Rodgers doesn’t automatically change the Browns’ fortunes if he lands in Cleveland, but it’s easy to forget that the franchise was the AFC’s top wildcard team just one year ago.
A few improvements to the offensive line and the addition of a skill-position player or two could put the Browns back into the playoff mix if the defense can stay healthy and take a step back toward its 2023 form, when the unit was the top-ranked in the league.
Rodgers is certainly an upgrade over Watson, who can’t stay on the field and who was bad pretty much all the time anyways when he was healthy over the past three seasons. Jameis Winston has had some bright spots, though he — like second-year signal caller Dorian Thompson-Robinson — has shown clearly that he is not a long-term answer.
And while Rodgers isn’t a multiyear solution either, he’s a better bridge option than anyone currently in Cleveland’s QB room. He can help pave the way to a new quarterback in 2026, whether the Browns draft that player at some point in 2025 or wait and try to do so the following year.
Rodgers also affords Cleveland a better chance to pull itself out of the cellar next season than anyone on the roster, and could help the Browns close the chapter on Watson for good by getting off to even a reasonable start with the team.