What we know: No position group on the entire Browns roster went through a bigger makeover than the quarterbacks, which boasts a completely different look entering 2018. Taylor, who is entering his eighth season, was acquired in a March trade with the Bills and was instantly anointed the team's starter, replacing DeShone Kizer, who started 15 games as a rookie last season and was subsequently traded to the Packers. He's one of the most experienced and decorated quarterbacks to join the Browns since the team returned in 1999, and it was clear on the practice fields throughout the offseason workout program. The Browns offense, while still working out the kinks and learning the new terminology of offensive coordinator Todd Haley's system, looked crisp and produced a number of big plays through the air throughout OTAs and minicamp. Taylor's presence allowed Mayfield, the No. 1 pick in the 2018 draft, to quietly develop without the pressure and urgency to produce as the team's starter from Day 1. Midway through OTAs, Mayfield began taking the lion's share of the repetitions with the second-team offense while Stanton, the most experienced player on Cleveland's roster, moved down to the third team.

Biggest question: How will Haley adapt the offense to Taylor's and Mayfield's strengths? Simply put, Taylor -- from a measurables and skill set standpoint -- is a much different quarterback than Ben Roethlisberger, whom Haley coached during a stretch in which Pittsburgh's offense piled up big points and big yards and Roethlisberger made four Pro Bowl appearances. This question might not have an answer until we see the signal-callers run the offense during the preseason, and even that might be too early to make any broad-sweeping judgments. Haley called Taylor an "outlier" at the quarterback position because of the sustained success he's had despite measuring at 6-foot-1. Haley has repeatedly said he'll play to his quarterback's strengths. For Taylor, that centers on accuracy, protecting the football and some of the best mobility in the NFL.