BEREA, Ohio — The most scrutinized contract in NFL history is entering its final, desperate act. Cleveland Browns owner Jimmy Haslam confirmed Tuesday that the team expects Deshaun Watson to be fully healthy for the 2026 season, offering a “cautiously optimistic” endorsement of the quarterback despite a 5-12 finish last year. Watson hasn’t taken a meaningful snap since Week 7 of the 2024 season, leaving a massive void that rookie standout Shedeur Sanders tried to fill during a dismal 2025 campaign.
The Sam Darnold Blueprint
Haslam isn’t ready to call the $230 million deal a total loss just yet. He pointed to the career resurgence of Sam Darnold as proof that a “fresh start” can salvage a former star. But the numbers tell a grimmer story. Watson has managed only 19 starts across four seasons in Cleveland, posting a mediocre 9-10 record. He has thrown just 19 touchdowns to 12 interceptions during his entire Browns tenure. The physical toll is even heavier. Watson is currently rebounding from two separate Achilles tears and a major shoulder reconstruction.
The air in Berea feels heavy. Fans remember the 3,365 passing yards he’s scraped together since 2022—a figure he once eclipsed in a single season in Houston. Now, he faces a locker room that saw Shedeur Sanders earn a Pro Bowl nod as a fifth-round rookie. The internal battle for the QB1 spot will be the dominant theme of training camp.
“Deshaun has a great chance—a fresh start with an offensive-minded coach who has, in the past, been able to work with all kinds of different quarterbacks and make them successful. So Deshaun has a great chance to do that now. It’s not for lack of effort… His shoulder, tore his Achilles twice. So he’s been really ravaged by injuries.”
— Jimmy Haslam, Cleveland Browns Owner
The Todd Monken Era: What Lies Ahead
The arrival of head coach Todd Monken changes the math for Watson. Monken, known for tailoring schemes to his signal-caller’s strengths, represents the last lifejacket for Watson’s career in Cleveland. If Watson can’t adapt to Monken’s vertical attack, the team will likely pivot fully to the younger, cheaper Sanders. The Browns are currently stuck at the bottom of the AFC North, watching the Steelers and Bengals tighten their grip on the division.
Cleveland’s front office has no choice but to pray Watson’s legs hold up. A release would trigger a salary-cap catastrophe, meaning the 30-year-old quarterback will get every opportunity to prove his “effort and toughness” one last time. The 2026 season isn’t just about winning games; it’s about justifying the trade that redefined the franchise for all the wrong reasons.

