Dawgs By Nature
The Cleveland Browns are going to learn a hard, but very important, lesson this fall.
Life is better when Myles Garrett is on the field.
It has been rare to see the Browns play without Garrett anchoring the defense, as he only missed 17 games in total during his nine seasons with the Browns:
Basically, when there was a game to play, Garrett was available and not only made a difference, but he made everyone around him better.
This is not to disparage Jared Verse, who the Browns acquired along with draft picks from the Los Angeles Rams in exchange for Garett. Verse was, after all, the 2024 NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year, and his 99 quarterback pressures are behind just Garrett and Green Bay’s Micah Parsons over the past two seasons.
But while Verse is a force, Garrett is a force multiplier.
Former defensive coordinator Jim Schwartz said as much in an interview last week when asked about Garrett:
“Myles is one of the most gifted players who has ever played in the NFL. I’ve coached a lot of guys in 33 years, and two guys who stand out the most are Calvin Johnson (who Schwartz coached in Detroit) and Myles Garrett, as they did things big guys should not be able to do.
“It was a challenge practicing with Myles because he could destroy the offense, and they had a tough time completing plays. Every single game plan (from the opposition) started with ‘we are not going to let Myles Garrett beat us.’ When the whole game plan is to stop Myles Garrett, and he still sets the record for sacks, that tells you how special he is.”
Who on the current defense is going to have opposing offensive coordinators losing sleep during the week that the Browns are on the schedule?
Put simply, Garrett’s production was unlike anything seen in the league in a long time.
Consider that last season, when he set the single-season sack record, Garrett:
It wasn’t just last year that Garrett shone, of course, as Diante Lee highlighted at The Ringer:
When he was on the field in his career, opposing quarterbacks...