The Cleveland Browns have an opening to reset at quarterback after the Carolina Panthers shelved former No. 1 overall pick Bryce Young.
Carolina dropped the shocking news on Monday, September 16, just two games into Young’s second NFL season.
Sources: The #Panthers are benching former No. 1 overall pick Bryce Young and starting veteran Andy Dalton beginning this week.
— Tom Pelissero (@TomPelissero) September 16, 2024
Coach Dave Canales has repeatedly said “Bryce is our quarterback.” But with the season quickly slipping away, Canales decided to make a change. pic.twitter.com/jTYawQCi2C
“Sources: The #Panthers are benching former No. 1 overall pick Bryce Young and starting Andy Dalton beginning this week,” Tom Pelissero of NFL Network reported via X. “Coach Dave Canales has repeatedly said ‘Bryce is our quarterback.’ But with the season quickly slipping away, Canales decided to make the change.”
The Panthers now have essentially no choice but to deal Young, as he appears to have regressed in Year 2 and the trust between head coach and second-year quarterback has been broken.
Carolina pretty well nuked Young’s trade value by benching him before shopping him, which is good news for a team like Cleveland that should be looking for a youthful reset under center given all of Deshaun Watson’s woes since joining the team in 2022.
However, given Young’s standing as a former No. 1 pick, he will still cost a significant amount on the trade market. The Browns can make a quality offer because they can throw in second-year QB Dorian Thompson-Robinson, who they selected in the fifth round the same year Carolina picked Young in the first.
Thompson-Robinson has put together two quality preseasons and has significant experience, appearing in eight games during his rookie campaign in 2023 and earning three starts (1-2). Cleveland owns all of its own picks in rounds 1-4 of next year’s draft, along with three sixth-rounders and a seventh-rounder.
Packaging Thompson-Robinson with either a second-round or third-round pick in 2025 plus one of those sixth-round selections might be enough to bring Young into the fold in Cleveland.