USA TODAY Sports Weekly

CROWN THE BROWNS OFFSEASON CHAMPS

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Click your heels three times and say it fast: The Browns are the team to beat.

With Odell Beckham Jr. joining the Browns last week in a trade with the Giants, Cleveland adds to an impressive haul that has netted Sheldon Richardson, Olivier Vernon and Kareem Hunt to give them a championsh­ip look.

No, Bill Belichick doesn’t need to shake in his boots.

I’m talking about the “offseason crown.”

With the NFL’s new league year commencing on March 13, the Browns came out of the gate like gangbuster­s, seizing the moment and the headlines with the type of splash moves that once won Washington owner Dan Snyder a few of those offseason titles in years past.

The Browns’ brain trust — GM John Dorsey, flanked by new coach Freddie Kitchens, with team owner Jimmy Haslam writing the checks — have made the moves as part of the plan to build on last season’s momentum and become the winner that the new generation Dawg Pound has dreamed about.

The Browns, battling the Jets for the “offseason crown,” are also suddenly positioned to swing the balance of power in the AFC North, and not merely by their own master plan. The defending A-North champion Ravens have started the postOzzie Newsome Era by losing four starters off the NFL’s No. 1ranked defense. The Steelers have waved farewell to the NFL’s best receiver, who followed the league’s best running back, Le’Veon Bell, out of town. The Bengals are starting over with Zac Taylor, less proven than any new head coach hire (Kitchens and Kliff Kingsbury included).

So with Baker Mayfield poised to only get better after setting an NFL rookie mark with 27 TD passes, Cleveland is ready to rock. This after a 7-8-1 finish in 2018 that marked the Browns’ best season since 2007, seven coaches ago, when they had their last winning season (10-6) under Romeo Crennel.

But before going any further, we’d be remiss without giving some due credit.

Sashi Brown, take a bow. Brown, with Paul DePodesta at his side as “Moneyball” strategist, was Dorsey’s predecesso­r as the franchise’s chief football decision-maker. Brown ran out of time. But in passing on Carson Wentz and Deshaun Watson as franchise quarterbac­ks, he worked a plan to build for the future.

Well, that future is now for Dorsey. He has inherited the most draft capital (which start- ed with Brown dealing the No. 2 pick that allowed the Eagles to draft Wentz in 2016) and largest salary-cap cushion ... and absolutely demonstrat­ing he knows what to do with it.

To land Beckham, for instance, Dorsey dealt first- and third-round picks with safety Jabrill Peppers, who can be traced to a first-round pick in 2017 that the Browns got from Houston.

Sure, all of this wheeling and dealing has to come together on the field. Yet in this era of free agency and a salary cap it is certainly a means for injecting life and hope when you’re talking about a franchise with the NFL’s longest playoff drought.

Beckham might be considered in many circles as an attention-seeking diva receiver, but his close friend in football is Jarvis Landry, his roommate at LSU (who came to Cleveland in a trade that marked one of Dorsey’s big moves last year). Now they are Mayfield’s top two receivers. The chemistry should only get better.

Then consider the other fresh moves. Hunt joins a backfield already featuring home-run threat Nick Chubb, though Hunt was suspended for eight games due to a violation of the league's personal conduct policy.

The Browns have many other productive players, including stud defensive end Myles Garrett (No. 1 overall, 2017) who will develop some chemistry with Vernon coming off the opposite edge while Richardson brings the potential of destroying blocking schemes in the middle of the trenches.

This almost seems to be too good to be true. We’re talking about the Browns, the franchise with a knack for finding new ways to lose.

Go ahead, three times.

If it’s January and the Browns are in the playoffs, the “offseason crown” was only the beginning. click your heels

 ?? RAJ MEHTA/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? The Browns scored by landing wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. in a blockbuste­r trade with the New York Giants.
RAJ MEHTA/USA TODAY SPORTS The Browns scored by landing wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. in a blockbuste­r trade with the New York Giants.

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