Deshaun Watson Watson missed extensive time with a rotator cuff strain but returned to action to face the Cardinals. He needed some time to find his rhythm against Arizona but finished with a solid stat line. Watson completed 63.3 percent of his passes, tallying 219 yards and a pair of touchdowns.
It wasn’t overly impressive but the Browns didn’t need him to be with the defense limiting the Cardinals to just 58 yards of total offense — the lowest mark for a team this season in the NFL.
took some hits against the Arizona Cardinals during the Cleveland Browns‘ 27-0 victory on Sunday but he’ll be all good to face the Baltimore Ravens this week.
Browns head coach Kevin Stefanski was asked about his quarterback’s health on Monday, November 6 and kept it simple.
“He’s good,” Stefanski said.
Watson didn’t look 100 percent and admitted after the game he’s not all the way back yet. However, he had his moments, which included a pair of deep connections with Amari Cooper.
“I get to see him in practice. I get to see him in games. You’re going to have some misses,” Stefanski said. “Not many people are throwing 100 percent on a completion percentage, but the balls that he threw, two in particular, stick out — the one to Amari, the deep one, and then the earlier play action to Amari in stride. I thought he made really good decisions, but he’s a good player and he made some big plays for us [Sunday].”
Watson missed the first matchup with the Ravens, which Baltimore dominated, winning 28-3. Much of that was due to the Browns’ quarterback situation. Watson was a late scratch and Cleveland turned to rookie Dorian Thompson-Robinson, who tossed three interceptions.
The Browns now get a shot at the AFC North-leading Ravens with Watson back.