Seth DeValve, tight end, Princeton, taken in the fourth round, at No. 138 overall.
Jordan Payton, wide receiver, UCLA, taken in the fifth round, at No. 154 overall.
Spencer Drago, offensive tackle, Baylor, taken in the fifth round, at No. 168 overall.
Rashard Higgins, wide receiver, Colorado State, taken in the fifth round, at No. 172 overall.
Trey Caldwell, cornerback, Louisiana-Monroe, taken in the fifth round, at No. 173 overall.
Scooby Wright III, inside linebacker, Arizona, taken in the seventh round, at No. 250 overall.
See anyone there who interests you?
The Browns do. Those are the final six players they took on Saturday on the third and final day of the NFL Draft.
Let’s see. There’s a guy named Spencer Drago, not to be confused with Ivan Drago, the Russian boxer in the movie, “Rocky IV.
There’s a guy named Jordan Payton, not to be confused with Walter Payton or Michael Jordan.
There’s a guy named Trey Caldwell, not to be confused with Mike Caldwell, a linebacker drafted by the Browns in 1993.
And there’s a guy with a first name of Scooby, not to be confused with Scooby of the Scooby-Doo cartoons.
In addition, it’s Scooby Wright III, not to be confused with Robert Griffin III.
Some cool names, to be sure. Indeed, if you’re going to be taken in the final rounds of the draft, then you want to have a cool name, one that will be remembered long after the dust settles on this draft.
But other than for their names, will any of these players be remembered six months from now? A year from now? Two years from now? A decade from now?
Keep in mind that, 46 years after he was drafted by the Browns in the fifth round in 1969, fans remember wide receiver Fair Hooker, both for his name and for the fact he played six seasons with the club.
And even though returner Eddie Payton played only one season, 1977, with the Browns, we remember him as the brother of the great Walter Payton.
There’s also wide receiver Eppie Barney, the cousin of Lem Barney, a Pro Football Hall of Fame defensive back from the Detroit Lions, who was drafted by Browns in 1977 and played with them for two years.
If the Browns can hit on at least one of these late-round picks, then the members of this new regime will have begun to earn some street cred with fans. Great teams find players late in the draft. In fact, in many regards, that’s how those great teams are made, by being able to locate talent in places where few clubs can.
The opportunity for all these players to make the team is certainly there. The Browns are rebuilding this club from the ground up. As such, they are looking for people to fill the roster spots, and they’d like for some of those players to be the ones they drafted in the waning rounds on Saturday.
And if that doesn’t happen, then these will just be cool names that we might not remember by Labor Day.