The Cleveland Browns concluded their 2016 NFL Draft with fourteen choices. Analytics have been mentioned in correspondence with the Browns ever since the addition of the Harvard trio. What do the numbers say about Cleveland's picks? Several websites have broken down the numbers.

According to FiveThirtyEight in 2015, production through a player's first five years in the league was measured against the Approximate Value from 1980-2014. Offensive linemen, linebackers and running backs are the safest picks in the first round. All others have a below 50-percent success rate. Wide receiver is actually the most risky selection. The Browns used the No. 15 overall choice to select Baylor wide receiver Corey Coleman. There is no round in which a wide receiver is a 'safe' pick, however. The increased likelihood of a player failing is in large part due to the sheer volume of players at the position taken in an average NFL Draft.

The numbers support the team's selection of Baylor offensive lineman Spencer Drango and Louisiana-Monroe cornerback Trey Caldwell in the fifth round. They also support the choice of linebacker Joe Schobert and safety Derrick Kindred in the fourth round.

NationalFootballPost compiled data from 1995-2014 to determine career length, rookie starts, Pro Bowl selections and other factors. The average career length of a player taken No. 15 overall - Corey Coleman - is 6.66 years. A team gets 4.64 starter years and 69.7 games started from that player. On average, the player has a 26.5-percent chance to earn one Pro Bowl selection or more. There is a 9.5-percent chance that he makes it to three Pro Bowls or more. There is a 14-percent chance that Coleman will earn one All-Pro selection or more over the course of his career. Finally, there is a 2.5-percent chance that he earns three All-Pro selections or more. Each of the fourteen players taken before the Baylor product have higher odds of being successful in each category. The numbers decrease from there forward.

Fans can apply the chart to the other thirteen draft choices: OLB Emmanuel Ogbah (No. 32), OT Shon Coleman (No. 76), QB Cody Kessler (No. 93), LB Joe Schobert (No. 99), WR Ricardo Louis (No. 114), DB Derrick Kindred (No. 129), TE Seth Devalve (No. 138), WR Jordan Payton (No. 154), OL Spencer Drango (No. 168), WR Rashard Higgins (No. 172), CB Trey Caldwell (No. 173) and LB Scooby Wright III (No. 250).

RELATED: Reviewing the 2016 Browns Draft class

From 2005-2014, 2,465 players were drafted. Of those, 629 players were starters for at least half of their careers. The first-round (Coleman) has a 58-percent success rate. The fourth-round (Louis) has a 12-percent success rate. The fifth-round (Payton, Higgins) has a 16-percent success rate according to a report.

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In regards to linebackers, the second-round (Ogbah) has a 55-percent success rate. The fourth-round (Schobert) has a 16-percent success rate while the seventh-round (Wright) has a 2-percent success rate.

When it comes to defensive backs, the fourth-round (Kindred) has an 11-percent success rate. The fifth-round (Caldwell) has an 8-percent success rate.

The Browns drafted two offensive linemen. A player taken in the third-round, Coleman, has a 40-percent chance of being successful. The fifth-round (Drango) has a 16-percent success rate.

The third-round (Nassib) has a 27-percent success rate with defensive linemen. The tight end position has a 33-percent success rate in the fourth-round (Devalve). The quarterback position has a 17-percent chance in the third-round (Kessler).