CLEVELAND — The Cleveland Browns hold the No. 6 overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft, a desperate need for a quarterback, and a front office that refuses to sit still. According to a heavy influx of C.J. Stroud trade rumors—highlighted by a stunning proposal from FanSided’s Mark Powell—Cleveland could package that top-10 selection, a 2027 second-round pick, and a 2028 first-round pick to pry the young signal-caller away from the Houston Texans.
The Cost of a Franchise Quarterback
Stroud lit the league on fire during his 2023 rookie campaign. Since then? He hit a wall. His 2025 season ended in a playoff disaster, yielding seven turnovers in just two games. Houston fans groaned as the offense sputtered, wasting an elite defensive unit built by DeMeco Ryans.
ESPN’s Todd McShay recently floated the idea of Houston cutting its losses, sending the local media into an absolute frenzy. The Texans are right to demand a massive haul. Two first-rounders and a second-rounder is a steep price, but Cleveland lacks leverage. They need a savior. The No. 6 overall pick is the golden ticket Houston needs to either draft a rookie replacement or flip for a veteran stopgap.
You could almost hear the collective groan of the Dawg Pound when the rumor first broke. We’ve seen this movie before. Mortgaging the future for a Houston-based quarterback? It’s a terrifying proposition for a fan base still nursing the financial burns of the Deshaun Watson deal. Yet, here we are.
Cleveland operates in survival mode. Bringing in a 24-year-old Stroud gives newly hired head coach Todd Monken a massive lump of clay to mold. Monken worked miracles with Lamar Jackson in Baltimore; he could absolutely rebuild Stroud’s shattered confidence.
“I think I’ve mentioned it to at least all of you here, that we go into each offseason as if we have an expansion team. Particularly a quarterback, where it’s the most important position in sports.”
— Andrew Berry, Browns General Manager
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
This trade alters the entire AFC North power dynamic. If Stroud regains his rookie form, Cleveland instantly becomes a terrifying out. They possess the defensive trench monsters to win in January. They just need a quarterback who won’t hand the ball to the other team.
However, the elephant in the room remains Deshaun Watson. Watson’s fully guaranteed contract sits like an anvil on Cleveland’s salary cap, carrying over $100 million in dead cap money spread across 2027 and 2028. Pulling off a trade for Stroud requires aggressive cap gymnastics. Berry must either find a team willing to absorb a historic salary dump or gut the rest of his roster to pay Stroud’s impending fifth-year option.
Houston holds the cards. If the Texans decide Stroud isn’t the guy to lead a Super Bowl charge in 2026, expect Nick Caserio to start taking calls. The Browns will be first in line, checkbook in hand.

