The Cleveland Browns have a clear setup for the quarterback position when the season opens on September 7 against the Cincinnati Bengals.
Then, like something from a Victorian-era horror novel, is the specter of Deshaun Watson, who will open the season on the physically unable to perform list after tearing his Achilles tendon twice in the span of a few months.
Throughout the summer, short videos of Watson engaging in various football-related activities have surfaced on social media. These would then lead to a litany of posts proclaiming how great he looks, how the Browns have not “ruled out” the idea of him playing this fall, and that a “hard decision” is looming on the horizon for a player that still has two years left on his fully guaranteed contract.
The reality is much different, however, as there is no way the Browns can put Watson back on the field ever again.
Everything that can go wrong has gone wrong for Watson and the Browns ever since he arrived in Cleveland. An 11-game suspension by the NFL in 2022. A season-ending shoulder injury in 2023. A season-ending Achilles’ injury in 2024. And some of the worst quarterback play in NFL history.
While general manager Andrew Berry and head coach Kevin Stefanski will never come out and rip a player in public – what value is there in doing that, after all? – they watch the same games, and they know that putting Watson into a game is a disaster waiting to happen.
So what is the plan for Watson?
Here is how the upcoming season can (should?) play out for the Browns and Watson: