March 19, 2024

NFL draft: Browns are still searching for franchise quarterback

CLEVELAND (AP) — Finding Bigfoot has been more productive than the Cleveland Browns’ search for a franchise quarterback.

This flawed football quest drags on.

For nearly two decades, the Browns, once a standard of NFL excellence and now a league punching bag, have been running in circles as they try to find a quarterback to lead them from the darkness to relevance and respectability. Since the franchise’s inglorious expansion return in 1999, they’ve started 26 quarterbacks, a roll call of names that haunt even the most loyal Cleveland fans holding out hope the team will one day get it right.

From Tim Couch to Trent Dilfer, from Derek Anderson to Cody Kessler, and let’s not forget that year of fun with Johnny Manziel, QBs have cycled through Cleveland like tourists, with none sticking around for long.

It’s been a running joke.

And until the Browns find that long-term answer at quarterback, they’ll continue to be looked at as a laughingstock.

They’ll have another chance to perhaps end this long pursuit in this week’s NFL draft. With the No. 1 and No. 12 overall picks, and four more selections in the first three rounds, the Browns are positioned to finally fix the most important position on the field.

This could be the year Cleveland fans have longed for, the one when the Browns find their Tom Brady or Ben Roethlisberger. But as fate would have it, this year’s QB class isn’t highly regarded. Many draft experts feel there isn’t a quarterback worth a first-round selection and that Cleveland should wait until 2018.

That’s just so Browns, whose experiment with Robert Griffin III backfired last season, resulting in the latest QB confusion.

“We’re going to keep searching,” coach Hue Jackson said recently. “I think we all understand, no one’s really claimed this position yet on our football team so we need to do everything we can to continue to add a player that we feel, as an organization, really good about, that can lead our football team and we’ll continue to chase that.”

The chase continues Thursday when the Browns try to find that elusive, essential piece. Or fumble again.

Here are some quarterback tidbits to chew on when the Browns go on the clock:

Up Top: Cleveland seems locked in ON Texas A&M defensive stud Myles Garrett at No. 1, and while he's proficient at sacks, there are no three- or seven-step drops in his future. The Browns are impressed with North Carolina's Mitchell Trubisky, a former Ohio Mr. Football, despite his inexperience (only 13 college starts), but probably not enough to take him first. Landing Garrett and Trubisky would be a dream scenario, but Cleveland may have to trade up as the rebuilding Jets have sent out vibes they prefer Trubisky.

Why Not Watson? Clemson's Deshaun Watson would seem to fit Jackson's profile of the ideal QB: mobile, dynamic, successful. The Browns, though, don't seem enthralled with Watson — not in the first round anyway — unless their silence is a smoke screen. There are other good options like Notre Dame's DeShone Kizer, Texas Tech's Patrick Mahomes or California's Davis Webb, who may all be available after Round 1.

Draft Debacles: The Browns' track record drafting QBs — or any position — is abysmal over the past decade, which is why many Cleveland fans fear the team will mess up again. Since 2007, only OT Joe Thomas and CB Joe Haden have proven to be good choices. Eight other first-round picks are no longer on the roster.

Along with Couch, the No. 1 choice in ‘99, the Browns have used first-round picks on Brady Quinn, Brandon Weeden and Manziel, who was Johnny Goofball in an orange helmet. Those mistakes shouldn’t deter the Browns from selecting a QB early, but they are grim reminders that there are no givens.

Hometown Heroes: Trubisky is the latest in a long line of Ohio-born QBs tabbed as the Browns' next savior. Quinn, Charlie Frye and Brian Hoyer all grew up as Browns fans, but none was able to lead the turnaround.