In two weeks, the first round of the 2026 NFL draft will have just finished, and Cleveland Browns fans will be discussing how the team used their two (or three) first-round picks to continue to build the foundation of the roster. At this time last year, the Browns had all but finalized their trade down with the Jacksonville Jaguars, as long as QB Cam Ward wasn’t still on the board.
With two weeks left, all we have from a news perspective is final predraft visits. Rumors and mock drafts will flow like
the Mississippi, however. Teams are allowed 30 visits from prospects before the draft, and for a while, many called them “Top 30,” assuming they were used on the top players on the board. Now, it is clear that it isn’t accurate and the more appropriate notation is “30 visit” or just “predraft visit.”
Teams are also allowed “local visits” for players from universities in their areas.
Since 2015, the Cleveland franchise has often used its first-round picks on players who came in for a predraft visit:
For current Browns GM Andrew Berry, DT Mason Graham and CB Greg Newsome II were brought in for visits before their drafts, but OT Jedrick Wills was not. Due to the Deshaun Watson trade, Cleveland did not have a first-rounder to use for three of Berry’s six drafts.
While we do not know all of the prospects brought into Berea, based on reporting, the Browns have brought the following in for predraft visits:
- OL Caleb Lomu
- WR Carnell Tate (local)
- QB Ty Simpson
- TE Oscar Delp
- TE Kenyon Sadiq
- WR Denzel Boston
- WR Germie Bernard
- WR Chris Bell
- S Emmanuel McNeil-Warren (local)
- WR Makai Lemon
- OT Markell Bell
- WR Jordyn Tyson
- DE Mason Thomas
- WR Omar Cooper Jr.
- WR KC Concepcion
So far, that means we know of 13 of the 30 visits and only a couple of local visits.
What do you think about the Browns history with predraft visits and first round picks? Does anyone on the above list jump out to you as surprising? Did we miss any reporting on other visits?
Join the conversation in our comment section down below, sign up if you haven’t already, so that you can join.
Join the conversation!
Sign up for a user account and get:
- Fewer ads
- Create community posts
- Comment on articles, community posts
- Rec comments, community posts
- New, improved notifications system!











