Cleveland's quarterback room walks into another uncertain summer, and the two names on every depth chart projection are Deshaun Watson and Shedeur Sanders. On paper, it reads like a clean competition.
In practice, the scales appear to be tipping, and they have been tipping since Todd Monken accepted the head coaching role. Watson is the one drawing the early edge.
Jeremy Fowler of ESPN, reporting from inside the Berea facility, suggested on SportsCenter that the so-called battle may already be less competitive than fans assume.
"He's been a factor already on the practice field. I'm told he's hit it off with Todd Monken, who's got an offensive concept, some elements that Watson has run in the past and been his best at; a little bit of a departure from what they were running with Kevin Stefanski," Fowler said.
That last detail matters. Monken is not simply inheriting Kevin Stefanski's playbook. He is installing a system whose architecture draws on the same well Watson drew from during his most productive NFL stretches.
When the scheme already favors the veteran's instincts, the competition ceases to be neutral ground. Watson does not have to outplay a rookie.
Layered onto this is Monken's own stated reluctance to drag the decision out. He has indicated he sees no value in stretching the timeline, which means the answer could surface well before training camp opens.
Why the early schedule tilts the Browns' QB decision toward Watson
Walk through the opening slate, and the case builds itself. Cleveland begins on the road in Jacksonville against a Jaguars roster that finished 13-4 last season, then heads to Tampa Bay, which went 8-9 but finished atop its division.
Two home dates follow against the Panthers and Steelers, both of whom reached the 2025 postseason. Four straight games against credible opponents, with five fresh starters on the offensive line trying to find their footing.
Browns beat writer Mary Kay Cabot framed the calculus directly. "I really believe that Todd Monken will choose his starting quarterback based on who gives the Browns the best chance to win, but if Deshaun Watson and Shedeur Sanders are really close down to the wire, the road-heavy early slate could be a factor," she wrote, adding that "Watson is also 7-0 against the Jaguars, and has never lost in Tampa's Raymond James Stadium."
The betting board has already moved in step with that logic. Watson held the shortest odds last week to open the season as Cleveland's starter, and the public bet has stayed parked on him as OTAs begin.
Monken offered his own read after the early April work. "I thought they were in command. I never felt at one time like they were lost," he said.
With six road games inside the first nine weeks, the safer bet for a youth-heavy roster is the quarterback who already owns wins in those buildings.
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