The Cleveland Browns already have four quarterbacks under contract, but the team is at least considering taking a flier on a fifth in this year’s NFL draft.
Cory Kinnan of Browns Wire wrote on Monday, April 1 that Cleveland is “showing interest” in Joe Milton III out of the University of Tennessee. Kinnan cited a social media report from ESPN’s Jordan Reid in late March that Milton will meet with the Browns at some point this week.
Milton mentioned to us on the telecast following Pro Day today that he’s scheduled to meet with the #Browns early next week. https://t.co/ruz6zJAT1C
— Jordan Reid (@Jordan_Reid) March 27, 2024
“Milton mentioned to us on the telecast following Pro Day today that he’s scheduled to meet with the #Browns early next week,” Reid posted to X.
Joe Milton Has Huge Arm Talent, Struggles With Accuracy
Browns owner Jimmy Haslam is a University of Tennessee grad, and Kinnan noted he has “invested deeply in” the school. While that tie could be meaningful to some degree, the reason Cleveland will draft Milton — if it ultimately does — is because of the arm talent he has displayed across his collegiate career.
Milton, now 24 years old, began his six-year run in college at Michigan. He spent three seasons with the team but appeared in only 14 games between 2018-2020. He then transferred to Tennessee, where he finally got the chance to be the man under center in 2023.
Milton completed 64.7% of his attempts for 2,813 passing yards, 20 TDs, 5 INTs and a QBR of 70.4, per Football Reference. He also rushed the football 78 times for 299 yards and 7 scores while leading the Volunteers to an 8-4 record.
NFL Network’s Lance Zierlein referred to the 6-foot, 5-inch and 235-pound Milton as a “rare specimen” with a “cannon for a right arm,” but that’s mostly where the praise ended.
Rare physical specimen with the proverbial “arm talent to make all the NFL throws,” but he’s prevented from doing so by a lack of timing, accuracy and touch. Milton is gifted with a cannon for a right arm and can throw the ball as hard or as far as you want. His fastballs are often inaccurate and difficult to catch for moving targets, and he was wildly inconsistent locating his deep throws.
He can elude pressure, extend plays and put jaw-dropping highlights on tape, but he’s never been able to mature his game from splashy to consistent. He’s primarily a single-side reader who struggles to improvise with his eyes. The physical ingredients could get him drafted on Day 3, but his lack of development over six seasons discourages his projection.