BEREA, Ohio — The Andrew Berry and Todd Monken honeymoon period is officially over. Less than three weeks after Monken’s hiring as head coach, the Cleveland Browns face a roster-defining financial cliff. On Monday, February 16—Presidents’ Day—legendary guard Joel Bitonio’s contract is set to void. If Berry doesn’t act by 4:00 p.m. ET, a staggering $23.5 million dead cap charge will accelerate onto the 2026 books, instantly crippling the team’s ability to rebuild a 5-12 roster.
The “Trenches” Crisis
This isn’t just about one player. It’s about the collapse of a once-great unit. The entire starting offensive line—including Cam Robinson, Ethan Pocic, and Wyatt Teller—is heading toward free agency. Bitonio is the last line of defense between stability and a total reset for young quarterback Shedeur Sanders.
According to cap specialists at 247Sports and Spotrac, Berry has three plays left in his playbook to handle Bitonio’s massive $50M+ contract leverage:
1. The “Win-Win” Extension
If the 34-year-old Bitonio commits to one more ride under Monken’s new offensive scheme, an extension is the cleanest fix. By agreeing to a one-year, $15 million deal structured with a league-minimum base salary and a signing bonus spread over future void years, Cleveland could slash his 2026 cap hit to just $12.6 million. That saves nearly $11 million—enough to sign a mid-tier free agent or draft class.
2. The “Post-June 1” Retirement Maneuver
Rumors of Bitonio hanging up his cleats have swirled since the chaotic end to the 2025 season. If he retires Monday, the full $23.5 million hits immediately. However, if Berry and Bitonio agree to a “procedural” extension now and process his retirement officially after June 1, the hit splits: $8.5 million in 2026 and $14.9 million in 2027. This kicks the can down the road but keeps the lights on for this season.
3. Buying Time
The simplest, yet most temporary fix: Amend the contract to push the void date from February 16 to the start of the league year in March. This buys Berry two weeks to see how the market shakes out.
“We know the business side is ugly. We saw it with [Jim] Schwartz leaving. But Joel is the heartbeat. You lose him, you lose the identity of this room. We need that ’64’ in the huddle.”
— Anonymous Browns Offensive Starter
The Monken-Schwartz Fallout
The pressure is compounded by the internal friction following the coaching search. Jim Schwartz’s departure after being passed over for Monken has left a void in leadership. Berry cannot afford to lose the team’s offensive leader (Bitonio) immediately after losing the defensive leader (Schwartz). Retaining Bitonio might be a necessary PR win to stabilize the locker room culture.
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
Monday is the first domino. If Bitonio stays, expect the Browns to aggressively pursue a veteran tackle to pair with him. If he walks (or the contract voids), Cleveland enters the draft with the No. 6 overall pick likely forced into selecting an offensive lineman rather than a playmaker for Sanders. The decision made in the next 24 hours will dictate whether 2026 is a competitive retooling or a “burn it down” rebuild.

