Jerome Ford’s next stop could come with another uniform sooner than expected.
The former Browns running back, who landed with the Washington Commanders in free agency, is already being mentioned in trade chatter before training camp even gets rolling. Bleacher Report’s Moe Moton floated a deal that would send Ford to the Indianapolis Colts for a late-round pick in 2027, a move built around the idea that Indy needs another steady back behind Jonathan Taylor.
“Running back Jonathan Taylor logged a league-leading 323 carries last season. The last time he finished with 320-plus rush attempts (2021), the workhorse ball-carrier missed several games in the following season.
The Colts need a solid No. 2 rusher who can also be an outlet in the short passing game. Ford can fill that role.”
For Cleveland, Ford’s exit was one more quiet goodbye in a offseason full of them. The Browns’ youth movement has already pushed a long list of veterans out the door, and Ford was one of the more overlooked names in that turnover. He was a fifth-round pick in 2022 and gave the team real value when injuries hit, especially after Nick Chubb’s season-ending knee injury early in 2023.
That stretch was Ford at his best. He helped stabilize the offense, finishing with more than 1,132 all-purpose yards and nine total touchdowns in 2023. He followed that with a career-best 5.4 yards per carry in 2024.
But the picture changed fast after the 2025 NFL Draft, when Cleveland added Quinshon Judkins in the second round and Dylan Sampson in the fourth. Ford’s role shrank sharply in 2025, and he never really settled in during a contract year. He finished with 26 catches and just 24 carries, a strange split for a back who had been a useful piece in the rotation.
His final season in Cleveland ended on injured reserve, and the numbers tell the rest of the story: 73 scoreless yards on 24 carries, plus an average of 3.5 yards per touch. Even so, the Browns’ offense gave him very little to work with. Former head coach Kevin Stefanski cycled through Joe Flacco, Dillon Gabriel, and Shedeur Sanders at quarterback, and the Week 1 starting offensive line lasted only 20 snaps together before injuries took over.
That context matters. Cleveland was often chasing games during a brutal 3-12 start, and Ford wasn’t exactly being handed clean opportunities.
Now 27 in September, Ford has logged just 340 total carries in four NFL seasons. That’s part of why a move elsewhere still makes sense. He signed a one-year deal with Washington worth $1.4 million, and he enters camp battling Penn State rookie Kaytron Allen for the Commanders’ No. 3 running back job.
If Allen proves ready for a bigger role, Ford could become a name to watch around roster cutdown day. Teams looking for backfield depth and a reliable short-yardage pass catcher could come calling.
The Browns, meanwhile, would be watching a player they drafted and developed get flipped for a 2027 pick. That wouldn’t be the cleanest look.
But Ford’s path out of Cleveland already says plenty about where the Browns are headed. With Raheim Sanders under contract through 2027 at a cheaper price, Ford’s place in the mix was gone.
He was a useful player who got swallowed up by the shuffle. And even after everything that happened in Cleveland, it still wouldn’t be a shock if he’s on another roster in 2026.
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