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Dynasty fantasy football rookie drafts were thrown for a loop when a pair of Round 1 quality pass-catching talents ended up on both the Browns and Jets rosters in the top 40 picks. It’s unlikely anyone with hopes of drafting KC Concepcion, Denzel Boston, Kenyon Sadiq or Omar Cooper Jr. was hoping they’d land in those offensive ecosystems, which have struggled to produce high-end offensive output many times over the years.

Here, we’ll take a look at what’s sneakily good about both landing spots, what the potential roadblocks are and what needs to go right next year and beyond for these players to return value over the course of their careers.

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KC Concepcion and Denzel Boston to the Browns

Why it’s sneaky fine

It’s flown under the radar because the news out of the Browns’ hiring cycle was messy — what a shock — but landing on Todd Monken as the head coach was a massive win for anyone invested in Browns offensive players. For multiple reasons, people don’t seem to understand how good an offensive coach Monken is. The 60-year-old is not a young, well-groomed member of the Shanahan or McVay coaching tree but he’s had a long track record of success across different levels of the sport.

Monken was a sought-after assistant in the college ranks as a passing game coordinator and wide receivers coach before jumping to the NFL in 2007 to take a receivers coach job with the Jaguars, which featured four wildly different rooms with different archetypes. He then dipped back into college, including a stint at Oklahoma State as the quarterbacks coach, which helped get Brandon Weeden drafted in Round 1, and as the Southern Miss head coach. He then spent several seasons with the Buccaneers as the receivers coach and offensive coordinator, and led the unit to a No. 1 finish in passing yards and No. 3 in touchdowns in 2019, with Jameis Winston and Ryan Fitzpatrick, who led the league in yards per attempt while majoring in Monken’s spread-and-shred philosophies.

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Monken then went back to college to take the Georgia offensive coordinator job, where the school won back-to-back national championships in 2021 and 2022 and he ran a power-run-based attack. He then enjoyed a three-year run with the Baltimore Ravens, during which the team ranked, on average, third in EPA per play and fourth in success rate on offense. Yes, Lamar Jackson had a massive hand in that, but anyone who watched the Ravens offense prior to Monken’s arrival knows that his alterations to the scheme helped push the passing game to new heights and Monken brought a quality run-game design from Georgia back up to the pros.

So, all in all, I’m more than intrigued by the idea of Monken getting to run the show for this Browns offense. He had an impressive résumé, having worked with a wide variety of quarterbacks and being something of a philosophical chameleon, adapting to offensive personnel and broader trends depending on whether he was in different college conferences or the pros.

If there are going to be positive changes to the Browns’ offensive ecosystem, Monken will be the deciding factor.

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What are the biggest roadblocks?

Quite obviously, it’s the quarterback situation. This problem has clouded just about everything that this organization has done ever since ownership pushed for the terrible trade and fully guaranteed contract for Deshaun Watson.

Speaking of which, according to folks I’ve spoken with and wider reports out of Cleveland, it seems Watson is going to get the first crack at the starting job. The organization is giving it one last gasp to see if it can recoup any value out of his albatross contract but there is nothing we’ve seen out of Watson since the 2020 NFL season that points to him being anything other than a bottom-tier starter or someone who can even stay on the football field.

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