Ben Cleveland arrives in Los Angeles with a résumé that still carries real weight on paper, even if the rest of the picture is a lot less flattering. The Chargers are giving a former five-star recruit another shot, but the margin for error is thin as he heads into 2026.
Cleveland, born Aug. 25, 1998, in Toccoa, Georgia, starred at Stephens County High, where he played both baseball and football. On the football field, he was the kind of prospect every program wanted, rated a five-star offensive lineman by 247Sports and standing as the highest-ranked player in the Chargers roster spotlight series so far.
He stayed close to home and committed to Georgia despite having offers from nearly every school he could have wanted. After redshirting, Cleveland worked his way into the lineup and started five games, including the 2018 College Football Playoff National Championship game.
In his third season, he started eight games and missed six because of injury. By his fourth year, he had locked down the right guard spot and started all 13 games there.
In his final season of eligibility, he earned AP All-SEC First Team honors while starting all nine games at right guard.
That college success pushed him into the NFL as a mid-round projection, with scouts describing him as: "[he] isn't just a burly interior lineman. He has a legitimate pro, wide-body frame with desired lean mass and proportional build.
He's an average athlete for his size, but there are athletic limitations that will put him into the "lumbering" category if he has to redirect his weight or sustain his movements. The fundamentals into his first strike are sound, but he loses the sustain phase faster than expected for a man with his size and strength.
He can be a little slow to process the moving pieces in pass protection, which could become a big issue due to below-average reactive lateral quickness. He should become an average starter, but has a chance to upgrade to quality starter if a team can coach him up to become a more consistent people-mover."
Greg Roman and the Baltimore Ravens took him in the third round, and Cleveland spent five seasons there. He started only seven games in Baltimore, and his time with the team became a topic of discussion for fans because of off-the-field issues and work ethic concerns.
After that run ended, Roman’s 2025 Chargers offensive unit took a swing on him. Cleveland spent the final few weeks of the season on the practice squad before signing a futures contract for 2026.
The production has been limited, and the numbers tell the story: 688 offensive snaps, one sack allowed, 16 pressures allowed, three penalties, a 59.2 PFF offensive grade, a 58.2 PFF run blocking grade and a 62.5 PFF pass blocking grade.
Cleveland’s deal with Los Angeles is a one-year contract worth $1,215,000, with the same amount listed as his average annual salary. His 2026 base salary is also $1,215,000, and his cap hit is $1,075,000.
For the Chargers, the challenge is straightforward. Cleveland has the recruiting pedigree and the Day 2 draft status, but that’s about where the comfort ends.
He’s buried behind plenty of rookies, and his size and average athletic profile make him a tough fit for the scheme. Without Roman in place to tailor things around him, Cleveland has to show something real in year six if he wants to stick.
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