CLEVELAND — The Cleveland Browns aren’t just turning the page; they’re rewriting the entire defensive playbook. In a move that has stunned the shores of Lake Erie, Head Coach Todd Monken bypassed established play-callers Monday to hire Mike Rutenberg as the team’s new defensive coordinator. The hire marks the first major staff shakeup of the 2026 offseason and signals a definitive shift in the Monken era.
The Monken Gamble: Chemistry Over Credentials
On paper, the decision screams risk. Rutenberg, fresh off a stint as the Atlanta Falcons’ passing game coordinator, has never called plays at the NFL level. Yet, inside the building, the vibe isn’t about experience—it’s about evolution.
Rutenberg inherits a unit that was nothing short of a buzzsaw last season. Led by reigning NFL Defensive Player of the Year Myles Garrett and the sensational rookie campaign of Carson Schwesinger, the Browns racked up 53 sacks and terrorized quarterbacks across the AFC North. Handing the keys of a Ferrari to a first-time driver is a bold play, but sources say Monken was sold on Rutenberg’s vision during a marathon session on Sunday.
“Nobody knows if he’s going to be a good coordinator or not. Nobody can sit here and say, ‘Well, this is a bad hire…’ And nobody can say, ‘Man, that’s a home run hire.’ It’s the great unknown.”
— Dan Labbe, Orange and Brown Talk Podcast
Why Rutenberg? The “Schwartz” Factor
While the hire shocked the fanbase, the logic tracks when you look at the pedigree. Rutenberg isn’t an outsider coming in to torch the scheme; he’s a disciple of the aggressive, wide-9 style that Jim Schwartz used to resurrect Cleveland’s defense.
With 16 years of NFL experience—including time under defensive guru Robert Saleh—Rutenberg speaks the language of the current locker room. The transition should be seamless, especially with the Browns retaining their defensive brain trust:
- Jacques Cesaire (Defensive Line)
- Jason Tarver (Linebackers)
- Ephraim Banda (Safeties)
- Brandon Lynch (Cornerbacks)
Beat reporter Mary Kay Cabot noted the importance of this continuity: “You are not reinventing the wheel… You’ve got all your elite premier defensive assistants in place and I think that’s going to make the job a whole lot easier.”
The Rookie Phenom & The Road Ahead
The immediate challenge for Rutenberg will be maximizing the window of this elite core. Carson Schwesinger, the UCLA product who shocked the league to win Defensive Rookie of the Year, has already drawn comparisons to the league’s best off-ball linebackers. Rutenberg’s background with linebackers (having coached the position for the Jets) makes him the perfect mentor to elevate Schwesinger’s game to an All-Pro level in Year 2.
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
This is Todd Monken’s defense now. By bypassing internal options like Jason Tarver, Monken has removed potential friction and established a clear chain of command. If Rutenberg can maintain the aggression that produced 53 sacks while patching the secondary lapses that plagued them in key losses, the Browns won’t just be a playoff contender in 2026—they’ll be the favorite to hoist the Lombardi. The risk is massive, but the payout could be legendary.

