Jim Schwartz: What the Browns are getting in their new defensive coordinator

Our Jeff Risdon covered Schwartz in Detroit and breaks down why he is a big believer in the hiring for the Browns

Jim Schwartz is the new defensive coordinator of the Cleveland Browns. Schwartz comes to the Browns after years of NFL experience, most recently with the Tennessee Titans as a senior defensive assistant, after breaking into the league as a personnel scout in Cleveland under Bill Belichick.

He’s best known for his five seasons (2009-2013) as the head coach of the Detroit, and this is where the worlds collide for me. His final season as the Lions head coach was my first year as credentialed media covering the team.

I won’t beat around the bush; I love the move to hire Schwartz as Joe Woods’ successor. I openly campaigned for it on social media and in various radio spots. There are a couple of reasons why I’m bullish on the divisive Schwartz.

Scheme

Schwartz uses an aggressive 4-man front in the style of longtime Eagles coordinator Jim Johnson. His defenses rely heavily on generating pressure with just the front four. First with the Titans (2001-2008) as a coordinator, then with the Lions as head coach and subsequent coordinator stops in Buffalo (2014) and Philadelphia (2016-2020), Schwartz’s defensive units perennially ranked near the top in sacks and at or near the bottom in blitz percentage.

Don’t mistake the dearth of blitzing for not being aggressive. Far from it. Schwartz uses a barrage of twists, stunts, alignments within the four-man line and even some more advanced gimmicks like the asynchronous rush or the inverted line (ends inside, tackles outside). His expansive use of the Wide-9 technique with his ends is Schwartz’s signature.

Spotlighting his standouts

Everywhere he’s been, Schwartz has thrived at catering to the skills of his top talents. From Jevon Kearse and Kevin Carter in Tennessee to Ndamukong Suh and Kyle Vandenbosch in Detroit and the Brandon Graham/Chris Long combination in Philadelphia, Schwartz prominently features his top talents and puts them in optimal situations to succeed.

That certainly bodes well for Myles Garrett in Cleveland. The Wide-9, where the EDGE lines up beyond the outside shoulder of a tight end–even if there is no tight end to that side of the formation–creates considerable space for Garrett to get options to use either his freakish power or incredible speed and cornering ability. Expect to also see Garrett kick inside into a 4i or 5-technique, too.

Cleveland holes

You might notice that he’s almost always had more than one impact member of the front four. Garrett gives him arguably the best individual talent he’s ever had on the outside, but the Browns don’t have a No. 2. they might not even have a No. 3 on the roster right now, and that’s one of the reasons why Woods is gone.

If GM Andrew Berry, who was with Schwartz in Philadelphia before joining the Browns, wants this to work, he has to know the defensive tackle position is offseason priority No. 1. The Browns already desperately needed at least one new starting DT, preferably one who can collapse the pocket reliably. Now that position is a non-negotiable necessity.

So is having a balance to Garrett at DE. Alex Wright can develop into a No. 3 DE in Schwartz’s scheme, which plays well to Wright’s quickness and length. But the No. 2 DE is not on the roster. Jadeveon Clowney wouldn’t be it even if he returned, either.

The good news? The rest of the returning defensive personnel fits what Schwartz typically wants quite well. He’s a coordinator who leans on man coverage outside and Cover-3 and Cover-1 in the middle. Schwartz knows how to mask and mix up his coverages too.

In Denzel Ward, Greg Newsome and Martin Emerson, the Browns are set at CB for Schwartz. His use of a traditional split of strong and free safety also fits the Browns existing personnel of Grant Delpit and John Johnson–presuming Johnson returns, a debate where the dynamic has changed with Schwartz’s hiring.

The linebacking corps is tailor-made for Schwartz when everyone is healthy. Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah is a perfect fit in the middle, a smart, speedy backer with range. Jacob Phillips and a return from a bigger SLB like Sione Takitaki are good enough for a defense that emphasizes the front four and the back four (or five). Tony Fields works as a depth piece. Crashing the gaps inside the Wide-9 alignment against the run and carrying TEs to the safeties in coverage are the primary functions. No blitzing and no heavy man-coverage required.

Stefanski impact

One of the big reasons I wanted Schwartz is his personality. Schwartz is proudly prickly. He is not afraid to be defiant or difficult. A Georgetown grad, Schwartz is a very bright guy and isn’t shy about letting folks know he’s smart.

His personality is not for everyone, but his abrasive, prideful nature serves a great purpose in Cleveland. He is the boat-rocker and willing antagonist I strongly believe is needed to help head coach Kevin Stefanski.

It’s overstating the situation to say Stefanski was surrounded by assistants who are complacent or “yes men”. But there has not been enough pushback or negative feedback to Stefanski internally, certainly not in the strident way Schwartz will deliver those things.

Don’t mistake those qualities in Schwartz for disloyalty or not being a team player. It’s more about Schwartz being willing to speak up if he sees things that he doesn’t think will work, and not just on his own defense — and Schwartz does so in full-throated spirit to help the team win. He found that balance very nicely in Philadelphia with head coach Doug Pederson and in Tennessee with Jeff Fisher, who wasn’t afraid to dish it right back. Schwartz loved that, by the way.

The coaching dynamic needs to change in Cleveland. That’s Schwartz.

It might not work, no question about it. If the defensive line doesn’t get significant personnel upgrades immediately, it could very well be one-and-done for Schwartz in Cleveland. Berry, Stefanski and the Browns trust Schwartz and respect his process and his results enough to believe he can pair with Stefanski and thrive. I do too.

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Report: Browns add 2 coaches to the defensive staff

The Browns have reportedly hired Jordan Thomas and Jeff Anderson to the defensive coaching staff

The Cleveland Browns have filled a couple of vacancies on the defensive coaching staff. Per Aaron Wilson of PFN, the Browns have hired a new assistant defensive line coach and a quality control coach to work under coordinator Joe Woods.

Jordan Thomas is the new assistant DL coach, and he has some interesting connections that could come in handy during the upcoming draft evaluation period. Thomas has been the assistant DL coach at San Diego State for the last two years. He played linebacker for SDSU.

One of the players he coached with the Aztecs, Cameron Thomas, is a consensus top 75 overall pick in the coming draft and a good fit for the Browns scheme.

The new defensive quality control coach is Jeff Anderson, per Wilson. There is no official word yet on Chris Kiffin’s fate. He is not currently listed on the Browns’ coaching roster.

Kevin Stefanski expects his Browns coaching staff to return intact

Stefanski is happy with the coaching staff he assembled in his first season in Cleveland

Browns head coach Kevin Stefanski is not planning on any changes to his coaching staff during the offseason. Stefanski indicated in his press conference on Monday that he will not be making any changes to the group that includes offensive coordinator Alex Van Pelt, defensive coordinator Joe Woods and special teams coordinator Mike Priefer.

“Really proud of this group,” Stefanski said of his coaching staff. “They worked very, very hard in some tough circumstances. People stepped up when some of us were out. And really, I loved the way our group worked together and were very much trying to solve problems in the season as they came about.”

The continuity is important to Stefanski as he tries to build something that offers sustained long-term success.

“(Keeping the coaching staff intact) is a huge part of this is we can start at that baseline,” Stefanski said. “We can start that foundation and build on what we have done to date.”

There is a chance the Browns lose an assistant coach or two to another opportunity. With several new coaching regimes taking over around the league, assistants like RB coach Stump Mitchell or defensive quality control coach Stephen Bravo-Brown could be in line to climb the coaching ladder elsewhere.

But no changes will come from Stefanski. He’s clearly happy with the coaching staff he assembled in his first season in Cleveland.

Browns hire Kevin Rogers as senior offensive assistant coach

Rogers was Stefanski’s boss in Minnesota during the Vikings’ Brett Favre era

Kevin Stefanski’s coaching staff just got a little more robust and experienced. The Browns have hired Kevin Rogers to join Stefanski’s crew as a senior offensive assistant coach.

Rogers and Stefanski worked together in Minnesota for several years. In fact, Stefanski served part of his career with the Vikings as the assistant QB coach under Rogers, who was the team’s QB coach from 2006-2010.

“It’s great to add someone with Kevin’s expertise to the staff,” Stefanski said via a media release from the Browns. “He has seen so many offenses on every level of football and the knowledge he brings will be invaluable at every position.”

Rogers will work with the full offense in Cleveland under Stefanski and offensive coordinator Alex Van Pelt. He is not the official QB coach even though that role remains vacant, but expect Rogers to work closely with Baker Mayfield. The 68-year-old Rogers has worked with Donovan McNabb and Brett Favre among the many QBs under his tutelage in over 45 years of coaching.

He last coached at William & Mary, his alma mater, serving as the Tribe’s offensive coordinator and QB coach before he resigned after the 2017 season.

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Browns add 6 coaches via Bill Walsh Diversity Coaching Fellowship

The group, which will work with the Browns through the end of the offseason programs, also includes two female coaches

The Cleveland Browns have added six new members to the coaching staff as part of the Bill Walsh Diversity Coaching Fellowship program. The new coaches are getting their feet wet in the NFL and gaining experience on a temporary basis.

Cleveland’s sextet includes two former NFL wide receiver Leonard Hankerson as well as two female coaches aspiring to climb the ladder.

From the team’s press release,

The fellowship provides coaches the opportunity to observe, participate, gain experience and ultimately land full-time positions in the NFL via access to teams’ offseason programs and training camps. Applicants for the fellowship must either have NFL experience or coaching experience at the high school, college or other league level (CFL, XFL, etc.).

The six new additions, who will work with the club through the final three weeks of the offseason program:

Chris Cook

Angela Baker

Leonard Hankerson

Ashton Grant

Elena Grigelevich

Ray Smith Jr.

Browns complete their coaching staff, add 6 more assistants

The Kevin Stefanski staff for 2020 is now complete

With days to go in advance of the 2020 NFL Scouting Combine, the Cleveland Browns have completed the hiring process for the entire coaching staff under head coach Kevin Stefanski. The team announced the hiring of six more assistants on Wednesday in conjunction with the inaugural press conferences for new coordinators Alex Van Pelt and Joe Woods.

The Browns added the following sextet of assistants to Stefanski’s staff:

  • Ben Bloom – senior defensive assistant
  • Stephen Bravo-Brown – defensive quality control
  • Ryan Cordell – coaching assistant
  • Jeremy Garrett – assistant defensive line
  • Brandon Lynch – assistant defensive backs
  • Seitu Smith – offensive quality control to the coaching staff

Cordell is the only coach who is a holdover, having served as a football research analyst for the Browns in 2019.

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