Harold Fannin Jr. Is Already Learning How Little Respect Browns Get

Harold Fannin Jr. shines as a rising star for the Cleveland Browns, but his talents risk being overshadowed unless the team's performance improves.

Harold Fannin Jr. has already given the Browns plenty to feel good about, but the league’s latest young-player ranking is a reminder that Cleveland still has to fight for attention.

The tight end, a third-round pick in the 2025 draft, wasted no time becoming one of the Browns’ most dependable options as a rookie. In 16 games, Fannin hauled in 72 catches for 731 yards and six touchdowns, and he added another score on the ground. He also set a Browns record for receptions by a rookie, a strong first-year mark that made him look like a real piece of Cleveland’s next wave.

But that production wasn’t enough to land him on CBS Sports’ recent list of the top 25 NFL players 25 or under. Fannin, who turns 22 on July 20, was left off the ranking entirely, and he didn’t even get mentioned in the “toughest cuts” group.

That omission stands out because Chicago Bears tight end Colston Loveland came in at No. 25, even though Fannin and Indianapolis Colts tight end Tyler Warren both put together more productive seasons than Loveland did as fellow 2025 draftees.

The simplest explanation is the one Browns fans know all too well: team success matters, and players in Cleveland often have to do more to get the same level of respect.

That idea lines up with a recent comment from an anonymous NFL personnel evaluator, who said Browns corner Denzel Ward would be the talk of the NFL if he played for the Kansas City Chiefs or the New England Patriots. It’s the kind of assessment that rings true for a fan base that has watched strong individual performances get lost because the team around them hasn’t done enough.

Fannin now finds himself in that same conversation, even if the hope in Cleveland is that he won’t stay there long. The Browns have added a number of promising young players over the last two years, and the belief is that this group can become the foundation of a turnaround.

If Fannin and that young core are the ones who help push the franchise into better days, the recognition should come with it.

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