Deshaun Watson’s contract has hung over the Browns for years, but he’s not the only expensive name Cleveland has to think about as it moves toward 2026. The team is shifting into a new era, and with a wave of young talent, the financial picture should look cleaner over the next couple of seasons. Even so, a few players on the roster are set to carry price tags that could be tough to justify.
That’s the backdrop for a look at Cleveland’s three most overpaid players entering 2026, using contract information from Spotrac and position rankings from OverTheCap.
Tyson Campbell is first on the list at $14.1 million, which ranks 12th among cornerbacks. Trading for him was a sensible move on Cleveland’s part. The Browns didn’t appear to have a clear answer for Greg Newsome II, and Campbell gave them a long-term replacement at a lower cost than what they likely would have had to pay their former draft pick.
Still, Campbell is not an elite corner, and he’s being paid like one of the better players at a premium position. That’s a lot to ask, especially now that he’ll have had a full offseason with the team and won’t be able to lean on the same adjustment period he had last season.
In his first year with Cleveland, he was solid enough, but he also gave up three touchdowns and 11.7 yards per completion in 12 games. That’s respectable production, just not the kind that makes a top-15 salary feel light.
Zion Johnson comes next at $18.8 million, a number that places him seventh among left guards. With Joel Bitonio likely headed for retirement, the Browns moved early to lock Johnson in as the future at left guard.
On paper, the idea made sense. The problem is that his performance hasn’t matched the investment so far.
Cleveland may have jumped the gun by committing nearly $19 million a year to a player who probably could have been had for less. Johnson hasn’t fully established himself at either guard spot with the Chargers, though there’s still a chance the situation in Cleveland suits him better.
Until he actually gets on the field, the Browns can’t know for sure. But at first glance, it looks like a hefty bet.
Then there’s Watson at $46 million, which ranks 13th among quarterbacks. The only reason his deal no longer stands alone as the league’s worst is because quarterback salaries have ballooned around him. Even so, the contract still has a strong case for the worst in NFL history, and maybe the worst in all of professional sports.
Watson is making more than Daniel Jones, Sam Darnold, Baker Mayfield, Aaron Rodgers, Caleb Williams, Bryce Young, Jayden Daniels, C.J. Stroud, Drake Maye, and Malik Willis. And there’s an argument that Cleveland’s offense would be better off with any of them.
The good news for the Browns is that they can finally move on from the deal after this season. They’ll still be dealing with dead money for a few years, but that’s a tradeoff they’ll take gladly if it means not carrying Watson past 2026.
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