Jared Verse may have handed Bengals fans one of the easiest laughs of the week.
The new Browns defensive end went on NFL Network’s “Good Morning Football” and, while discussing Cleveland’s quarterback battle, described Deshaun Watson and Shedeur Sanders this way: “These are two great quarterbacks ... so far I've just seen two elite quarterbacks battling it out.”
That line is going to land differently in Cincinnati, where Joe Burrow has spent years showing exactly what elite quarterback play looks like. It also lands awkwardly for a Browns team still searching for answers at the game’s most important position.
Verse’s comment was meant seriously, but it sounded like a punchline to anyone who watched Cleveland’s offseason work. The source of the joke is obvious: calling Watson and Sanders “elite” invites a reality check, especially when the Browns are still stuck in quarterback uncertainty.
The Burrow comparison is the sharpest one. Last season, he threw more touchdowns in two games - a pair of four-touchdown performances - than Sanders managed across his seven starts, which totaled seven touchdowns. That’s the kind of contrast that makes Verse’s praise look wildly out of step with what’s actually been on the field.
Watson’s recent play only adds to the skepticism. The last time he appeared in an NFL game, he produced what the source described as one of the worst quarterback stretches the league has seen, with an EPA per drop-back in 2024 that was the worst of any quarterback since at least 2000.
So while Verse was trying to frame Cleveland’s quarterback competition in a positive light, the broader picture is much less flattering. If the Browns truly had two elite quarterbacks already in place, they probably wouldn’t be in the position they’re in now.
For Bengals fans, though, it’s a reminder of the gap between the two teams at quarterback. Burrow is operating in a different class, and comments like Verse’s only make that clearer.
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Joe Flaccos move from Cleveland to Cincinnati in the middle of the 2023 season still stands out as one of the more unusual quarterback detours of that year, and the Netflix documentary Quarterback gives a behind-the-scenes look at just how quickly it came together. With Joe Burrow sidelined, the Bengals needed help in a hurry, and Flaccos reaction to the trade showed a veteran who understood the opportunity right away and was ready to slide into a new locker room without much time to waste.
The documentary also captures how fast the transition moved once the deal was done, with Flacco immediately diving into Cincinnatis plans and getting himself ready for the next game. He played well in his starts before the job shifted back once Burrow returned, and the Bengals decision to bring him back this offseason says plenty about how they viewed his brief run. [Read more 🡒]
Joe Burrow Trade Talk Just Put A Stunning Price On Cincinnatis Future
The idea of Joe Burrow ever being moved is still firmly in the hypothetical bucket, but it is the kind of hypothetical that gets attention in Cincinnati because of what it says about the quarterbacks standing around the league. ESPN analyst Bill Barnwell recently put a striking price on that possibility, using the Deshaun Watson deal as the benchmark for how elite quarterback trades can reshape a franchises future.
For the Bengals, the bigger takeaway is not a transaction on the horizon, but the reminder that Burrow remains one of the leagues most valuable assets even as the team plans around him. Barnwells scenario only matters if circumstances ever turn sharply against Cincinnati, and for now it reads more like a stress test of the roster-building era than a real negotiation. Still, it is hard to ignore how much draft capital a team would need if it ever had to replace a quarterback of Burrows caliber. [Read more 🡒]
Joe Flacco Is Giving Bengals Fans A Very Cincinnati First Impression
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One of those stops was Cantina, the Mexican restaurant in Pendleton, where Flacco talked through a meal that fit the kind of low-key first impression Cincinnati tends to reward. The visit also lines up with his appearance in the third season of Netflixs "Quarterback," which has already dropped all eight episodes, giving fans another look at how hes handling life with the Bengals beyond the field. [Read more 🡒]
