Browns Safety Room Suddenly Feels Like A Season Defining Gamble

As the Cleveland Browns prepare to revamp their defense under new leadership, the focus shifts to solidifying a versatile safety lineup to anchor the secondary.

The Browns are headed into 2026 with a different voice running the defense, and the safety room looks like one of the clearest places where that change could show up fast.

Mike Rutenberg is taking over as defensive coordinator for the first time, but he is hardly new to coaching on that side of the ball. He has been working on defense since 2003, when he was an assistant defensive back coach with the Jacksonville Jaguars.

Like former coordinator Jim Schwartz, Rutenberg leans on a four-man front whenever he can. The bigger shift may come behind that front, where his background in the secondary points to a heavier dose of five defensive backs on the field - and often three safeties among them.

That lines up with something general manager Andrew Berry pointed to during the offseason: Cleveland needs to catch up to the rest of the league in that area.

The Browns’ safety group for 2026 starts with Grant Delpit and Ronnie Hickman, and it should also include rookie Emmanuel McNeil-Warren, one of the team’s second-round picks. Beyond that, the room is still taking shape as training camp approaches later this month.

Here’s how the depth chart looks right now: Grant Delpit, Christopher Edmonds, Ronnie Hickman, Donovan McMillon, Emmanuel McNeil-Warren, Daniel Thomas and Zion Washington.

The upside is pretty easy to see. Delpit is in the final year of his contract, and the Browns need him to settle in and play like a steadying force in the secondary if he wants to earn another deal in Cleveland.

Hickman is in a similar spot, working on a one-year contract in 2026 after reaching restricted free agency. He’s coming off a 2025 season in which he posted 103 tackles and became a full-time starter for the first time.

Then there’s McNeil-Warren, who will be asked to make the jump from the MAC to the NFL. The Browns can help smooth that transition by keeping him focused on one position early before layering in more responsibility later, the same kind of approach that helped Hickman after he arrived as an undrafted free agent in 2023.

The downside is just as clear. If Delpit lets contract uncertainty affect his play, the Browns could eventually move him during the season.

If Hickman slips, and McNeil-Warren needs more time than expected to adjust, the group could be forced to lean harder on Donovan McMillon. He has value on special teams, but he may not be ready for a bigger defensive workload yet.

And if the unit can’t get on the same page quickly, the problems could show up in a hurry. Coverage busts would keep piling up, the defense would keep trying to adapt to Rutenberg’s system, and the sideline body language might tell the story after another long completion slips through.

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