After recording the first 1,000-yard season of his NFL career, wide receiver Kenny Britt left the Los Angeles Rams for the Cleveland Browns on a four-year, $32.5 million contract this past offseason, with $10.5 million guaranteed.

Things didn't exactly work out.

In nine games played, Britt only managed to make 18 receptions for 233 yards. As his snaps diminished and Cleveland's record dropped to 0-12, the organization decided to cut Britt loose.

As Mary Kay Cabot of Cleveland.com notes, each catch cost Cleveland $583,333.00 from that guaranteed money. Just brutal.

Britt is now with the New England Patriots at Super Bowl LII, and while he was inactive for their first two playoff games, he told Cabot that he feels like one of the luckiest men in the world.

Eventually, the conversation turned to his tumultuous time with the Browns. When asked if he felt disrespected in Cleveland, Britt deflected the question.

“To tell you the truth, I really don't think about those times when I was Cleveland,” he said. “Too busy getting ready for games. We're still playing.”

Britt not only doesn't enjoy thinking about his time with the Browns: he doesn't even consider them as one of the franchises he's suited up for in his career. More from Cabot:

In fact, when he told a Boston Globe columnist that he's played for four teams, she corrected him and said five.

“We don't count Cleveland,” he said.

Britt never got along with head coach Hue Jackson, and as soon as Cleveland hired John Dorsey as their new general manager, the wide receiver was gone. He admitted that getting cut was the low point of his career, but he has quickly moved on and is happy with New England.