BEREA, Ohio -- It might be two flips and out for embattled Browns quarterback Brandon Weeden.

Coach Rob Chudzinski admitted Monday that the Browns are considering benching Weeden, who punctuated each of his last two losses with panicked, backhanded or underhanded flips to Chris Ogbonnaya. One was picked off and the other nearly was.

They were the poster-passes for Weeden's back-to-back poor outings, which may have earned a look at backup Jason Campbell Sunday against the 7-0 Chiefs. Asked if he was considering sitting Weeden down, Chudzinski said, "Yeah, at all positions we're considering it and looking at that, that's typically what we do every week."

Last week, after the loss to Detroit, Chudzinski came out right away in his Monday post-mortem and said he was sticking with Weeden. Not so this week?

"Right,'' he said. "We're going to look at it and talk again.''

He earned a 48.6 rating during Sunday's 31-13 loss to Green Bay and completed only 17 of his 42 attempts with one touchdown and one interception.

"It's not all Brandon,'' said Chudzinski. "(But) that's the first thing you have to look at. There were some execution errors and issues with other guys, and he needs to play better. But we all need to play better around him.''

Linebacker D'Qwell Jackson said Monday he's "pretty sure'' Weeden is shaken by all of this.

"Anybody would,'' said Jackson. "I’d be lying if I said he wasn’t. You try to block out the noise and can’t avoid it. It's a big-boy league. People are going to love him when he plays well and people are going to try to run him out of Cleveland if he doesn’t. And that goes for all of us. But it comes with the territory, especially playing in Cleveland.''

Chudzinski said the staff would discuss Weeden Monday afternoon as part of its weekly post-game protocol, "and we'll basically put the guys in positions who will give us the best opportunity to win."

As of the open locker room around 1 p.m., Weeden hadn't yet been told if he's still the starter. He made an appearance in the locker room, but PR staffers said he'll wait until Wednesday for his weekly press conference.

Despite a report by CBS Sports' Jason LaCanfora that the Browns will stick with Weeden, a team spokesman said, "the truth of the matter is that Chud has not made up his mind yet.''

Chudzinski said he receives a "thumbnail, quick analysis'' from each position coach and then they talk more in detail after they've met with their players.

"Sometimes you get things back from them, and find some things out that makes you think differently on a particular play,'' said Chudzinski.

Does he think Campbell can provide the same spark as Brian Hoyer, who beat Minnesota and Cincinnati while Weeden was out with a sprained thumb?

"Difficult to say,'' said Chudzinski. "Again, (we're) just looking for the guy that's going to give us the best chance to win at all positions.''

Last week, Chudzinski said the players had faith in Weeden. Is that still the case?

"I think our guys are looking at themselves,'' said Chudzinski. "We had plenty of places and plenty of opportunity to get better. By no means is it one guy. It certainly wasn’t a perfect game by anybody. Those guys know and I guarantee you we’re going to put the best guys out there and the guys that give us the best chance to win and that’s what we’re going to always do.”

One reason the Browns might want to switch is the Chiefs' attacking defense. They're No. 1 in the NFL with 35 sacks -- 10 more than the No. 2 team, Baltimore. Weeden's been sacked 21 times for third in the NFL, but his four-sack average projected over seven games lead the league. Chiefs outside linebackers Justin Houston and Tamba Hali are second and fourth in the NFL with 10 and nine sacks, respectively.

Weeden's teammates say they still believe in him.

"I have confidence in Brandon, 100 percent confidence,'' said Jordan Cameron. "He’s a tough guy. He’ll hang in there, and whoever they pick will be ready to play. I just have confidence in whoever they choose and I’m backing whatever their decision is.”

He said the players will respond the same way they have all season. "We come close together,'' he said. "We kind of trust where this organization is going and we’re resilient and we just keep fighting.”

Jackson added, "we dealt with the Trent (Richardson) situation. We handled that perfectly. That’s kind of groomed us for anything that’s going to happen. I think we’ll be fine whichever direction (Chudzinski) wants to go.''

He said it's possible a change could spark the team.

"But there’s a reason why Brandon is in the position that he is -- because they feel he’s the best guy for the job,'' said Jackson. "Then again, you never know. we had a third-string quarterback go into Minnesota and we had a heckuva game. Anything can happen.''

He noted that a lack of confidence in the quarterback can permeate the whole team, "but I don’t think it’s the case here. I mean, the guy won on the big stage this year. I don’t know why he’s taking so much of the (blame). We've got our own problems on the defensive side of the ball. We’re not playing complementary football right now.''

Linebacker Quentin Groves said if ninth-year pro Campbell starts, he'll receive "the same embrace we did with Hoyer. We’re a team that does not blink. We’re a team that sticks together. We’re all grown men. Things in this league happen. So if Jason’s our quarterback, we’re going to back him. If Brandon’s our quarterback, we’re going to go out and play the same way, if not even harder for him.”

Groves was with Campbell (31-40) in Oakland when he went 11-7 as a starter in 2010 and 2011.

"He can play,'' said Groves. "He provides a bit of mobility of course, a lot of leadership, a lot of veteran maturity ‘cause he’s been in certain situations, he’s been a quarterback that has been on streaks. He’s been a starting quarterback in this league, so he knows what to expect. I think he should do fine.”