The Cleveland Browns' offseason started with a bang after star defender Myles Garrett demanded a trade.
But general manager Andrew Berry kept things calm, refused the trade request, then extended Garrett, keeping him in Cleveland for the foreseeable future.
Berry also dealt well with the NFL Draft, where they addressed many roster needs while also adding two quarterbacks in the process. That, after signing two veteran quarterbacks to compete for the starting job.
Sam Monson of The33rdTeam.com thinks the Browns' offseason is completely "underrated."
"Starting point, Myles Garrett demanded a trade. Instead of trading one of the best players in the NFL, they extended him and got him a new contract. Albeit, one of the most expensive contracts in the NFL, but they've gone from 'their best player wanted out the door' to 'he's happy again,' that's good," Monson wrote. "You can debate how they got there, but they ended up with the quarterback I would have taken at No. 2. I would have taken Shedeur Sanders just because I think they need a way out of that. They got him in the fifth round.
"So they got the same guy and they're paying him like a fraction of the money they'd be paying him at No. 2, AND they got an extra roll of the dice, like a bonus lottery ticket with Dillon Gabriel in the third round as well."
Making it through the first portion of the offseason with a good grade is one thing. For Berry and the Browns, it's the final portion of the summer that needs to end positively.