NFL: Report: Browns sign veteran QB Joe Flacco to practice squad

Date:

Share post:


The Cleveland Browns are signing veteran quarterback Joe Flacco to their practice squad, ESPN reported Sunday night.

Flacco will likely be promoted to the active roster, per the report.

Cleveland placed starting quarterback Deshaun Watson on injured reserve earlier this week due to a season-ending shoulder injury.

Dorian Thompson-Robinson filled in under center on Sunday, helping the Browns to a 13-10 victory over the visiting Pittsburgh Steelers. He completed 24 of 43 passes for 165 yards with an interception.

But now Cleveland has added depth with Flacco, who last appeared in five games (four starts) with the New York Jets last season. He threw for 1,051 yards with five touchdowns and three picks.

Flacco, 38, has 183 career games (180 starts) under his belt with the Baltimore Ravens (2008-18), Denver Broncos (2019) and Jets (2020-22). He has amassed 42,320 yards through the air with 232 touchdowns and 147 interceptions.

Flacco led Baltimore to a Super Bowl in 2013 and was named MVP as the Ravens beat the San Francisco 49ers 34-31.

–Field Level Media

spot_img

Related articles

NCAAF: Reports: Donald Trump’s proposed presidential commission put on hold

According to reports, plans to create a presidential commission to oversee key issues in college sports have been...

NFL: Cardinals put CB Sean Murphy-Bunting on non-football injury list

The Arizona Cardinals placed cornerback Sean Murphy-Bunting on the reserve/non-football injury list on Thursday, a move that will...

NCAAF: Report: CFP switching to a straight-seeding model for 2025

College Football Playoff executives unanimously agreed Thursday to adopt a straight-seeding model for the 2025 season, Yahoo Sports...

NCAAF: UNC chancellor ‘delighted’ at attention Bill Belichick has brought program

North Carolina fully expected the hiring of NFL coaching legend Bill Belichick to put a spotlight on its...

FREE

Get the most important breaking news and analyses for Free.

Thank you for subscribing

Something went wrong.