The Browns Want More Ways To Mess Up Their Own Future
So the Cleveland Browns walked into the 2026 NFL Annual League Meeting in Phoenix and proposed something that honestly sounds pretty reasonable at first glance: let teams trade draft picks five years into the future instead of three.
And from a pure roster-building standpoint, thereâs logic to it. The NBA lets teams go way farther out than that. MLB doesn't have a hard cap on it at all. The NFL trade market is getting more aggressive every year, and front offices are constantly trying to find new ways to move money, move picks, and stay competitive. If a team wants to make a massive trade or push harder during a championship window, having access to more future picks gives them more ways to do it.
The problem is the team proposing it.
Sean McVay basically laughed the idea off and said it had âzero percent chanceâ to pass. The Competition Committee voted it down 11-0 before it even reached the owners. Cleveland eventually pulled the proposal altogether. Dead before it ever had a shot.
But the more I thought about it, the more the actual rule almost stopped mattering. Because this whole thing says way more about how NFL team-building works now than it does about draft picks.
And honestly, the Browns are kind of the perfect team to accidentally expose the problem.
This is a franchise that has spent years cycling through coaches, quarterbacks, front offices, and rebuilding plans. They traded three first-round picks for Deshaun Watson and have been getting clowned for it since it happened. Theyâve had front offices stack up future assets and then get fired before being able to use them, only for the next regime to come in and start spending like crazy, trying to speed the whole thing up. Most of the Brownsâ modern history has been one regime trying to fix the last disaster while they set up a new one for the next guy.
So when the Browns start pushing for the ability to trade picks five years down the road, itâs hard not to look at their history and wonder why theyâd want even more ways to gamble with the future.
You Canât Separate This From The Brownsâ History
The Browns have constantly churned through general managers and head coaches since Jimmy Haslam took over in 2012. Six of each have come and gone in the last 14 years. Every new group comes in talking about âthe plan,â makes a few big swings, then usually leaves before anyone's able to figure out whether it worked or not.
And thatâs really the heart of this whole conversation. The people making these massive future-based decisions usually arenât around long enough to deal with the fallout if things go sideways.
Ray Farmer got fired after going 3-13 in 2015. Sashi Brown replaced him, tore the roster down, traded the No. 2 pick to Philly, passed on Carson Wentz, and stacked up future assets. Some of those picks eventually helped build the Baker Mayfield-era roster, but Brown never got to see any of it pay off. He was fired during the Brownsâ 0-16 season before the rebuild even reached the payoff stage.
Then came John Dorsey. He drafted Baker first overall, added Nick Chubb, traded for Odell Beckham Jr., and for a minute it actually felt like the Browns were finally becoming normal. Then Freddie Kitchens went 6-10, Dorsey was out, and Cleveland hit reset again.
Andrew Berry and Kevin Stefanski finally gave the Browns some stability in 2020. They made the playoffs, won a playoff game, and it honestly looked like they mightâve figured something out. Berry was supposed to be the modern answer for Cleveland â young, analytical, calm, process-driven.
Then they traded for Deshaun Watson, and everything changed.
The Browns Bet Everything On Watson
In March 2022, the Browns traded three first-round picks, a third-rounder, and two fourth-rounders to Houston for Deshaun Watson. Then they handed him a fully guaranteed five-year, $230 million deal before heâd even played a snap for them.
Since then, itâs been one thing after another. Watson got suspended 11 games in 2022, missed most of 2023 with injuries, and never looked even close to the player Cleveland thought they were getting. Three first-round picks and $230 million later, the Browns have almost nothing to show for it.
Meanwhile, Houston used those Browns picks to help build one of the fastest-rising teams in the AFC. They landed C.J. Stroud, moved up for Will Anderson Jr., and turned themselves from a disaster into a playoff team fast. Cleveland helped fund the rebuild.
The Browns followed all of that with a 3-14 season in 2024, then went 5-12 in 2025. Myles Garrett publicly questioned whether they could really compete, though he eventually stayed after getting a massive extension. Kevin Stefanski got fired. Andrew Berry stayed.
And honestly, thatâs what makes this part interesting. Usually in Cleveland, the people making the huge swings are gone before the fallout fully hits. Berryâs still there, dealing with the consequences of the biggest move of his career.
The NFL Has A Front Office Problem
Sportsology found that the average NFL GM tenure was just 2.1 years â the shortest of any major North American sports league. More than half the league changed top football decision-makers during a five-year span.
And honestly, once you think about it, a lot of modern NFL team-building suddenly starts making way more sense.
If youâre a GM and thereâs a decent chance you wonât even be around three years from now, why would you build patiently? Why would you protect picks in 2029 or 2030 if winning right now is what determines whether you keep your job?
Thatâs the incentive problem the NFL quietly has. Front offices are constantly making long-term decisions while operating on short-term timelines. So naturally, some of them start borrowing from the future to try to save the present.
And the Browns have lived every version of this already.
Sashi Brown stockpiled future assets and got fired before most of them paid off. John Dorsey came in, spent aggressively trying to speed things up, then got fired before those players had developed. Berry traded three first-rounders for Watson, watched the whole thing blow up, and now heâs still sitting there trying to clean up the mess while proposing a rule that would let teams trade picks even farther into the future.
There Mightâve Been More To This
The read I keep coming back to is that this probably wasnât just about general draft-pick flexibility. It felt tied to the Myles Garrett situation too.
Garrett is still the best player in the organization by a mile, but heâs also 30 now and sitting on a team that just went 3-14 and 5-12 in the last two seasons. He already pushed for a trade once before Berry calmed things down with a massive extension.
But if thereâs ever a point where Cleveland decides they need to reset again â or Garrett decides heâs done waiting around â a trade package for a player like that would absolutely need quite a few future first-rounders involved. Thereâs a big difference between being able to offer picks through 2029 versus going all the way out to 2031.
Berry obviously denied any connection there, but the timing was hard to ignore.
Whatâs interesting, though, is this idea probably isnât gone for good. Multiple reports said the league expects some version of it to come back eventually, which tells you teams are clearly thinking about this stuff more than they used to.
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