Cleveland’s quarterback room is drawing plenty of attention, and not for the reasons Browns fans would want. On Good Morning Football this week, Browns defensive end Jared Verse was asked about the competition between Deshaun Watson and Shedeur Sanders, and he didn’t exactly dial it down.
“These are two great quarterbacks ... so far I've just seen two elite quarterbacks battling it out.”
That’s a bold way to describe a situation that already has plenty of people raising an eyebrow.
Watson’s most recent work on an NFL field hardly supports the “elite” label. In 2024, he went 1-6 as a starter and finished those seven games with a 21.0 QBR.
Sanders’ case is different, but not much cleaner: he entered the league after not hearing his name called until Round 5 of the 2025 NFL Draft, despite being sure he’d go on Day 1, and his rookie season ended with seven touchdowns and 10 interceptions in seven starts. He was also selected to the Pro Bowl.
Verse may have been trying to sound like the kind of teammate every locker room wants, especially in Cleveland after the trade of Myles Garrett. But calling Watson and Sanders “elite” is a tough sell, and it’s the kind of quote Steelers fans are going to have a field day with.
There’s also the matter of what’s already happened in Browns camp. On June 11, 2026, Mike Hall batted down a Shedeur Sanders pass after standing straight up with his arm raised, and Sanders threw it right into him.
No, your eyes do not forsake you. That’s a defensive lineman standing straight up, fully stationary, and putting forth zero effort. All the while, Shedeur throws it right into his arm.
Oh, yeah ... now that's elite.
Verse is an elite player, and he’s clearly trying to handle his new situation the right way. But after coming from the Rams and landing in a Browns quarterback battle like this, he’s already in a strange spot. At least he’s embracing it.
In Other News...
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The intrigue comes from the uneasy math around a star pass rusher who remains elite but is no longer a simple trade chip. A recent ESPN discussion compared his situation to the Von Miller market as a reminder that even a player with Watts reputation may not command the kind of return fans would expect, and if Pittsburgh were to tumble badly this season, the front office could be forced to consider a move it would otherwise never entertain. [Read more 🡒]
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Coverage is the part that keeps coming up, and it is the reason Wilson feels like such a pivotal player entering 2026. He can run and finish plays, but the Steelers need more consistency when offenses start testing him in space, especially with the kind of scrutiny that follows a rough defensive year. If Wilson takes a step forward there, Pittsburghs linebacker room looks a lot more settled. If not, the questions around the middle of the defense are only going to grow louder once camp opens. [Read more 🡒]
Keeanu Benton Suddenly Has More To Prove Than Steelers Fans Expected
The Steelers have spent the offseason locking up familiar faces, extending veterans and several members of the 2023 draft class, which has only sharpened the spotlight on Keeanu Benton. The fourth-year defensive lineman has shown enough growth to keep his place in the conversation, especially after taking a step forward as a pass rusher in 2025, but the bigger question around him is whether his all-around game is ready to match the organizations long-term plans.
Bentons path to a more prominent role still runs through the part of the job that has been hardest to trust, and that makes 2026 a pivotal season for him in Pittsburgh. If he can clean up the run defense while building on the pressure he created last year, he will put himself in position to matter far more than just as another name in the rotation, and potentially as a player the Steelers have to think about in a different contract conversation. [Read more 🡒]
