

The Cleveland Browns face the Tennessee Titans this Sunday and Myles Garrett has been predicted to make NFL history during the game.
NFL.com analyst Marc Ross believes Garrett will set the single-season sack record against the Titans.
"Garrett is four sacks away from setting the NFL's official single-season sack record," Ross wrote. "He's posted that many sacks in two games already this year -- five against New England and four against Baltimore. Up next, he's got a meeting on tap against the Titans and Cam Ward, who has been sacked a league-leading 48 times in 2025 -- and Garrett won't need the four games left on Cleveland's schedule after that to surpass Michael Strahan and T.J. Watt. Because on Sunday, he'll make history."
Garrett leads the NFL with 19.0 sacks and 28 tackles for loss. He also has 35 solo tackles and 30 QB hits.
Despite Garrett playing out of his mind, the Browns are only 3-9. They will miss the playoffs again and many people around the NFL believe Garrett should do what he did in February this offseason.
Garrett requested a trade from the Browns in February. One month later, Cleveland signed the defensive end to a four-year extension that averages $40 million per year and includes $123 million guaranteed.
A future Hall of Famer, Garrett is under contract with the Browns for the next six seasons. Along with the no-trade clause, Garrett's new deal includes $100 million in the first three years, $1 million in yearly workout bonuses and $88.8 million in execution guarantees.
Garrett deserves to play for a winning franchise. He should request a trade this offseason and pick a winning franchise. Because he has a no-trade clause in his contract, Garrett can choose his next team if he requests a trade.
If Garrett requests a trade this offseason, the Browns would incur $41 million in dead cap charges, according to NFL insider Dan Graziano of ESPN.
"He is guaranteed about $62 million over the next two years, so an acquiring team would be getting a deal if he continued to play anywhere near his current level," Graziano wrote. "The Browns would incur around $41 million in dead cap charges if they were to trade him, which is about half of what the Broncos took in dead money when they cut Russell Wilson (and they're 20-10 since they did that).
"I'm not saying it's going to happen. What I am saying is that, if circumstances changed and either through Garrett's doing or for other reasons the Browns changed their stance, the contract is tradable. What is a list like this for if not to enlighten y'all on something like that?"