Browns Fans Should Not Ignore The Buzz Around This Day 3 Pick

The Cleveland Browns may have struck gold with their late-round draft pick, Joe Royer, a tight end whose impressive skills and character have drawn comparisons to NFL greats.

The Browns may have found a sneaky Day 3 gem in Joe Royer, and the best evidence is coming straight from Cincinnati.

Royer, the University of Cincinnati tight end Cleveland added in the NFL Draft, checked in at 6-foot-5 and 247 pounds at the NFL Combine. That frame - along with his Cincinnati roots - naturally invited Travis Kelce comparisons. But the production he put together after transferring from Ohio State is what really makes the pick stand out.

At Ohio State, Royer barely got on the stat sheet over three seasons, finishing with four catches for 24 yards and no touchdowns. Once he got to Cincinnati, everything changed. Over his last two seasons, he posted 83 receptions, 961 yards and seven touchdowns, good enough to climb to fourth on the school’s all-time list for tight ends, behind Brent Celek, Josiah DeGuara and Josh Whyle, and ahead of Kelce.

That kind of jump is why University of Cincinnati tight ends coach Josh Stepp thinks the Browns may have gotten “the steal of the draft.”

Stepp didn’t hold back when describing what Cleveland is bringing into the building. “Browns fans will come to know Joe is a phenomenal young man.

He's kind of an old soul, quiet and just keeps his head down and goes about his business. He is a very competitive person, no matter what it is you are doing he wants to win.

[Joe] has a huge heart and loves his family and will give you the shirt off his back. He is extremely smart, hard working and dependable.

He was our best player these last 2 seasons at UC!”

As for when Royer first looked like a real NFL prospect, Stepp said the signs showed up almost immediately after he arrived in January of [2024]. “It didn't take long for us to realize [Royer] was special.

When he got here in January of [2024], we could tell just watching him move around and work out that he was special. Then it was our first spring practice we had with him when we all kind of knew, we have something extremely rare here now.

Just the way he moved, ran routes and caught the ball we were all just blown away.”

The trait Stepp believes will carry over fastest is the one that shows up in the dirty work areas of the field. “There are many parts of his game that I think will translate to the next level, but I think the one that will translate the fastest is his ball skills.

Joe has a 10-inch hand [and] wears a 5X glove. He's got the best ball skills I've ever been around.

He didn't drop a ball last year. He has phenomenal hands and can make all the contested catches and traffic catches which is where the TE room lives!”

Stepp also pointed to Royer’s personal journey as a major part of who he is. “Just the type of person he is.

Once people in Cleveland get to know Joe, they will see what I'm talking about. Joe has been through a lot in his career, been through some tough moments [such as losing his mom in September of 2022], but it has all made him better and made him the person he is today.

He's got such a big heart and he's such a good teammate. The Browns got the steal of the draft in my opinion.”

One story, in particular, stuck with Stepp from Royer’s time at Cincinnati. During the team’s first training camp, after a scrimmage in which Royer had about 5 receptions for 150 yards and 2 or 3 TDs, Stepp had already pulled him from the action.

But in a red zone period, Royer wanted back in. “Someone has to make a play, I'm going in.

Tell [head coach Scott Satterfield] to throw me the ball.” Cincinnati did, and the team scored.

“That’s Joe on the field,” Stepp said. “He wants to be the spark; he wants to be the one to make a play.”

He also remembered Royer stepping up when the program lost Jeremiah Kelly last offseason. “It was one of the hardest and worst days we've had as a program.

Watching Joe be there for his teammates, especially our TE room, was incredible. Here's a kid who's dealt with a sudden horrific loss, he lost his mom, now seeing him pick his teammates up and comfort them and be there for them was incredible to watch.

That just speaks to the heart and character of who he is.”

For a Browns team that added plenty of offensive skill talent in the draft, Royer has been easy to overlook. But the combination of his production, his hands and the kind of person Cincinnati says he is gives Cleveland a tight end worth watching closely.

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