the Eastern and Western divisions were abandoned in favor of a single set of standings, with the top four teams participating in playoffs to determine the league champion. The team with the better regular-season record had home-field advantage in the playoffs, the first time that happened in professional football history.
Paul Brown and other AAFC coaches knew the league was unlikely to survive after the 1949 season. AAFC owners had already discussed merging with the National Football League (NFL) the previous year, and most teams in both leagues were losing money. The talks fell apart, however, when the owners could not agree on which of the AAFC's teams would join the NFL. As the league faltered, Brown entertained but ultimately declined offers to leave the Browns and return to Ohio State University, where he had coached in the early 1940s.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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