CLEVELAND — The pancake blocks stop here. After seven years of burying linebackers into the Huntington Bank Field turf, All-Pro right guard Wyatt Teller is officially leaving Cleveland. The 31-year-old trench enforcer took to Instagram Wednesday to confirm his Wyatt Teller Browns free agency 2026 departure, blowing a massive hole in an offensive line that desperately needs stability.
An Era of Dominance Ends
Teller arrived in Cleveland via a 2019 trade with Buffalo and immediately built a reputation for violence at the point of attack. He amassed 94 starts and secured three straight Pro Bowls from 2021 to 2023. You could feel the raw energy in the stadium every Sunday as Teller fired off the snap, flattening a defensive tackle while 67,000 freezing fans barked their absolute approval.
Recent campaigns proved harsh. Calf injuries limited his mobility down the stretch in 2025, forcing him to split reps with Teven Jenkins. Teller’s last snap as a Brown came in a gritty Week 17 victory over the Steelers. He didn’t just play in Cleveland; he lived it. He proposed to his wife, Carly, right on the 50-yard line and raised two children in Northeast Ohio. The chill winds of Lake Erie matched his playing style perfectly.
“I wish things were different and this is hard to put into words… The Browns took a chance on me that changed the trajectory of my life forever. Cleveland will always have a special place in our hearts.”
— Wyatt Teller, All-Pro Guard
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
The Browns face a monumental reconstruction project. New head coach Todd Monken might need to replace all five offensive line starters. Left guard Joel Bitonio is heavily weighing retirement, while Jack Conklin, Cam Robinson, and Ethan Pocic are also hitting the open market. Salary cap realities dictate this move; Cleveland owes Teller over $20 million in restructured money, meaning a post-June 1 release will likely defer the dead cap hit to 2027.
Teller’s exit injects elite talent into a loaded 2026 free agent market for interior offensive linemen. Guard-needy contenders will rush to secure his services alongside these premier options:
- Tyler Linderbaum: The 25-year-old crown jewel from Baltimore.
- Isaac Seumalo: Pittsburgh’s reliable run-blocking veteran.
- David Edwards: Buffalo’s top-10 graded pass blocker.
For Cleveland, the front office must strike gold in the upcoming draft—potentially targeting Washington guard Vega Ioane—or risk leaving their quarterback exposed in the pocket next season.

