Browns trade WR Donovan Peoples-Jones to the Lions for 6th round pick

Cleveland Browns WR Donovan Peoples-Jones was traded to the Detroit Lions for a 2025 6th round pick.

The Cleveland Browns have sent wide receiver Donovan Peoples-Jones to the Detroit Lions for a 2025 sixth round pick according to Mary Kay Cabot. The veteran wide receiver from the University of Michigan is returning to his home state. Peoples-Jones is in the final year of his rookie contract and is set to become a free agent at the end of the season.

Peoples-Jones has played well for the Browns over the last four seasons. The wide receiver has glue for hands and could always be relied on during clutch time. Peoples-Jones started the season off slow as the Browns have had to shuffle around their quarterbacks causing the passing game to suffer.

Peoples-Jones role was relegated into a glorified blocker as the season went on. The receiver has played the most snaps out of the group and has run the most routes, but he hasn’t been able to find any production. Peoples-Jones is a big-bodied receiver who can win at the catch point but lacks the separation skills to earn targets from quarterbacks whom he lacks chemistry with.

Peoples-Jones finishes his career in Cleveland with 1,837 receiving yards on 117 receptions and 8 touchdowns. Hopefully, the receiver is able to bounce back with the Lions.

The Browns have a few options to replace Peoples-Jones with between rookie Cedric Tillman, 2nd-year wideout David Bell, and veteran Marquise Goodwin. The Browns will need to replace him on the punt return. On Sunday, the Browns tried Elijah Moore as the punt returner, but he looked indecisive. The Browns might elevate practice squad member Jaleon Darden who has experience returning punts.

Browns, Baker Mayfield facing the music in the NFL musical chairs for QBs

There aren’t many seats left for Mayfield to find in this NFL edition of musical chairs

Deshaun Watson is the new quarterback for the Cleveland Browns. When the franchise decided to make the seismic shift to the polarizing Watson, it also meant that Baker Mayfield was out of a job. Finding a new home for Mayfield could prove quite difficult for the Browns.

There is no room left in Cleveland for Mayfield, who (rightly) demanded a trade. The problem facing both Mayfield and the Browns is finding a destination where No. 6 can go right away. The NFL’s quarterback musical chairs music is ending and there aren’t enough seats left for Mayfield to sit in anymore.

It’s been a crazy offseason for quarterbacks. Seattle and Russell Wilson broke up like a boy band that outgrew their carefully choreographed dance steps, with Wilson landing in Denver. Carson Wentz got exiled to Washington from Indianapolis after he kept playing the wrong note for the Colts. Now the Colts have imported Matt Ryan as the new lead singer for their group.

The Texans didn’t want anything to do with Mayfield in the return package for Watson. The Colts opted for what’s left of Ryan, who turns 37 in May and has thrown over 8,000 career passes, instead of their rumored interest in acquiring Mayfield. Atlanta is moving quickly on Marcus Mariota, based on some dot-connecting reports. The Saints, a possible landing spot for Watson and subsequently Mayfield, just inked Jameis Winston to a new deal that is enough of a level of commitment that they’re out of the Baker business.

There just aren’t that many places that need a quarterback right now. Even with what’s widely perceived as a weak draft class, the demand for quarterbacks to fill the musical chairs simply isn’t very strong. And that’s doubly true for Mayfield, who is simultaneously recovering from major (non-throwing) shoulder surgery and a public image debacle that he created for himself with his inability to stop talking or tweeting.

There are chairs left in Seattle, Carolina, and (maybe) Pittsburgh, though the Steelers did sign Mitchell Trubisky for up to $27 million over the next two years. The concept of Pittsburgh fans having to dance with the reviled Mayfield might make for some schadenfreude boogying in Cleveland, but it’s not really feasible. Seattle picked up Drew Lock from Denver in the Wilson trade and seems inclined to at least see what they’ve got before yanking the chair out from under the 2019 second-round pick.

The Panthers? They already traded for the man selected one spot after Mayfield in the 2018 NFL draft, Sam Darnold, a year ago. They are in the catbird seat to select the QB of their choosing in the draft, if they find one they think can harmonize well enough with coach Matt Rhule.

Mayfield isn’t the only veteran who is actively looking for a chair. Jimmy Garoppolo is being pranced around to a weird beat by the 49ers, who traded way up to select Trey Lance a year ago and need some return on investment sooner than later. Carolina’s last QB, Cam Newton, is still out there. So is Andy Dalton, a high-floor veteran who offers a lot less drama than Mayfield.

The contract status for Mayfield isn’t helping him find a dance partner. He’s entering the final year of his rookie contract, which is both expensive at $18.8 million and completely short-term. Any team trading for Mayfield will need to give him a new deal unless they’re picking him up for a song from Cleveland. But he’s damaged goods between the shoulder and the ego, and it’s a tough sell to a new team to commit much to Mayfield without seeing him in their locker room and performing on the field.

He might be a good dancer, but the music isn’t very sweet for Mayfield as the Browns hope to find a new home for their quarterback of the last four seasons. Mayfield and the Browns are in real danger of losing the NFL’s version of musical chairs.

Flashback: 2 years ago the Browns traded for Odell Beckham Jr.

Where were you when you heard the news?

Where were you when you heard the news on March 12, 2019?

I was at my daughter’s volleyball practice when my phone started going crazy. The Browns had just pulled off a stunning, blockbuster trade with the New York Giants for wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr.

Two people I’ve grown to trust as Browns sources over the years had tipped me off that talks were progressing, but they didn’t have a scope of the full deal or the timing. There had been rumors swirling since before the prior season, believe it or not. Earlier that very day, two prominent New York-based NFL reporters had shot down any notion that the Giants were moving Beckham, so I was caught unaware like most everyone.

Dodging errant serves and shanked passes as I sat at the side of the gym, I pounded every source I could find while also reassuring inquiring minds on social media that the deal was, in fact, real.

The final details of the deal resulted in the Browns sending a 2019 first-round pick (New York drafted DT Dexter Lawrence), third-round pick (EDGE Oshane Ximines) and safety Jabrill Peppers to the Giants for Beckham. while commonly lumped together, the Olivier Vernon-Kevin Zeitler trade was a separate transaction, though both players were included in the negotiating process and that subsequent deal sprang from the aftermath of Beckham.

The on-field impact from Beckham hasn’t developed as dynamically as hoped. He’s caught 97 passes for 1,354 yards and seven TDs in 23 games over two seasons. He topped those combined figures in each of the 2015 and 2016 seasons with the Giants. There have been injuries both nagging (the sports hernia that required surgery) and drastic (the torn ACL that ended his 2020 early) and a radical offensive scheme change from 2019 to 2020 that he had to make without the benefit of practice time as he rehabbed from surgery.

Many in the New York media warned of diva behavior and a team-killing attitude. Beckham has never been anything of the sort, despite many in the New York media still trying to will it into existence. He’s eccentric and loves attention, but those aren’t crimes against football. Even though he hasn’t produced as hoped — yet — the Browns are better for having him. It was a sign the team was prepared to start winning and aggressively acquiring talent. That sentiment has only blossomed. Beckham is no small part of that mindset.