The personal trophy case for Myles Garrett is becoming increasingly crowded, but the one achievement that remains conspicuously absent is the one he desires most.
Following a 2025 season that saw him rewrite the NFL record books with 23 sacks and secure his second Defensive Player of the Year award, the 30-year-old defensive end is no longer satisfied with statistical dominance.
In a recent dialogue with News 5 Cleveland‘s Camryn Justice, Garrett laid out a blueprint for the remainder of his career that prioritizes team success over personal milestones.
“A Super Bowl would be great. That’s the way I always wanted my career to go. To be able to knock out each one of these. I would have knocked it out earlier if I could, but it’s all God’s timing,” Garrett said.
The path to this point has been anything but linear for the former first-overall pick. Just a year ago, Garrett sent shockwaves through the organization by requesting a trade, citing a profound “desire to win” and a reluctance to spend his prime years on a roster that wasn’t consistently contending.
However, the Cleveland Browns managed to extinguish the brushfire by signing him to a massive four-year, $160 million extension in March 2025, a deal that includes $123 million in guarantees and ties him to Cleveland through 2030.
Despite the financial commitment, the ambition remains the same.
“Super Bowl and Super Bowl MVP would be amazing,” he noted. “But right now, I’m just taking it day by day. I’m happy with what I’ve done.
“I’m not satisfied but taking a second to breathe. When all the dust is settled, I’m just appreciative that I’ve even got to this point. Taking it one day at a time.”
The future of the Cleveland defense
The challenge for the Browns’ front office is to build a roster capable of matching Garrett’s historic output.
While he spearheaded a defense that allowed the third-fewest passing yards in the league last season, the team struggled to a 5-12 finish, leading to the dismissal of head coach Kevin Stefanski and the hiring of Todd Monken.
This organizational shift has left Garrett in a reflective, yet non-committal state regarding his long-term future with the team that drafted him.
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