The Browns’ insurance relief tied to Deshaun Watson’s contract is now looking a lot smaller than first reported.
Pro Football Talk has walked back its earlier figure, saying the team’s cap relief is closer to $25 million after initially reporting it was nearly $89 million. The correction came after PFT consulted with a source who used to work in salary cap logistics for a team and helped interpret the NFLPA records the outlet received.
Even that revised number may not be the full picture. Over The Cap said the figure could be as low as $9 million and change based on the records PFT reported, though that still might not account for all of the insurance relief.
PFT also cited another source who said the Browns may not have bought the maximum insurance allowed. There could also have been other terms in the policy that reduced the payout. The Browns, meanwhile, have declined comment or explanation, per PFT.
Insurance on major contracts has become more common around the league in recent years. Teams can use loss-of-value policies on big deals, and while the premiums are expensive, they don’t count against the salary cap.
Watson, 30, entered the league as a first-round pick in the 2017 NFL draft out of Clemson by the Texans. He signed a four-year, $13.854 million rookie contract with Houston that included a fifth-year option worth around $17.3 million for 2021.
Houston later gave Watson a four-year extension worth as much as $177 million heading into the 2020 season, a deal that paid him $39 million per year. After that season, Watson asked for a trade, then sat out all of 2021 while dealing with more than two dozen lawsuits for sexual misconduct. He was later suspended for 11 games.
The Texans traded Watson to the Browns in 2022 for significant draft compensation, and Cleveland signed him to a five-year, $230 million fully guaranteed contract as part of the deal. That contract runs through 2026 and includes base salaries of $46 million in each of the final two seasons.
In 2024, Watson played seven games for Cleveland, completing 63.4 percent of his passes for 1,148 yards, five touchdowns and three interceptions. He also ran 31 times for 148 yards and one touchdown.
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