Ronnie Hickman didn’t crack ESPN’s top-10 safety list, and that omission should sit just fine in Cleveland.
Jeremy Fowler recently surveyed league executives, coaches and scouts for his ranking of the NFL’s best safeties, and while the list itself didn’t spark much debate, one name that drew votes over Hickman did raise eyebrows: Tennessee Titans safety Amani Hooker. That’s where the Browns can turn the slight into fuel.
Hooker played 16 games and started all of them for Tennessee, finishing with 81 total tackles, eight pass breakups and no interceptions. His Pro Football Focus numbers didn’t help his case either, with a 51.9 overall grade, 85th among 98 graded safeties, and a 44.8 coverage grade, 89th among 98 graded safeties. In coverage, he allowed 28 catches for 413 yards and two touchdowns.
Hickman’s season was the stronger one. He started 17 games, piled up 103 total tackles, added seven pass deflections and picked off two passes.
PFF was far kinder to him as well, giving him a 71.6 overall grade, 21st among 98 graded safeties, and a 75.3 coverage grade, 11th among 98 graded safeties. He also gave up just 20 catches on 34 targets for 262 yards and one touchdown.
That’s why the vote gap feels hard to square. Hooker got some recognition.
Hickman got none. Based on the numbers in front of everyone, that looks like a miss.
For Cleveland, though, the disrespect could be useful. Hickman re-signed on a restricted tender and is looking to get paid, and the lack of league-wide credit gives him another reason to come into 2026 with a chip on his shoulder. The Browns would gladly take that version of him again.
In Other News...
Browns May Be Headed For A Dillon Gabriel Outcome Fans Hate
Dillon Gabriel entered Browns camp with a clear path to work ahead of rookie Shedeur Sanders, but the early-season shuffle has only made the quarterback picture murkier. The third-round pick lost his spot quickly, yet his place on the roster still looks far from settled, especially with Cleveland weighing how many passers it wants to carry and how the depth chart might look once the dust settles.
Zac Jacksons read on the situation suggests Gabriel may not be going anywhere soon, even if the Browns keep sorting through other young arms and roster math. Gabriels rookie contract gives Cleveland plenty of control, and his profile still fits the kind of backup role teams like to protect, but the bigger question is whether the Browns will view him as part of their long-term quarterback plan or as a player whose value could be tested by late-summer competition and possible trade interest. [Read more 🡒]
Browns Hit With Another Brutal National Label Before 2026 Begins
The Browns are entering another offseason with plenty of change and very little certainty, which is exactly why a recent preseason power ranking landed with such a harsh edge. FanSideds Jason La Canfora placed Cleveland at No. 30, a reminder that national skepticism is still following the franchise even after a reset that includes new head coach Todd Monken and a reworked offensive line built around first-round pick Spencer Fano.
The bigger issue is that Cleveland still does not have a settled answer at quarterback, with the competition expected to stretch into camp. Add in the loss of Myles Garrett and the Browns are trying to convince the league they have a real direction, even as outside observers continue to see a team stuck in the middle of a rebuild and searching for proof that this version can move forward. [Read more 🡒]
Which Browns Players Are Truly Worth A First Round Pick
An ESPN column from Bill Barnwell has Browns fans doing the kind of roster math that always sparks debate this time of year: which players around the league are actually valuable enough to bring back a first-round pick in a trade. The piece uses Cleveland as a lens for that conversation, sorting through names and trying to separate true premium assets from players who are merely good, useful or still too unproven to command that kind of return.
Barnwells list leaves room for plenty of argument, which is exactly the point. He sees some Browns as the type of players who could headline a deal for a single first-rounder, while others would take more than that to pry away, and a few just missed the cut altogether. It is the sort of exercise that says as much about how the league values certain positions and age curves as it does about Cleveland itself, and it gives Browns followers another reason to wonder which pieces of the roster would draw the most interest if the phone ever started ringing. [Read more 🡒]
