Patriots: This David Njoku Trade With Browns Makes Sense for New England

CLEVELAND, OH - OCTOBER 14: David Njoku #85 of the Cleveland Browns runs onto the field during the player introduction prior to the game against the Los Angeles Chargers at FirstEnergy Stadium on October 14, 2018 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Jason Miller/Getty Images)
CLEVELAND, OH - OCTOBER 14: David Njoku #85 of the Cleveland Browns runs onto the field during the player introduction prior to the game against the Los Angeles Chargers at FirstEnergy Stadium on October 14, 2018 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Jason Miller/Getty Images) /
facebooktwitterreddit

The David Njoku trade rumors are a perfect fit for the Patriots.

The New England Patriots are slated to move forward with a rookie TE combo of Dalton Keene and Devin Asiasi fronting their plans for 2020, but another excellent option may have just fallen into their laps.

Spurred on by the Browns’ offseason acquisition of Austin Hooper on a mega-deal, as well as their fourth-round selection of FAU TE Harrison Bryant, tantalizing pass-catcher David Njoku has officially asked out of The Land, giving credence to the long-bubbling trade rumors surrounding his name.

At this point, Njoku can be had — though Kevin Stefanski loves to deploy two-tight-end sets, he…already has two other key tight ends on his roster, and the former 2017 first-rounder seems to want nothing to do with his vision.

Fine. We can help there.

It would seem the going rate for Njoku, who piled up 639 receiving yards and four touchdowns in his most recent full season in 2018, would be a third-rounder. New England was docked such a pick, however, for whatever their role in the 2019 sideline-filming fiasco was.

As such, perhaps a fourth- and seventh-round package would sway a desperate Cleveland team in a similar fashion? After all, it’s hard to maximize an asset when he’s already packed his bags. Bill Belichick knows this.

It seems…ill-advised to acquire Cam Newton, and then force him to run his preferred offense with the “security blanket” of only two rookie tight ends. Newton used Greg Olsen to perfection as a safety valve (and occasional down-field threat) during his MVP season in 2015.

Though New England is bound to get experimental with their deployment of Newton this season, it would be foolhardy to involve stripping him of one of his favorite varieties of weapons in the process.

Next. Patriots QB Contract Details Should Embarrass Bucs. dark

Is the 6-4 Njoku the man for the job? He certainly seems like a preferred option (remember when the Pats were going to get OJ Howard out of the Gronk deal?!), and would come relatively cheap.