The Cleveland Browns offense in 2024 was, in a word, unwatchable.
It did not matter which quarterback the team cycled through – Deshaun Watson, Jameis Winston, Dorian Thompson-Robinson, or Bailey Zappe – it was a weekly comedy of errors whenever the Browns had the ball.
Consider that at various points in the season:
By the end of the season, general manager Andrew Berry and head coach Kevin Stefanski had seen enough and went to work rebuilding the offense.
The quarterback room was completely rebuilt with the addition of veteran Joe Flacco in free agency, and rookies Dillon Gabriel and Shedeur Sanders in the 2025 NFL Draft.
Both the running back group and receiving corps received an influx of youth with the selection of running backs Dylan Sampson and Quinshon Judkins (although Judkins remains unsigned due to an off-field legal issue), and tight end Harold Fannin Jr. in the draft, and the signing of undrafted free agent wide receiver Isaiah Bond.
So things should be better this fall, yes?
Well, not everyone is a believer, and we can include The Ringer’s Sheil Kapadia in that group of doubters. Kapadia ranked every NFL offense for the upcoming season, and he does not like what he sees from the Browns, who check in at No. 29:
Everything that could have gone wrong did go wrong for the Browns last year. They started Deshaun Watson, Jameis Winston, Dorian Thompson-Robinson, and Bailey Zappe at quarterback. They were crushed by injuries. And they lost more EPA on turnovers than any other offense in the NFL. In other words, maybe they’ll get a little luckier this season. But also, let’s be real: This offense will stink.
I have no issue with Cleveland taking a bunch of dart throws at quarterback and essentially kicking the can down the road for a year while it tries to dig its way out of the franchise-altering Watson mistake. It looks like it’ll start the season with Joe Flacco. The offensive line should be OK. And I still like Kevin Stefanski as a coach. But c’mon—there’s just not much to get excited about here.
We’re going to have to push back a bit on Kapadia’s thoughts, especially the idea that there is “not much to get excited about” when it comes to Cleveland’s offense.
While...