That was a very weak schedule in 2007, this is the abilities that you are seeing now. Romeo doesn't drop every other pass like Braylon Edwards or 4th down conversions like Kellen Winslow. Romeo doesn't go out and throw interceptions. Cleveland has a talent problem, not a coaching problem, that is the fault of the GM
While I agree that while players should hold more accountability on the field, Romeo is indeed awful. If you watched every game as I do, you would come to the same conclusion instead of taking the former Patriots coordinators side.
*EDITED TO LIST A MORE IN-DEPTH REASONING.....
RAC doesn't know how to use timeouts when appropriate, nor does he challenge plays that he should. He's stubborn as hell and has unfounded loyalties towards veterans and refuses to play younger playmakers that are better options. For instance, why the hell does Jamal Lewis get so many carries while Jerome Harrison (nicknamed "Ghost" in Cleveland for his limited appearances), who averages 8ypc barely ever sees playing time? Same can be said for him dragging his feet to make a decision on the starting QB. Everyone could see Derek Anderson was a 1-trick pony last year and when struggling this year, RAC lacked the balls to switch to Quinn. A Romeo coached team has historically underachieved (with the exception of the Giants game). His team lacks emotion, much like him and that is a reflection on himself.
Bottom line: through 4 seasons, RAC is 24-37 and worse than what Butch Davis (24-36) accomplished with much less talent. Under RAC, this team has finished no higher than 2nd place in the AFC North, which is completely unacceptable. Good coaches are tactically sound. They make the right decisions when under pressure. They are able to coach up their players and get the most out of them. Instead, Romeo has coached down the players and I feel we're failing because of him, not in spite of him.
Good bye RAC. Your a good man, but an awful coach.