The Green Bay Packers are trading away Damarious Randall, a talented but flawed and often unpredictable cornerback.

In exchange, the Cleveland Browns sent the Packers a young quarterback in DeShone Kizer and improved draft slots in both the fourth and fifth rounds. The unexpected trade was completed Friday during a frenzied afternoon of deals around the NFL.

Trading Randall has left the Packers dangerously thin at cornerback, a troubled position for the franchise, especially over the last two years. But Randall was often a part of the position’s unpredictability, as outlined in a revealing Twitter thread produced by Ben Fennell of ESPN, NFL Network and the Philadelphia Eagles:

The thread displays some of the struggles Randall has worked through, not only in man coverage on the outside, but also in zone and as a slot cornerback inside.

Don’t get it wrong: Randall made plays for the Packers, and he was undoubtedly the team’s best cornerback down the stretch in 2017. After a mid-game benching in Week 4, he rebounded and provided some sense of stability at the position, even as injuries mounted around him. The former first-round pick was widely believed to be a sure-fire starter alongside Kevin King in 2018.

Clearly, the Packers thought otherwise. Coaches and players soured on him. Mike McCarthy went as far as saying Randall needed to “clean his own house” after the 2017 season.

Instead of toiling through another year of unpredictability with the volatile cornerback, they dealt him to Cleveland and jump-started the makeover at the position.

The decision has left the Packers with arguably the NFL’s worst group of cornerbacks. But it’s only March, and new general manager Brian Gutekunst has free agency and 12 picks in the NFL draft to restock the position and replace Randall, who clearly wasn’t a part of the team’s long-term plans.