Last year’s draft class was underwhelming at the quarterback position outside of No. 1 pick Cam Ward. As a result, the Browns opted to trade down from the No. 3 pick and select defensive tackle Mason Graham rather than the best quarterback available.
The deal with the Jaguars added another 2026 first-rounder to Cleveland’s cache of picks, suggesting that they were amassing capital to secure a quarterback from that class. But they also drafted Dillon Gabriel in the third round and Shedeur Sanders in the fifth, with both getting playing time as rookies. Neither emerged as a clear long-term starter, and Deshaun Watson does not fall into that category, either. None of the three have shown enough for the Browns to pass up on an elite quarterback in the draft.
But this year’s crop of prospects thinned significantly after a number of top college passers opted to stay in school for another year. That left Indiana’s Fernando Mendoza alone atop draft boards with Alabama’s Ty Simpson generally considered a distant QB2.
Despite calls from the Giants, the Titans were unwilling to move off Ward last year, and the Raiders likely have the same mindset with Mendoza, their widely-projected No. 1 pick. If the Browns wanted to draft Mendoza, they would likely have to trade their two first-round picks this year plus their first-rounders in 2027 and 2028 – and Las Vegas may not even accept that. (Notably, the Browns recently proposed a rule change that would allow teams to trade picks up to five years in the future. Currently, they are limited to three.)
But even with Mendoza off the table, Browns general manager Andrew Berry said on Sunday (via Cleveland.com’s Mary Kay Cabot) that it is “wholly realistic” to add another young quarterback to the team. He did not explicitly say that player would be a rookie, but outside of an Anthony Richardson trade, no other names fit his description. That has increased speculation that the Browns could target Simpson next month, especially given that the 23-year-old visited Cleveland at the beginning of the month.
“I have spent time with Ty,” Berry said. “I think that’s obvious and we’ll continue to do so. But I think he has a bright NFL future.”
Is it bright enough for the sixth overall pick? The current consensus is no, but the Browns have plenty of time to be convinced. They also hold the No. 24th selection and could hope that Simpson falls there, though they will run the obvious risk of quarterback-needy teams snapping him up first.
But Berry chooses his words carefully. Just because something is realistic does not mean that it is likely or a priority. The 2027 class is significantly stronger at the quarterback position, and waiting another year would also give new head coach Todd Monken a chance to see what he has in his current trio.

Monken might have a leash (or the perception of one) but does Berry?