Report: Kevin Stefanski Safe; Browns Fire OC Ken Dorsey, OL Coach After 3-14 Season , but the team is already shaking up its coaching staff after a disastrous 3-14 season, according to NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero.
Pelissero reported Sunday that Cleveland has fired offensive coordinator Ken Dorsey and offensive line coach Andy Dickerson, both of whom were hired last offseason.
The Browns have one of the worst offenses in the league. They’re averaging the fewest points (15.2) and fifth-fewest yards (300.8), and that’s unacceptable any way you cut it for a franchise that had such high ambitions coming into the campaign.ady shaking up its coaching staff after a disastrous 3-14 season,
Simply put, the Deshaun Watson trade has been a failure on a historic scale for the Browns. He has made just 19 appearances through three seasons and when he has been healthy, his performance has been much worse compared to his peak with the Houston Texans.
Pretty much any offensive coordinator would have a hard time getting something out of this version of Watson.
Then Cleveland cycling through Jameis Winston, Dorian Thompson-Robinson and Bailey Zappe after the three-time Pro Bowler suffered a season-ending Achilles injury.
Compounding matters, running back Nick Chubb missed the first six games while recovering from a torn ACL and meniscus in 2023 and was out for the last three weeks after breaking his foot.
Ultimately, the marriage between Stefanski and Dorsey may have been imperfect from the start.
ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler and Daniel Oyefusi detailed how firing Alex Van Pelt as OC and hiring Dorsey “was curious to people inside the building and out.” The personnel move represented a major shift in playing styles, particularly a pivot toward opening up the passing game and trying to play to Watson’s strengths.
“The changes did not bring out the best in Watson or the Cleveland offense, which looked caught between two worlds,” Fowler and Oyefusi wrote. “Watson struggled mightily as the season began, missing open targets and looking uncomfortable in the pocket. The Browns never reached 20 points in Watson’s seven 2024 startsโall games in which Stefanski, not Dorsey, called the playsโand the quarterback was last in QBR (23.5) by a wide margin, looking up at the Titans’ Will Levis (27.0) at the bottom.”
From that standpoint, letting Dorsey go is understandable and perhaps warranted.
But having a third different offensive coordinator in as many seasons rarely looks good for a head coach, and it underscores the level of urgency within the entire organization. Leaving the Watson trade and its consequences aside, two playoff appearances in five years isn’t a great return from the Stefanski era. He probably has one more staff reshuffle left before he’s the one who will be held accountable for whatever struggles Cleveland continues to endure on the field.
Watson is on a five-year, $230 million fully guaranteed contract that expires after the 2026 season. Rapoport added that the new deal “doesn’t affect Watson’s 2025 contract.” He is still due $92 million fully guaranteed over 2025 and 2026.
Rapoport added that “the new parameters of the deal would make his contract easier to manage following the 2026 season…” He also said Cleveland plans to bring in another quarterback for competition, whether it’s a rookie, a younger player or a veteran (perhaps even current Browns signal-caller Jameis Winston).
Watson is on a five-year, $230 million fully guaranteed contract that expires after the 2026 season. Rapoport added that the new deal “doesn’t affect Watson’s 2025 contract.” He is still due $92 million fully guaranteed over 2025 and 2026.
Rapoport added that “the new parameters of the deal would make his contract easier to manage following the 2026 season…” He also said Cleveland plans to bring in another quarterback for competition, whether it’s a rookie, a younger player or a veteran (perhaps even current Browns signal-caller Jameis Winston).
Watson only played seven games for the Browns this season after suffering a torn Achilles against the Cincinnati Bengals on Oct. 20.
Watson had struggled over the first seven weeks of the season. His 79.0 quarterback rating ranks 32nd out of 34 signal-callers, and his 23.0 QBR ranks dead last, per Pro Football Reference. His 3.84 net yards gained per attempt was last as well and sits more than a full yard behind the next-closest QB (the Chicago Bears’ Caleb Williams, at 4.89).
Overall, the Browns’ signing of Watson has not worked out. In 19 games over three seasons, Cleveland has gone 9-10 in his starts. Watson has completed only 61.2 percent of his passes for 3,365 yards, 19 touchdowns and 12 interceptions. He’s also thrown for only 6.0 yards per attempt.
Given Watson’s 2024 performance and subsequent season-ending injury,
it’s understandable that the Browns are looking for a new quarterback. And given his monstrous contract, Cleveland certainly needs some more cap flexibility, especially given the team’s nightmarish 3-12 season.
For now, the Browns will play out the string of a lost season before turning attention toward the offseason, presumably with finding out the team’s answer at QB1 in 2025 high on the list.
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