The Browns earned their first divisional win of the season in a thrilling 29-24 victory over the Ravens on Sunday, snapping a five-game losing streak.

“I’m just very proud of that football team. We knew we were going to have to outlast (the Ravens), that’s a great football team,” head coach Kevin Stefanski said after the game. “I’m proud of them because of the work that we put into this thing, and you want to get the results when you put in all the work.”

Here are three players of the game from Sunday’s win.

In his first start for the Browns, QB Jameis Winston threw for 334 yards and three touchdowns as the Browns earned their first home win of the season.

“He brought great energy,” WR Cedric Tillman said after the game. “Jameis kept telling us that he’s going to keep throwing it. He’s going to keep coming back to us no matter what. He played great today.”

Winston led the offense on a scoring drive to open the game, driving 81 yards downfield and chewing over eight minutes off the clock before settling for a field goal. The scoring continued all game, as the Browns surpassed 20 points in a game for the first time this season.

No scoring drive was more important than the final one, as the Browns faced a one-point deficit with just over 2:30 remaining in the game.

Winston took what the defense gave him, completing 5 of 7 passing attempts before throwing a ball right into the hands of S Kyle Hamilton for what would have been an interception. Hamilton juggled the ball in his hands before it slipped out and fell incomplete.

“Oh, I started praying instantly,” Winston said of the near interception. “Who knows how we would feel right now if that would have happened? But I’m so grateful that that was an ‘if’. And ‘ifs’, and ‘shoulds,’ and ‘would’ve, could’ves’ don’t mean nothing in this game.”

After the drop from Hamilton, Winston and offensive coordinator Ken Dorsey showed no lack of trust in the quarterback’s arm. Winston dropped back, waited a few beats for Tillman to beat his man downfield and launched a 38-yard bomb hitting his receiver in stride for what became a game-winning touchdown.

Huntington Bank Field was perhaps the loudest it has been all season as Winston ran downfield to celebrate with Tillman before a failed two-point conversion.

“When you don’t get those for a while, you forget a little bit,” LG Joel Bitonio said of the Winston-fueled win. “And so, it was special. Guys were excited, guys were pumped up and it’s just the best part about the game. It’s why you play the game.”