CLEVELAND, Ohio — Jim Schwartz walked out of Berea, and the immediate reaction across Northeast Ohio was pure panic. The architect behind the NFL’s most terrifying defensive front handed in his resignation earlier this month after Todd Monken landed the head coaching job. But Cleveland’s front office didn’t flinch. By bringing in Mike Rutenberg as the new Browns defensive coordinator, the organization just saved its most lethal weapon: the aggressive Wide 9 scheme that turned Myles Garrett into a back-to-back Defensive Player of the Year with a record-breaking 23 sacks.
You could almost feel the collective sigh of relief radiating from the Dawg Pound when the Rutenberg news broke. The defensive identity stays.
The System Over The Man
Schwartz didn’t just tweak the Cleveland defense; he weaponized it. He gave Garrett the ultimate green light to hunt quarterbacks from the extreme edge. When Schwartz packed his office, fans naturally grieved the loss of his hard-nosed personality. The fear of a complete schematic overhaul loomed large over the franchise.
But the recent analysis from the Orange and Brown Talk podcast cuts straight to the core of the issue. Hosts Dan Labbe and Browns beat reporter Ashley Bastock ripped up the panic script. They argued that losing the Wide 9 system would inflict far more damage than losing the coach who called it. According to Bastock, the scheme didn’t just elevate Garrett’s play; it made him historically great. Garrett registered 23 sacks this past season because the Wide 9 isolated him against tackles on islands. He faced fewer double-teams and wreaked absolute havoc.
Rutenberg steps in specifically to prevent that foundation from crumbling. After a stellar season as the Falcons’ defensive pass game coordinator and years of top-tier production coaching the Jets’ linebackers under Robert Saleh’s tree, Rutenberg speaks the same aggressive language. He brings a Ph.D.-level understanding of the secondary while keeping the front four completely unleashed.
“He’s one of the best teachers in this league. He understands the back end at a PhD-plus level. He’s a huge part of our success back there. Whether he gets a coordinator job this season or next, it’s inevitable. He’s too good a coach.”
— Jeff Ulbrich, Falcons Defensive Coordinator
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
Todd Monken wants to light up the scoreboard on offense, but he needs a ruthless defense to survive the AFC North bloodbath. Hiring Rutenberg guarantees continuity for a unit that ranked in the top five in total yards allowed. Players like Denzel Ward and reigning Defensive Rookie of the Year Carson Schwesinger will not have to rip up their playbooks and start from scratch.
Instead of rebuilding, the Browns are reloading. The focus now shifts strictly to free agency and the upcoming draft. Rutenberg’s immediate priorities are clear:
- Evaluate the inherited defensive line talent to ensure perfect Wide 9 fits.
- Identify rotational depth in free agency to keep the front four fresh deep into the fourth quarter.
- Merge his elite coverage principles seamlessly with the aggressive pass rush.
If Rutenberg checks these boxes, Cleveland will enter the 2026 season holding the blueprint for a deep playoff run.

