😤 CLEVELAND FANS ARE FED UP! FRUSTRATION IS BOILING OVER AROUND THE Cleveland Browns — AND SOME SUPPORTERS ARE SAYING THEY’VE FINALLY HAD ENOUGH! #XM

This isn’t about Deshaun Watson’s health or a recycled debate over the quarterback room. While the mainstream media obsesses over who takes the first snap, General Manager Andrew Berry has been quietly assembling a football army. The 2026 NFL Draft wasn’t just a good weekend for Cleveland. It was a franchise-altering declaration of war. Berry and head coach Todd Monken looked at the roster and realized the secret to beating the Kansas City Chiefs and Baltimore Ravens isn’t just a great defense—it is an avalanche of offense.

Consider the math for a moment. Eight of the Browns’ ten draft selections were dedicated to the offensive side of the ball. Five of the first six picks were either wide receivers or offensive linemen. This wasn’t a draft strategy; it was a surgical strike. In a league obsessed with finding the next Patrick Mahomes, Cleveland decided to build a wall and then arm every soldier on the other side of it. They passed on safe defensive picks like Caleb Downs multiple times because they weren’t playing for a participation trophy. They are playing to break scoreboards.

The names arriving in Berea read like a mad scientist’s experiment. Denzel Boston brings a rare combination of frame and physicality that turns fifty-fifty balls into eighty-twenty certainties. KC Concepcion arrives as a human joystick, the kind of slot weapon who turns a three-yard slant into a sixty-yard house call. And then there is Spencer Fano, the offensive tackle who moves like a dancer but hits like a truck. This isn’t just an injection of youth. This is an identity shift.

But the most dramatic change isn’t on the roster. It is on the sideline. Kevin Stefanski is out. Todd Monken is in. And while the transition was professional, the stylistic difference is measuring earthquakes. Monken brings an aggressive, vertical, no-fear mentality that stands in stark contrast to the conservative approach of years past. Forget managing the game. Monken wants to end it before the fourth quarter starts. He looked at the passing numbers from 2025—where Shedeur Sanders threw for 1,400 yards and Dillon Gabriel showed flashes—and saw a foundation, not a finished product.

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So why is the national media sleeping? Because they are fixated on the wrong quarterback report. Mary Kay Cabot’s suggestion that Watson will start is treated as gospel for a tank job. But the front office isn’t thinking about losing. They are thinking about explosion. They watched Joe Flacco grind through 815 yards and Dillon Gabriel post a respectable 937 yards. They saw a receiving corps that needed to be detonated and rebuilt. Mission accomplished.

The narrative that Cleveland is “tanking for a quarterback” is the laziest take in sports media. You do not draft three offensive weapons and a franchise tackle in the first two days to lose games. You do that to hang forty points on the Steelers in December. You do that to make the AFC North a shootout instead of a slugfest. The Browns are not getting ready to punt on 2026. They are loading the cannon. The only question left is whether the rest of the league realizes what is coming before it is too late.

For the fans who have suffered through the wind, the snow, and the heartbreak, this is the dawn. The Dawg Pound has been waiting for a team that fights back with ferocity and intelligence. Andrew Berry and Todd Monken are building a monster. And when the 2026 season finally kicks off, the world isn’t going to see a team trying to avoid embarrassment. They are going to see a team trying to cause it.

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Get your popcorn ready. The sleeping giant in Ohio just opened its eyes.