Current:Home > reviewsTradeEdge Exchange:Deshaun Watson's injury leaves Browns dead in the water – through massive fault of their own -BeyondProfit Compass
TradeEdge Exchange:Deshaun Watson's injury leaves Browns dead in the water – through massive fault of their own
SafeX Pro View
Date:2025-04-07 13:54:14
For the love of Otto Graham.
If you’re not familiar with “Automatic Otto,TradeEdge Exchange” the Hall of Fame quarterback led the Cleveland Browns to seven of their eight championships (four in the old AAFC from 1946 to ’49) and didn’t fail to reach the championship game in any of his 10 professional seasons split between the AAFC and NFL.
If only they had him now.
Wednesday morning dawned with the news that current Browns quarterback Deshaun Watson is out for the season after an MRI revealed a displaced fracture to the glenoid of his already banged-up throwing shoulder. He also suffered a high ankle sprain in what seemed like a landmark 33-31 win Sunday over the AFC North-leading Baltimore Ravens.
“Despite performing at a high level and finishing the game,” the Browns said in a statement, “it has been determined that this injury will require immediate surgical repair to avoid further structural damage. Deshaun will be placed on season-ending injured reserve and a full recovery is expected for the start of the 2024 season.”
NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.
Welp.
So much for any hopes Cleveland fans may have harbored that their team was positioned to reach the Super Bowl, the Browns one of four NFL teams that has never reached Super Sunday. Despite a 6-3 record that matched Cleveland’s best since the franchise was relaunched in 1999, this squad is now basically dead in the water – through massive fault of its own.
Say what you want about Watson and the folly of the five-year, fully guaranteed $230 million contract owner Jimmy Haslam awarded to a person many fans emphatically didn’t want as the face of their franchise given his sordid history in Houston. Yet Watson's uneven play in 2022 once he returned from his 11-game suspension should have been a sufficient red flag to have a quality arm in the bullpen.
Ironically, the Browns seemed to understand this perfectly well.
You’re probably familiar with one Joshua Dobbs – the “Passtronaut” – who remains an NFL vagabond, but one who's made a case he’s worth, say, a three-year, $40 million investment to get a shot somewhere as QB1. ICYMI, the seventh-year vet nearly led the Tennessee Titans to the AFC South crown at the end of the 2022 season while making his first NFL starts. This year, Dobbs turned the Arizona Cardinals from perceived tomato cans into a scrappy club that would fight you tooth and nail during Kyler Murray’s ACL recovery – just ask the Dallas Cowboys, who were trucked 28-16 by Dobbs and Co. in Week 3. Now, of course, Dobbs – dealt by the Cardinals at the trade deadline – has given new life to the surging Minnesota Vikings in the aftermath of Kirk Cousins’ season-ending Achilles injury.
Yet it was the Browns who signed Dobbs to a one-year, $2 million contract in March. Five months later, they sent him to Arizona – basically for a fifth-round pick – after falling in love with rookie Dorian Thompson-Robinson during preseason.
And here we are.
“DTR” was so dreadful in his only starting opportunity, a three-interception performance in a 28-3 loss to the Ravens in Week 4, that Cleveland immediately pivoted to journeyman P.J. Walker as QB2. He’s only been marginally better than Thompson-Robinson. The Browns are 1-2 in games not started by Watson, and – despite his physical limitations this season – 5-1 when he’s in the starting lineup. That’s largely a testament to the NFL’s top-ranked defense, the primary reason for Cleveland’s ascent, even during a campaign when Pro Bowl tailback Nick Chubb was lost to season-ending knee injury in Week 2. And Myles Garrett and his band of disruptors may yet be nasty enough to carry the rest of this roster into postseason. Maybe.
But just imagine if Dobbs had remained as the Plan B QB. Or what if the Browns, who knew how limited Watson has been, had beaten the Los Angeles Rams to Carson Wentz? Or what if they’d even asked the Houston Texans about third-string quarterback Case Keenum, who drove Minnesota to the 2017 NFC championship game with current Cleveland coach Kevin Stefanski as his quarterbacks coach?
Stefanski announced Wednesday afternoon that he was going back to Thompson-Robinson – hardly a stunner given it was one of his two viable options. (Good luck, DTR. First you're fed to the Ravens and now you're being served up to T.J. Watt and Co. as the Pittsburgh Steelers invade Cleveland.)
Hindsight unfailingly brings clarity, yet anyone could see the risk the Browns had invited before Wednesday’s Watson announcement. And while a new front office is in place, this is the same organization that whiffed on Tim Couch, Brady Quinn, Brandon Weeden, Johnny Manziel, Baker Mayfield – kinda – and so many others over the past quarter-century. Now Stefanski and GM Andrew Berry are left to pick up the pieces, perhaps making calls to the likes of ex-Brown Colt McCoy, or Joe Flacco, or Chase Daniel, or even taking the temperature of not-officially-retired-CBS-analyst Matt Ryan – not that those guys are legitimate saviors for the '23 Browns.
Shame. Didn’t have to be this way.
***Follow USA TODAY Sports' Nate Davis on X, formerly Twitter @ByNateDavis.
veryGood! (17)
Related
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Why Kelly Ripa’s Daughter Lola Consuelos Advises Her Not to “Get Pregnant” Before Every Vacation
- UK leader Rishi Sunak faces a Conservative crisis over his blocked plan to send migrants to Rwanda
- UN chief uses rare power to warn Security Council of impending ‘humanitarian catastrophe’ in Gaza
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- Chinese navy ships are first to dock at new pier at Cambodian naval base linked to Beijing
- Turkish President Erdogan visits Greece in an effort to mend strained relations
- What to know about Hanukkah and how it’s celebrated around the world
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Massachusetts governor says AI, climate technology and robotics are part of state’s economic future
Ranking
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- The New York Yankees' projected lineup after blockbuster Juan Soto trade
- UN chief uses rare power to warn Security Council of impending ‘humanitarian catastrophe’ in Gaza
- US House chair probes ballot shortages that hampered voting in Mississippi’s largest county
- 'Kraven the Hunter' spoilers! Let's dig into that twisty ending, supervillain reveal
- Robert Pattinson and Suki Waterhouse Make First Public Appearance Together Since Pregnancy Reveal
- Robert Pattinson and Suki Waterhouse Make First Public Appearance Together Since Pregnancy Reveal
- The Masked Singer: Gilmore Girls Alum Revealed as Tiki During Double Elimination
Recommendation
House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
Powerful earthquake shakes South Pacific nation of Vanuatu; no tsunami threat
'I know all of the ways that things could go wrong.' Pregnancy loss in post-Dobbs America
Vanessa Hudgens marries baseball player Cole Tucker in custom Vera Wang: See photos
The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
New director gets final approval to lead Ohio’s revamped education department
Florida woman sets Tinder date's car on fire over money, report says; both were injured
Japan pledges $4.5B more in aid for Ukraine, including $1B in humanitarian funds