Cleveland managed to land the tackle atop its O-line board while doing so after collecting additional draft assets. The Browns had been steadily connected to a first-round trade-down effort, and the Chiefs accommodated them in moving up from No. 9 to No. 6 for LSU cornerback Mansoor Delane.

It is debatable whether Kansas City needed to climb up for Delane, but the team was leery of New Orleans at No. 8. The Chiefs sent the Browns Nos. 9, 74 and 148 for the right to climb three spots in Round 1. The Browns would have taken Spencer Fano at No. 6, according to Sports Illustrated’s Albert Breer, but viewed the Commanders and Saints as unlikely to draft a tackle at Nos. 7 and 8.

Browns GM Andrew Berry was correct in his calculations, though he still wanted to know if the Chiefs were climbing up to take Fano. The resilient front office boss asked Chiefs counterpart Brett Veach if he was planning to select an offensive or defensive player at 6; after Veach indicated a defensive path, Berry agreed to trade the pick. Fano became the draft’s first O-lineman chosen, and he will have a big responsibility to start his career.

The Browns will station Fano at left tackle, per Breer, despite the Utah product playing on the right side during his final two Utes seasons. Fano moved from LT to RT in 2024, however, accommodating Caleb Lomu. Utes offensive line coach Jim Harding told the Browns the team viewed Lomu as more of a strict LT type, Breer adds, while believing Fano had enough versatility to make the transition. He earned All-America acclaim at RT. The Browns will now ask the accomplished right tackle to move back to the higher-profile O-line position.

The Commanders had traded for Laremy Tunsil last March and then chose Josh Conerly Jr. in the 2025 first round. New Orleans had taken tackles with its first-round picks in each of the past two years (Taliese Fuaga, Kelvin Banks Jr.). That left the NFC teams as obvious candidates to avoid taking a tackle. While Berry would have needed to be concerned with one of those teams trading down to allow for another club to land Fano, he was proven right and ended up with the team’s preferred blocker from this draft.

Fano is the final piece of the Browns’ puzzle to complete a revamped O-line. The team traded for Tytus Howard, and the ex-Texans tackle/guard will play RT in Cleveland. The team then signed Zion Johnson, Elgton Jenkins and Teven Jenkins to round out its interior O-line. Elgton Jenkins has experience across the formation, but the recent Packers cap casualty is not certain to play center. Todd Monken did not confirm Elgton Jenkins would be the team’s starting center when asked (via ESPN.com’s Daniel Oyefusi), but given Cleveland’s other moves up front, that seems likely.

Green Bay slid Elgton Jenkins from guard, where he received both his Pro Bowl invites, to center in 2025. A season-ending broken leg — an injury that also brought ligament damage — preceded the Packers re-signing C replacement Sean Rhyan and cutting Jenkins, who signed a two-year deal worth $24MM to join the Browns. Cleveland gave Elgton Jenkins $15MM guaranteed at signing, money that almost certainly has the versatile blocker ticketed to start.

Neither Johnson nor Teven Jenkins has played center as a pro. While the Browns roster former sixth-round pick Luke Wypler as a center option, Jenkins’ contract is above the backup level. As of early April, the door for Joel Bitonio to return remained open. Bitonio could come back and again bump Teven Jenkins to a second-string role, where he was most of last year, and the ex-Bears guard starter is attached to a one-year, $4MM deal.

As for Fano, he will be expected to start over injury-prone left tackle Dawand Jones. The latter is entering the final year of his rookie contract and has missed 27 games as a pro. A season-ending knee injury felled Jones in Week 3 of last season. After moving into Cleveland’s starting lineup, the Ohio State product will likely return to a reserve role to open the 2026 season.

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