Browns Fans Just Got A Striking New Sign On Draft Day Choice

The Cleveland Browns' strategic draft choices, opting for Spencer Fano over a controversial quarterback prospect, reflect a calculated approach to securing a successful future.

The Browns had every reason to feel pressure in the 2026 NFL Draft, especially with the No. 6 overall pick sitting there and Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson attached to the conversation. Instead, Cleveland passed on the noise and went with a different direction, taking hopeful left-tackle-of-the-future Spencer Fano.

That choice looks even cleaner after former NFL executive and general manager Scot McCloughan unloaded a blunt assessment of Simpson’s pro outlook.

“I think [Ty Simpson] is overdrafted. It’s the position alone, you know.

I think, not being a guru, but he’s like J.J. McCarthy.

He’s like Mac Jones. He’s a career backup.

Ideally, he might start, but that’s because of where his pick was and they want to prove everybody right, you know, type of thing. And that’s not the way you should build a roster.

Not at all.”

Simpson had been heavily linked to Cleveland, and the fit made enough sense on paper to keep the speculation alive. He has family ties to Browns head coach Todd Monken, and Monken was once involved in his recruitment.

But the evaluation never came with a clean consensus. Scouts saw a quarterback with grit and solid physical tools in the key areas, but not one obvious elite trait that separated him from the pack.

That uncertainty is exactly why the Browns’ decision matters. In a class where the draft chatter tends to elevate the No. 2 quarterback into something bigger than the tape says, Cleveland resisted the urge to chase the moment. McCloughan’s comments only sharpen that picture, especially with the Los Angeles Rams taking Simpson at No. 13 anyway.

Whether the Rams were right will play out later. For Cleveland, the bigger point is simpler: when a quarterback is going to be the guy, the organization has to be aligned from the top down. The source of the failure is often not just the player, but the people around him.

That’s why the Browns’ approach stands out here. If and when they do take their quarterback of the future - and that could still be Shedeur Sanders, who isn’t being ruled out just yet - it has to be a full commitment from ownership on down.

No split room. No half-measure.

No trying to talk themselves into it after the fact.

For now, Cleveland avoided that trap. And if skipping the Ty Simpson route was step one, it may be the kind of decision that helps them finally build this thing the right way.

In Other News...

Deshaun Watson Isnt The Only Browns Contract Fans Should Be Worried About

Deshaun Watsons fully guaranteed $230 million contract has long been the obvious anchor around the Browns cap picture, but it is not the only deal that could leave the front office paying premium prices for less-than-premium production. Clevelands books have been shaped by that quarterback commitment for years, and the team is still sorting through the ripple effects of spending big on players whose value has not always matched the number attached to their name.

Tyson Campbell and Zion Johnson are the other contracts that stand out as the Browns evaluate where the roster is headed next. Campbell is set to make top-15 cornerback money, while Johnson is lined up among the highest-paid left guards, and both situations raise the same question Cleveland has been forced to ask more than once: is the team paying for upside, or paying past it? The good news for the Browns is that the financial picture should ease after this season, even if the Watson deal continues to cast a shadow for a while longer. [Read more 🡒]

ESPN Still Has Denzel Ward Among The NFLs Best Corners

ESPNs latest positional rankings offered another reminder that Denzel Ward still belongs in the conversation with the NFLs best cornerbacks, even if the Browns veteran no longer sits as high as he once did. Ward remains one of the leagues more respected cover men thanks to his speed and steady play, a reputation that has helped him stay on the radar even as Clevelands roster has gone through plenty of change and the team has dealt with the fallout from the Myles Garrett trade.

Wards place in the rankings has taken a hit compared with where he stood a year ago, and there is some sense that the Browns recent struggles have played a role in how voters view him. Even so, the broader picture around Cleveland is not one of a teardown, with Andrew Berry not signaling a fire sale and Ward expected to stay put, leaving the Browns with one of the more recognizable defensive backs in the AFC. [Read more 🡒]