Browns Enter Camp With One Huge Tight End Question

As the Cleveland Browns gear up for training camp, the spotlight is on their tight end depth chart, where potential stars must rise to meet or exceed last season's performance.

Cleveland’s tight end room is one of the more interesting groups to sort through as training camp approaches, and it all hinges on Harold Fannin Jr.

The Browns’ depth chart at the position starts with Fannin, then moves to Jack Stoll, Blake Whiteheart, Joe Royer, Carsen Ryan and Brenden Bates. That order tells the story: there’s a clear headliner, but plenty of uncertainty behind him.

For the Browns, the best version of this group is built on Fannin taking another step after his rookie year. In that scenario, he gets close to 1,000 receiving yards and 10 touchdowns, giving Cleveland a real weapon in the middle of the field. That kind of production would give the passing game a much-needed lift, especially in an offense that works best when it can attack the middle with multiple options.

Stoll’s role would be different, but still important. He doesn’t need to be a major factor as a receiver, but he has to help the run game and keep the offense balanced. Behind him, the rookies Royer and Ryan - or Whiteheart and Bates - would need to chip in enough to top the 22 catches David Njoku had last season.

That part matters because Todd Monken’s offense is at its best when defenses have to account for more than one threat between the hashes. Fannin can be one of those answers, but the Browns need help from the younger tight ends too, starting with Royer.

There’s also a much less encouraging path. If Fannin’s rookie season turns out to be more about volume and a lack of tape than true breakout ability, then a sophomore slump - or even just a repeat of last year’s numbers - would leave the passing game with fewer options. And if Stoll can’t offer even a small threat as a receiver, he becomes little more than an extra offensive lineman, which could hurt both the run and pass game.

As for how this room stacks up against 2025, the outlook is slightly worse. It’s a tough ask for a fifth-round pick, a seventh-round pick and a five-year veteran with only 28 career catches to outproduce Njoku’s impact. Fannin could absolutely take another jump, and one of Royer, Stoll or Ryan could surprise, but that can’t be the expectation right now.

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