BEREA, Ohio — The coaching carousel just took a wicked spin. After new Atlanta Falcons head coach Kevin Stefanski raided his former team for assistants, Cleveland Browns head coach Todd Monken didn’t just sit back—he returned fire. The Browns have hired Mike Rutenberg as their new defensive coordinator, stealing one of the NFL’s sharpest rising stars right out from under Stefanski’s nose.
The Perfect Counter-Punch
This isn’t just a retaliation hire; it’s a surgical strike. Rutenberg, who served as the Falcons’ defensive pass game coordinator in 2025, arrives with a resume that screams “elite.” He fills the massive void left by Jim Schwartz, and if the buzz around the league is accurate, Cleveland’s defense might not miss a beat.
Rutenberg wasn’t the loudest name on the ticker, but his track record is deafening. During his four-year stint as the New York Jets’ linebackers coach (2021-2024), he was the architect behind one of the league’s most suffocating units. Under his watch, the Jets ranked in the top five in total defense for three consecutive seasons—the only team in the NFL to pull off that feat during that span.
“PhD-Plus Level” Knowledge
Falcons defensive coordinator Jeff Ulbrich didn’t mince words when describing the loss. In a candid interview with The Athletic, Ulbrich made it clear Cleveland is getting a heavy hitter.
“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
The Rookie & The Sophomore: Why This Fit Scares the AFC North
Rutenberg’s arrival is best-case scenario for Cleveland’s young defensive core, specifically two key names from the 2025 draft class.
First, there’s Mason Graham. The former Michigan standout, drafted 5th overall in 2025, had a solid rookie campaign, but Rutenberg’s scheme is designed to turn interior disruptors into superstars. Rutenberg was instrumental in Quinnen Williams’ ascent to All-Pro status in New York. If he can unlock that same “game-wrecker” tier for Graham, the Browns’ interior rush goes from dangerous to lethal.
Then there’s the linebacker room. Second-year LB Carson Schwesinger, the UCLA product who slid into the lineup late last season, is a perfect mold for Rutenberg’s coaching style. Rutenberg turned Quincy Williams—a waiver wire pickup—into a First Team All-Pro. Schwesinger has the range; now he has the teacher.
NHANFL Verdict: 2026 Outlook
Monken’s staff is finally set, and the message is clear: The offense might be getting a makeover, but the defense isn’t rebuilding—it’s reloading. Rutenberg runs a 4-3 scheme with aggressive fronts similar to Schwartz, meaning the learning curve for veterans like Myles Garrett will be minimal. They get to keep playing fast, but now with a coordinator hungry to prove he belongs in the big chair.
Stefanski got his guys in Atlanta, but Monken may have walked away with the most valuable asset of the offseason.

