Andrew Berry’s move for Tytus Howard made sense in the moment. Now, it looks like the kind of decision that’s much easier to question than defend.
Before 2026 free agency even got rolling, the Browns general manager helped set up an offseason that, overall, has aged well for Cleveland. The first big swing was a trade with the Houston Texans for the veteran right tackle, with Cleveland sending one of its three fifth-round picks in the 2026 NFL Draft to Houston. The Browns then quickly gave Howard a three-year extension, a deal driven mainly by immediate salary cap needs.
At the time, Berry was clearly bracing for turbulence on the offensive line. That turbulence arrived fast.
Joel Bitonio retired, Wyatt Teller signed with the Texans, and Jack Conklin, Ethan Pocic, and Cam Robinson were all moved on from as Cleveland churned through free agent additions and draft picks. By the time training camp opens, Todd Monken will be sorting through a roster built around a mix of youth and experience, with plenty of players able to handle more than one spot.
Still, the Howard deal has become the offseason move that stands out for the wrong reasons.
ESPN’s Seth Walder put it bluntly on Tuesday:
“I … did not understand the Howard trade at all,” he wrote. “The Browns traded a draft pick to pay Howard good money despite his poor numbers in recent seasons (24th and 31st percentiles in pass block and run block win rate last season, respectively).
That criticism lands harder now than it did in March.
Cleveland’s draft-day work changed the picture
Back in March, Berry was operating without much margin for error. With multiple offensive line contracts set to void and Bitonio still weighing retirement, the Browns had a real need to get ahead of the chaos.
From that angle, the Howard trade was at least understandable. The fifth-round pick Cleveland sent to Houston wound up having no effect on the makeup of the 2026 rookie class, and the Browns still ended up with four fifth-round picks on Day 3 at one point. Berry turned that group into three players: center Parker Brailsford, tight end Joe Royer, and quarterback Taylen Green, who went as the first pick of the sixth round.
But the real turning point came when Cleveland pulled off an elite draft-day trade with Kansas City and picked up two extra selections. That extra capital allowed the Browns to move into the third round and take offensive tackle Austin Barber.
That’s where the Howard move starts to look much less necessary.
Cleveland is clearly high on Barber, who now looks set to battle veteran Dawand Jones for the swing tackle job behind Howard and rookie Spencer Fano. There’s also a chance Barber pushes Teven Jenkins for the starting right guard role in camp. If the Browns had not made the early Howard trade, Barber might have shown up as the favorite to start at right tackle.
Instead, the Browns may have created a logjam they didn’t need.
A crowded line and a changed outlook
The Browns spent the offseason looking one way and then quickly pivoted to another. Extending Howard, paying guard Zion Johnson, and adding former Packers lineman Elgton Jenkins made it look like Cleveland was trying to reload.
Then the tone shifted. The Garrett move made it clear the Browns were leaning into a youth movement and a broader rebuild.
That changes how the Howard deal should be viewed, too.
Before the draft, there was at least a long-shot path to 10 wins in 2026 if Cleveland handled a schedule that gets notably easier in the second half. Now, five or six wins feels like a much more realistic ceiling, with the Browns likely focused on giving their young players real reps.
That’s why the fit matters so much. Cleveland should want to get snaps for Fano, Barber, Brailsford, and Jones this year to figure out what it has going forward. But if three of those players are stuck behind older veterans, that would run against what the Browns seemed to be building.
That was probably never the plan when Berry made the Howard move in March. And that’s exactly why it looks harder to justify now.
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Browns Camp Battle Could Decide If This Line Finally Holds Up
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For Cleveland, the appeal of this battle is obvious because the winner needs to be ready for anything, whether it is spot duty on the edge or a quick fix when the line is stretched thin. Barbers mobility gives him a path to carve out a role in a scheme that values movement, while Jones still has the kind of frame that makes him hard to ignore, so this competition could end up being one of the more telling storylines of training camp. [Read more 🡒]
