In the NFL, the bye-week is a time for rest, reflection, and, most importantly, accountability. It is the traditional mid-season checkpoint where the architects of the team—the General Manager and Head Coach—face the media, answer the tough questions, and lay out a roadmap for the second half of the season. But in Cleveland, that tradition has been shattered. The podium is empty, the questions are unanswered, and the silence from the front office is deafening.
Cleveland Browns General Manager Andrew Berry is, for all intents and purposes, missing in action. His annual mid-season press conference, a staple of the NFL calendar, has been inexplicably canceled. And in the vacuum left by his absence, a furious firestorm of speculation, insider reports, and explosive allegations has erupted, painting a disturbing picture of a front office in full-blown crisis mode, allegedly hiding from a conspiracy of its own making.
The “official” word, trickling down from local insiders, is that this was all planned. A report from Terry Pluto, via “The Dogs in Cleveland” podcast, claims the Browns decided way back in the off-season to skip this mid-season availability. It’s a tidy, bureaucratic explanation meant to defuse the situation.

But insiders and commentators aren’t buying it.
“We know damn well that’s a lie,” declared popular YouTube host Jon “The Liquidator,” who has been tracking the situation with growing alarm. To him and many others, this isn’t a simple scheduling quirk. It’s a “very bad look.” It’s the behavior of an organization that has something to hide, a front office that is “looking silly” and is now running from the very media it’s supposed to answer to.
The central question is: what could be so catastrophic that a GM would break precedent and hide from his own fanbase? The answer, according to these explosive reports, is a two-fold disaster: a secret tanking strategy that has spectacularly backfired and a dark, personal conspiracy to keep star quarterback Shedeur Sanders off the field.
The allegation is as stunning as it is simple: the Browns front office “decimated the offense” with the intention of tanking a “second straight season.” The goal, allegedly, was to secure a high pick in the 2026 NFL draft, a class they believed would be loaded with franchise quarterbacks.
There was just one problem. That 2026 draft class, in the host’s scathing assessment, is “hot garbage.”
“They’re not better than Shedeur,” he states flatly. “None of the quarterbacks that is coming out of this 2026 draft is better than Shador Sanders. No one else.”
And just like that, the master plan imploded. The team tanked, the draft class is a bust, and the generational talent they already have is the one man they seem intent on burying. Now, with the failure of their alleged secret strategy exposed, the front office has no answers. They have, as the host puts it, “allegedly look like y’all tanked y’all season,” and now, “you don’t want to talk to the media.”
This alleged failed tank job is only half of the story. The other, more personal and perplexing piece of the puzzle is the treatment of Shedeur Sanders. While the team spirals, Sanders is reportedly back in Cleveland, having just flown in on a private jet after appearing at the Colorado Buffaloes’ homecoming game. He is in the city, supposedly to continue rehabilitation for a back injury.
But the belief among insiders is that his health is irrelevant. The decision has already been made.
“It’s looking more and more like Shador Sanders is not about to play,” the host reveals. “They gonna put anybody in but Shador.”
This isn’t just a coach’s preference. It’s described as a full-on organizational mandate, a puzzling vendetta that defies logic. “They’re going to play anybody but your door. Why they hate Mr. Sanders so much? I have no damn idea.”

This theory is bolstered by the Browns’ baffling quarterback carousel. As the bye-week ends, Deshaun Watson is “getting re-evaluated,” a familiar script that the host predicts will end with Coach Kevin Stefanski’s empty promise: “We will know more by the end of the week.” It’s a stall tactic, a way to avoid admitting the truth.
Meanwhile, all signs point to Dillon Gabriel, a third-round pick the host labels “hot garbage,” as the chosen one. This, too, is alleged to be a game of backroom politics. “It’s all Jimmy Sexton the agent,” the host claims, alleging that Gabriel and another figure, Dan Lane, share the same agent who “put it all together.” This makes Gabriel “his guy”—Stefanski’s guy. “Wherever Kevin go, Dylan goes,” he says, painting a picture of cronyism over talent.
The situation is so toxic that the host suggests even Bailey Zappe would get the nod before Sanders. It’s a calculated, systematic freezing-out of a player who many believe is the team’s best chance to win.
This all falls at the feet of Head Coach Kevin Stefanski and the hiding General Manager, Andrew Berry. Stefanski is expected to face the media soon, but the narrative is already set. He will, as predicted, “address Dillon Gabriel future moving forward” and declare, “Dealing who we rolling with right now.”
It’s a frustrating, illogical, and deeply emotional situation for a fanbase desperate for transparency. The Browns are not just losing; they are, according to these reports, being intentionally dismantled from the inside, all to cover up a failed tanking strategy and indulge a personal bias against their most electrifying player.
As the November 4th trade deadline approaches, the tension is at a breaking point. Reports from national insider Adam Schefter suggest the Browns are “more likely to be buyers than sellers,” which means Shedeur Sanders is likely not going anywhere. He is trapped, a star player held captive by a front office that refuses to play him and a GM who refuses to even say his name in public.
The bye-week was supposed to bring answers. Instead, it’s brought only silence and secrets. With the GM in hiding and the coach allegedly preparing his spin, the Cleveland Browns are a team at war with itself, and the fans are left to watch the self-destruction, wondering who is actually in charge and why they are so afraid to tell the truth.
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