The Cleveland Browns entered the 2019 season with aspirations of the playoffs and more. It turns out; they didn't even finish with a winning record—the result: more change expected to come in the offseason.

While the future of head coach Freddie Kitchens remains in question, he isn't the only member of the staff potentially getting the boot. General manager John Dorsey, the constructor of the current Browns, isn't particularly safe, according to Mike Florio of Pro Football Talk.

The 2019 Browns are built in the eyes of Dorsey. Since his arrival in 2017, the GM has emphasized winning now, not in the future, as the previous staff did. He started those efforts by making a slew of trades and additions in the 2018 offseason, highlighted by the trade acquisitions of safety Damarious Randall and wide receiver Jarvis Landry.

Dorsey followed his bold trade strategy to the draft, making the polarizing quarterback Baker Mayfield the No. 1 pick, who proceeded to break the rookie passing touchdowns record for the Browns. Pro Bowl cornerback Denzel Ward and likely 2019 rushing champion Nick Chubb followed.

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Dorsey made Kitchens the head coach after the 2018 campaign, in which he fired Hue Jackson. The 2019 offseason was perhaps more tumultuous than the last, as he swung a massive trade with the New York Giants to bring in superstar receiver Odell Beckham Jr. and Pro Bowl pass-rusher Olivier Vernon.

However, despite Dorsey infusing the Browns with talent, Cleveland finished the decade as the only team not to go the playoffs. Something has to change in the organization.