Ken Dorsey Will Call Plays for Cleveland Browns, Damage Already Done With Deshaun Watson’s Contract


Known for his play-calling and communication with quarterbacks in a previous life, Browns head coach Kevin Stefanski punted to offensive coordinator Ken Dorsey on Wednesday.

Cleveland looks to Dorsey in a thankless, nearly no-win situation akin to pulling a parachute as a nose-diving plane approaches impact.

Jameis Winston steps in for Deshaun Watson, Stefanski’s co-pilot of this rig called the Browns, with nowhere to go but up. Trouble is, the heaviest burden in the cargo hold can’t be dumped to save the mission.

Not Winston nor Dorsey, Stefanski, Belichick or Parcells have an easy solution to the Watson problem.

By the time Watson officially hit injured reserve with a season-ending injury for the second consecutive season, his financial cost to Cleveland is only part of the story. Because of the guaranteed deal—unprecedented at this rate, position, and length of contract in the NFL—general manager Andrew Berry tied the Browns to Watson for several more years. His dead-cap figure if released this week? Almost $120 million and more than $80 million more for 2025.

Next year is only marginally better, with cap hits well north of the record $85 million total dead salary cap charge by the Broncos are splitting between 2024 and 2025 for kicking Russell Wilson to the curb.

Watson’s 2025 dead cap hit would be $118.94 million, with an additional $53 million on the cap in ‘26. He won’t be a free agent until 2027. There’s no getting that money back or the three first-round picks delivered to the Texans in the trade to get Watson.

With one win in seven games this season, six games played in 2023 and six in 2022 after serving an 11-game suspension, Watson goes back on the shelf having netted the Browns a grand total of 19 touchdown passes in 19 games. His record of 9-10 since sitting out the 2021 season with the Texans partially explains why fans in Cleveland decided to cheer Watson’s second-quarter injury last week.

Choosing a direction with Watson is the first step for Cleveland to determine where the Browns go from here.

Barring a shocking shift from owner Jimmy Haslam, Browns general manager Andrew Berry and head coach Stefanski aren’t going anywhere this season or in the offseason.

Both signed long-term contract extensions in June, in part a reward for Stefanski getting the Browns to 11 wins and into the playoffs in 2023 after Watson’s shoulder surgery with five different quarterbacks making at least one start.

The tandem is 38-37 since being hired in 2020.

Watson is still owed $92 million for the next two seasons. It’s guaranteed, and the only path out of the deal would be Watson being suspended again. 

Stefanski didn’t sound like a coach ready to move on from Watson on Monday, either.

“This is a tough break for him, but I know he will bounce back,” Stefanski said. “But he’s been a great contributor to this football team, both in the locker room, on the practice field, on the game field, and we’ll just support him as he rehabs from that injury. I do think we know what he’s about. I know what he brings to the table for this football team.”



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