2023 Cleveland Browns Betting Preview

2023 Cleveland Browns Betting Preview

Matthew Freedman dives into the Cleveland Browns from a betting perspective heading into the 2023 NFL season.

The Cleveland Browns last year hoped to get through the first 11 games of the season with a winning record so that suspended QB Deshaun Watson could return to action, ball out in the final six games and get the team to the playoffs, where their end-of-season momentum could carry the team to a deep postseason run. 

None of that happened. 

The Browns were 4-7 when Watson made his first start, he had the worst season of his career, the team finished fourth in the division at 7-10 and the organization’s preseason thoughts on the playoffs seemed retrospectively quixotic. 

Plus, they had earned the ire of many sports fans by trading for Watson after he was sued by 20-plus women for sexual harassment and sexual assault. 

This year, the Browns still dare to dream of the postseason: Watson is likely to improve in his first full season of playing time with the team, and the defense has been fortified with offseason additions. 

They’d like to win a playoff game at the minimum — multiple postseason victories would be stupendous — and, deep down, even if they won’t admit it, they’d love it if everyone could stop hating them.

In this 2023 Browns preview, we will look at the team’s offseason odds in various markets, my personal team projections and player projections for guys who might have props in the season-long markets.

I'll also dive into my projections for the 53-man roster with notes on each unit as well as the general manager and coaching staff, a schedule analysis, best- and worst-case scenarios, in-season betting angles, and the offseason market that I think is most exploitable as of writing.

For fantasy analysis, check out Ian Hartitz’s excellent 2023 Browns preview.

Player stats from Pro Football Reference and Pro Football Focus unless otherwise noted. Historical sports betting data from Sports Odds History and Action Network (via Bet Labs).


2023 Cleveland Browns offseason odds

MarketConsensus OddsRankImplied Probability
Win TotalConsensus OddsRankImplied ProbabilityTeamWin TotalWin Tot RkPts ScoredScored RkPts AllowedAllowed RkTeamImplied Opp Pts ScoredImpl RkProj Opp Pts ScoredProj RkTeamImplied Opp Pts AllowedImpl RkProj Opp Pts AllowedProj RkTeamOpp Win TotOpp Win RkProj Opp Win TotProj Opp RkOdell BeckhamBaker MayfieldDeshaun WatsonTeamPts ScoredScored RkPts AllowedAllowed RkTotal DVOADVOA RkTeamOff EPAEPA RkOff SRSR RkOff DVOADVOA RkTeamDef EPAEPA RkDef SRSR RkDef DVOADVOA RkEddie LacyAaron RodgersRicky WattersShaun AlexanderClinton PortisAndrew EllingtonDavid JohnsonNick ChubbKareem HuntTeamOffQBRBWR/TEOLTeamDefDLLBSecDeshaun WatsonAmari CooperElijah MooreDeAndre HopkinsWill FullerJoshua DobbsHe’s smart.He’s bad. Jacoby BrissettDorian Thompson-RobinsonPlayerCompPaAttPaYdPaTDINTRuAttRuYdRuTDNick ChubbJerome FordAlvin KamaraDemetric FeltonPercy HarvinJohn KellyPlayerRuAttRuYdRuTDTarRecReYdReTDAmari CooperElijah MooreDonovan Peoples-JonesMarquise GoodwinCedric TillmanDavid BellJakeem GrantAnthony SchwartzDavid NjokuHarrison BryantJordan AkinsPlayerTarRecReYdReTDRuAttRuYdRuTD
Elijah Moore80.748.1599.43.73.419.90
Donovan Peoples-Jones70.144.8590.83.30.20.20
David Njoku72.250.4565.44.31.35.80
Harrison Bryant2316.4152.31.3000

Projections as of July 4.


Offensive Line

  • Starters: LT Jedrick Wills, LG Joel Bitonio, C Ethan Pocic, RG Wyatt Teller, RT Jack Conklin
  • Backups: OT James Hudson, G/T Michael Dunn, OT Dawand Jones, C Luke Wypler 
  • Borderline: C Nick Harris, OGs Colby Gossett, Wes Martin and Drew Forbes
  • Notable Turnover: C Hjalte Froholdt (Cardinals)
  • Unit Ranking: No. 2

Wills is a 2020 first-rounder who has started at LT every game of his NFL career and is yet to have a PFF pass-blocking grade lower than 65. The team has picked up his fifth-year option. Bitonio is a 31-year-old third-contract boss who has made the Pro Bowl in each of the past five years and first-team All-Pro in consecutive seasons. Dominant in both phases, he has played the entirety of his potential Hall-of-Fame career with the Browns. 

Pocic joined the team in 2022 via a three-year $18M contract after five seasons with the Seahawks. While he began his career as a guard, he has started at the pivot for the past three years and just had his best campaign with PFF run- and pass-blocking grades above 70. Teller was traded by the Bills to the Browns as a cheap second-year backup in 2019, but he has made 52 starts for the team since then and been a Pro Bowler in each of the past two seasons. He’s an especially strong run blocker. 

Conklin is a two-time first-team All-Pro who re-upped with the team this offseason for another four years after joining the team in 2020 as a Titans free agent. He has allowed only six sacks in his three seasons with the Browns. This might be the best starting five in the league.

Hudson is a 2021 fourth-rounder who has played 599 snaps and made seven starts in two years. With 28 pressures allowed on 326 pass rushes, he’s a suboptimal swing tackle. 

Dunn is a 2017 undrafted free agent who played in the AAF and XFL before catching on with the Browns in 2020. A backup LG with three starts in his first two seasons, he transitioned to a regular role (80 snaps) last year as an extra OL (inline TE) in heavy formations thanks to his run-blocking ability. 

Jones and Wypler are Day 3 Ohio State rookies who have multiple seasons of starting experience and could develop into long-term contributors. Jones has elite size (6-foot-8 and 374 pounds) and four-star recruitment pedigree. 

Wypler has good athleticism (5.14-second 40-yard dash at 6-foot-3 and 303 pounds) and is a natural fit for Stefanksi’s zone scheme. Of the two, Wypler is more vulnerable, especially to Harris (2020 fifth-rounder), who missed all of last year to injury but demonstrated G/C versatility in his first two seasons.

If the Browns decide to keep a 10th lineman, that spot would likely come down to Gossett, Martin and Forbes. Gossett and Martin are cheap veterans off one-year deals with other teams. Both have ample (but unimpressive) experience at both guard spots. Forbes is a 2019 sixth-rounder whom the Browns drafted but didn’t play on offense until last year — when he saw 19 snaps.


Defensive Line

  • EDGE Starters: Myles Garrett, Za'Darius Smith
  • EDGE Backups: Ogbonnia Okoronkwo, Alex Wright, Isaiah Thomas, Isaiah McGuire
  • DT Starters: Dalvin Tomlinson, Jordan Elliott
  • DT Backups: Perrion Winfrey, Siaki Ika
  • Borderline: DTs Tommy Togiai, Trysten Hill and Maurice Hurst
  • Notable Turnover: EDGEs Jadeveon Clowney (free agent), Chase Winovich (Texans) and Isaac Rochell (free agent), DT Taven Bryan (Colts)
  • Unit Ranking: No. 14

Garrett is the No. 1 pick of the 2017 draft and a two-time first-team All-Pro with 16 sacks in back-to-back seasons. He is the defense. Smith is a late-blooming three-time Pro Bowler who rotated in for the Ravens early in his career but has racked up double-digit sacks in each of his past four healthy seasons (he missed most of 2021 with a back injury). 

In May, the Browns stole him from the Vikings, who had to let him go for almost nothing because of their salary cap situation. He’s a strong replacement for Clowney opposite Garrett.

Okoronkwo is a 28-year-old offseason acquisition who played on a limited basis for his first four years with the Rams, but last year with the Texans he hit career highs with 36 pressures and five sacks. A solid No. 3 EDGE, he has never had a PFF run-defense or pass-rush grade below 60. 

Wright is a 2022 third-rounder who played meaningful snaps (543) with terrible results (38.4 PFF grade) as a rookie. Thomas — a 2022 seventh-rounder — was only slightly better (51 PFF grade) but with far fewer snaps (162). Both could lose playing time to McGuire, a fourth-round rookie with good athleticism (4.76-second 40-yard dash at 6-foot-4 and 268 pounds) and decent production (team-high 13.5 sacks in final two seasons).

Browns Betting Report Card

Tomlinson played next to Smith on the Vikings DL last year, and they reunite this year with the Browns thanks to Tomlinson’s four-year $57M contract. Able to play the nose because of his size (6-foot-3 and 325 pounds), he has always been strong against the run, but he has also developed into a consistent pass rusher with 11 sacks over the past three years. He’s a big upgrade on Bryan.

Elliott is a 2020 third-rounder who last year had a career-best 703 snaps and a career-worst 40.4 PFF grade. If the guys behind him were more proven, he’d be at risk of losing significant playing time.

Winfrey is a 2022 fourth-rounder who got 22 tackles and 0.5 sacks on 342 snaps last year. Ika is a four-star third-round rookie who has great size (6-foot-3 and 335 pounds) but will likely be limited to running downs.

Because of the lack of known depth behind Tomlinson, the team might opt to keep a fifth DT, in which case Togiai, Hill and Hurst would all be options.

Togiai is a 2021 fourth-rounder who has 350 snaps for the Browns but back-to-back sub-40 PFF grades. 

Hill is a discarded 2019 second-rounder now on his third team in less than a year, but he did have his best statistical season in 2022 (12 tackles, nine pressures). 

Hurst is on a one-year deal with no guarantees, he has played just 41 snaps over the past two years (primarily because of injuries), and he fell in the fifth round of the 2018 draft due to a heart condition — but the 2017 All-American has never had a PFF grade lower than 70. He’s an intriguing upside option. 


Off-Ball Linebackers

  • Starters: Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah, Anthony Walker
  • Backups: Jacob Phillips, Sione Takitaki, Jordan Kunaszyk
  • Borderline: Tony Fields, Matthew Adams
  • Notable Turnover: Deion Jones (free agent)
  • Unit Ranking: No. 23

Owusu-Koramoah is a Butkus Award-winning All-American 2021 second-rounder who is strong in coverage (73.4 PFF grade last year) but less sturdy in run defense because of his size (6-foot-2 and 221 pounds). He has missed nine games in two years but has Pro Bowl potential.

Walker signed his third straight one-year deal with the Browns this offseason after missing most of 2022 with a torn quad. He’s a below-average run defender with big PFF coverage grades (90.0, 78.2) in his two years with the Browns.

Phillips is a 24-year-old five-star 2020 third-rounder who has never lived up to his recruitment status or draft capital (he has missed 23 games over the past two seasons), but he’s young and entering a contract year.

Takitaki is a 2019 third-rounder who has provided the team with consistent league-average backup play for four years. Kunaszyk is a 2019 UDFA who led the Browns with nine special teams tackles last year. A true dirty-work ace, he just signed a one-year deal with $500,000 in guarantees, so he’s making the roster.

Fields is a 2021 fifth-round core special teams contributor who made six admirable but undesirable starts last year due to unit injuries. He should push for a roster spot — but I’m not sure who he’s pushing. 

Adams played well last year with the Bears (career-high 69.6 PFF grade), and he does special teams. Like Fields, he should compete to make the team.


Secondary

  • CB Starters: Denzel Ward, Greg Newsome, Martin Emerson
  • CB Backups: Cameron Mitchell, Mike Ford, A.J. Green
  • S Starters: Juan Thornhill, Grant Delpit
  • S Backups: Rodney McLeod, D'Anthony Bell
  • Borderline: CB Thomas Graham
  • Notable Turnover: CB Greedy Williams (Eagles), FS John Johnson (free agent), SS Ronnie Harrison (free agent)
  • Unit Ranking: No. 8

Ward is a 2018 first-rounder who has two Pro Bowls and a five-year $100.5M contract but is coming off the worst season of his career (9.2 yards per target). He should bounce back toward his career average (6.6) and is one of the league’s best shadow defenders — but he’s yet to exhibit the truly elite shutdown functionality the team hoped for when it drafted him No. 4 overall.

Newsome is a 2021 first-rounder who plays perimeter in base formation and slot in nickel packages. Like Ward, Newsome has held pass catchers to 6.6 yards per target for his career. Emerson is a 2022 third-rounder with good size (6-foot-2 and 201 pounds) and press-man ability on the perimeter. He allowed only a 53.9% catch rate as a rookie and combines with Ward and Newsome to form a high-upside coverage trio.

Mitchell is a fifth-round rookie who played with Newsome at Northwestern and has a physical style that outweighs his size (5-foot-11 and 191 pounds). He had a team-high nine passes defended last year and has outside/inside versatility.

Ford is a 2018 UDFA now on his third team in three seasons. He played only 83 snaps for the Falcons last year and has never been reliable in coverage — but the Browns gave him nearly $925,000 in guarantees, and he can play all three corner spots, so he’ll probably make the roster.

Green is a 2020 UDFA who impressed in 2021 (3.2 yards per target, 27.3% completion rate) and disappointed in 2022 (9.8, 80%). He’s a core special teamer but will need to hold off Graham, a 2021 sixth-rounder who has been consistently better in coverage (5.4 yards per target) over the past two years.

Thornhill joined the Browns this offseason as the FS replacement to Johnson after four years with the Chiefs. An average run defender and skillful cover man, he upgrades the secondary.

Delpit is a Thorpe Award-winning two-time All-American 2020 second-rounder who missed his rookie year to injury but has been solid since over the past two years. He has the size (6-foot-3 and 213 pounds) to bang in the box and the athleticism (4.39-second 40-yard dash) to stick in coverage.

McCleod is a 33-year-old veteran now on his third team in three years. With 138 NFL starts, sustained coverage skills and the proven ability to play both safety spots, he’s an ideal No. 3 S replacement to Harrison. 

Bell is a 2022 UDFA who was terrible last year in coverage and against the run but good on special teams.


Specialists

  • Kicker: Cade York
  • Punter: Corey Bojorquez
  • Holder: Corey Bojorquez
  • Long Snapper: Charley Hughlett
  • Kick Returner: Jakeem Grant
  • Punt Returner: Jakeem Grant
  • Borderline: P Joseph Charlton

York is a 2022 fourth-rounder who converted 75% of his field goal attempts as a rookie and reminded the world that it almost never makes sense to spend draft capital on a kicker. But at least he has length and was 4-of-7 kicking on attempts of 50-plus yards. Bojorquez is in the second season of a two-year deal and will face competition from Charlton.

Bojorquez was No. 7 last year with 48.5 yards per punt, and he led the league in 2020 with 50.8, while Charlton’s career average is 44.3. Bojorquez should be able to keep his spot.

Hughlett is a 33-year-old veteran who bounced around with the Cowboys, Patriots, Jaguars and Chiefs for three years before he played in his first NFL game with the Browns in 2015. He has been with them ever since. In 2017, they made him the league’s highest-paid LS (at the time) and gave him a four-year extension in 2022. I guess he’s good.

Grant was a second-team All-Pro returner in back-to-back seasons before missing 2022. He has six return touchdowns (4 punt, 2 kick) in six years and strong career marks with 10.3 yards per punt return and 24.5 yards per kick return, both of which would’ve been good for No. 6 in 2022.


Browns schedule analysis

Here are my notes on the Browns’ strength of schedule and a pivotal stretch of games that I think will shape how their season unfolds.

  • Strength of Schedule: No. 14
  • Home Division: AFC North
  • Opposing Division: AFC South, NFC West
  • Key Stretch: Weeks 6-13
  • Opponents: vs. SF, at IND, at SEA, vs. ARI, at BAL, vs. PIT, at DEN, at LAR

The Browns have a middle-of-the-road schedule based on the market win totals of their 2023 opponents, but they have a circumstantially tough eight-game stretch coming out of the bye.

First of all, the Week 5 bye is probably a disadvantage. It’s too early in the year to be of significant ameliorative and self-evaluative benefit. After just a month, not enough games have been accumulated for players to need a break to get healthy or for the team to know that it needs to make major changes in scheme or personnel. So the early bye is of diminished value.

And after the bye the Browns are home underdogs against the 49ers — and then they play five-of-seven away. They’re the only theoretically legitimate title contender with such a stretch of games this year, and I don’t care who you are: If you play that many games on the road in that condensed of a period, you’re liable to lose some games you probably shouldn’t.

After hosting the 49ers in Week 6, the Browns have back-to-back road games against the Colts and Seahawks. The Colts could be unexpectedly tough with rookie QB Anthony Richardson, and the Seahawks are a playoff team with an elite home-field advantage.

For Week 9, the Browns head home as heavy favorites to host the Cardinals — but this is a classic “trap game,” given that QB Kyler Murray (knee) might be back in time to play, and the Browns could be looking ahead to their upcoming back-to-back divisional rematches on the road against the Ravens (Week 10) and at home against the Steelers (Week 11).

They could easily lose either (or both) of those games. After that, the Browns have another pair of road games: at Broncos and at Rams. Neither of those teams look tough now, but they both have championship-winning HCs and QBs, and the Browns could be worn out after consecutive games with physical divisional opponents.

The Browns won’t go 0-8 in this stretch — but all eight of these games are losable, and if they do any worse than 3-5 out of the bye they could be in trouble given that they have three divisional games in the first month of the season and back-to-back matchups with the Jets and Bengals at the end of the year. They need to hold serve in Weeks 6-13 to give themselves a good shot to make the playoffs.


2023 worst-case scenario

As a pessimist, I think this is the realistic worst-case scenario for the 2023 Browns.

  • Watson is placed on the commissioner’s exempt list shortly before the season starts after new allegations arise, which leads Berry to bring in replacement starting QB Teddy Bridgewater, who had Stefanski as his QBs coach on the 2017 Vikings — and his 2023 campaign goes poorly, given how little time he has to master the system.
  • Chubb gets career highs in touches and yards, but it’s a punishing campaign for him as defenses sell out to stop the run, which causes him to drop below 5.0 yards per carry.
  • Cooper (unsuccessfully) requests a trade after Week 2, and Njoku openly yells at Stefanski as the team walks off the field to the sound of hometown boos after a Week 4 loss to the Ravens.
  • The offensive line calls a players-only meeting ahead of the team’s Week 10 road rematch with the Ravens, after which reports leak of a highly fractured locker room.
  • Garrett has a Defensive Player of the Year-caliber campaign that goes overlooked because of the team’s overall woes.
  • Elliott, Owusu-Koramoah and Walker continue to struggle against the run, which prevents the defense from getting stops.
  • Ward repeats last year’s substandard performance and leaves the field early in Week 17 out of frustration before refusing to travel with the team to Cincinnati for Week 18.
  • York once again converts less than 80% of his field goal attempts.
  • Browns limp to a 5-12 record, Texans get the No. 5 overall pick because they own the Browns’ 2024 first-rounder, Watson gets cut by the Browns, who sue him for breach of contract in an attempt to keep the remainder of his guaranteed money, and the team signs QB Carson Wentz to be the presumptive 2024 starter. 

2023 best-case scenario

As an idealist, I think this is the realistic best-case scenario for the 2023 Browns.

  • Watson has the most efficient season of his career but doesn’t get an MVP vote because of his off-field scandal and the team’s low-volume pass attack.
  • Chubb wins Offensive Player of the Year as he becomes the ninth player in NFL history to rush for 2,000 yards in a season.
  • Cooper hits the 1,000-yard mark for the seventh time in his career, and Njoku makes his first Pro Bowl thanks in part to a highlight play in which he takes out two defenders on one downfield block to spring Chubb for a 57-yard touchdown.
  • The offensive line boasts three first-team All-Pros, and the five starters all get matching tattoos.
  • Garrett wins Defensive Player of the Year with a 20-sack season.
  • Elliott, Owusu-Koramoah and Walker all get just a little bit better against the run, which is good enough.
  • Ward bounces back to his pre-2022 form and makes his third Pro Bowl.
  • York develops into a league-average kicker in his second season.
  • Browns go 13-4, get the No. 2 seed, run past the Chargers on Super Wild Card Weekend, squeak by the Bills in overtime of the Divisional Round and hold the Bengals to 20 points in the home-field AFC Championship to advance to the Super Bowl, where Stefanski uses his Shanahan-style scheme to beat the 49ers and Chubb wins Super Bowl MVP while Watson is entirely ignored by the camera and the telecast during the team’s celebration and acceptance of the Lombardi Trophy.


In-season angles

I view the Browns as a neutral betting team, but I skew slightly negative and would entertain the idea of betting against them when they’re favored, at home or in division.

  • Stefanski as Favorite: 10-18 ATS (23.3% ROI for faders)
  • Stefanski at Home: 10-15 ATS (15.1% ROI for faders)
  • Stefanski in Division: 6-13 (30.0% ROI for faders)

Right now, I don’t see a situational scenario in which I’d actively look to back them.

Data from Action Network, includes playoffs, also includes two games Stefanski missed to COVID. Those games were technically coached by special teams coordinator Mike Priefer, but they were still Stefanski’s teams.


Offseason market to exploit

In the playoffs market, we have a synthetic no-hold opportunity between PointsBet and BetMGM.

Given that we have a market in which we can bet with no effective juice — a market in which the sportsbooks don’t have an edge — we have the incentive to take a side if we like it, knowing that we’re getting in good even if we ultimately lose.

At the same, there’s another bet I like for the Browns, so I’m taking a barbell approach to their futures market.

Browns to Miss Playoffs (-120, BetMGM), Browns to Win Super Bowl (+4000, DraftKings)

I have the Browns projected for 8.7 wins. (Their total is 9.5 in the market.) Last year, 8.8 wins would’ve made them the No. 9 team in the AFC. The year before that, the No. 11 team. I currently have nine AFC teams projected with more than 8.7 wins for this season. The AFC is a beast, and the Browns will almost certainly need at least nine wins to make the postseason.

So I like the value on them to miss the playoffs at -120 at BetMGM in this no-hold market. I think it’s likelier than not that they don’t advance past the regular season.

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That said… I see their upside case and think that they’re also undervalued to win the Super Bowl at +4000 at DraftKings. There are very few teams with a real chance to have a top-five QB and a top-five defense. The Browns are one of them. And Stefanski, for his flaws as a play sequencer, is a strong play designer. Maybe he gets better at playcalling this season.

It might seem odd that I think the Browns are undervalued both to miss the playoffs and to win the Super Bowl. And there’s a chance that I could lose both bets. But I expect the Browns to have a wide range of outcomes entering the year. There’s a lot of volatility with their projection because we simply don’t know who they are.

If the Browns underperform their 9.5 win total, which I think is likely, then I expect them to miss the playoffs. But if they overperform my projection of 8.8 wins — and they do it in an incredibly tough conference — then that could be the sign that they’re a legitimate contender, and if that’s the case then I want exposure to the long tail of their potential dominance.

So I’m betting them both to miss the playoffs and to win the Super Bowl. Up is down. Day is night. Good is bad. Black is Browns.

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Browns Betting Preview