
Earlier this week, rumors floated around the internets that Browns' tight end Kellen Winslow might miss all of 2007 recovering from off-season knee surgery. NFL.com's
Adam Schefter writes that "neither Winslow's doctors, trainers or the tight end himself believes that his 2007 season will be curtailed."
For the sake of discussion, let's assume Winslow can't play next season. Does that change Cleveland's thinking with the third-overall pick? Instead of, say, quarterback Brady Quinn, would it make more sense to draft wide receiver Calvin Johnson? Just to give the Browns another downfield threat? I know Johnson and Winslow play different positions, but I think it's easy to argue Johnson's upside seems boundless.
Former first-rounder Braylon Edwards had an up-and-down 2006 (mostly down), but he vowed to re-commit himself this off-season. A wide receiver corps including Edwards, Johnson and Joe Jurevicius could be formidable -- at least on paper -- and would lessen the need for a big-play tight end. The trouble, of course, is that with or without Winslow, left tackle Joe Thomas might fill the biggest need, and the team still needs to find long-term answer at running back. Also compounding things: there's a good chance another team trades up and takes Johnson before Cleveland goes on the clock.
This is all hypothetical -- Winslow plans on being ready for the regular season -- but the Browns have so many needs, almost anyone they select will add quality depth at key positions.